CFP: Landscapes and Societies in Ancient and Medieval Europe East of the Elbe. Interactions between Environmental Settings and Cultural Transformations, Keele Campus of York University, Toronto, 26-27 March 2010
Organized by the Department of History of York University and the Graduate School “Human Development in Landscapes”, Christian-Albrechts-Universität Kiel. Fourth International Workshop of the Interdisciplinary Association “Gentes trans Albiam – Europe East of the Elbe in the Middle Ages” To be held on the Keele Campus of York University , Toronto . 26-27 March 2010. Deadline for abstracts submission: 20 October 2010.
Landscapes can be understood as the natural environments in which a society is embedded, or as the set of representations with which members of a society observe and describe a region and give it significance. Modern conceptions of landscapes as aesthetic subjects resulted from a historical evolution that began in Renaissance Europe, whereas other cultures developed different traditions of understanding their environment – in medieval times, for instance, symbolic interpretations were in the foreground: nature was a book in which man could learn about God. Landscapes can be defined, in the words of Denis E. Cosgrove, as “visibly distinct regions.” It is clear that the idea of landscape is dependant on the one hand on the material reality of a given region, on the other hand on the sense attached to it by human beings beholding it.
Historical and environmental research of the last decades makes clear that landscapes are always in varying degrees the product of interactions between human societies and their environment. Even areas perceived as natural or untouched have been modified by man. These transformations are mostly due to the exploitation of resources needed to sustain human communities. In pre-modern
Given these observations, it is quite obvious that historical landscape research should focus simultaneously on the reconstruction of the environmental features as they existed and were transformed in previous periods as well as on the understanding societies had of these, on the systems that regulated the use of available resources, and how they could change in the course of time. Such a goal can only be achieved by an interdisciplinary approach. Recent developments in science and new methods in archaeology deliver information that would not have been possible to obtain even just a few decades ago. New questionings of the existing documentary sources open new possibilities. Only through communication between scholarly disciplines can a comprehensive understanding be pursued.
Medieval Europe east of the
The workshop will bring together a small group of young scholars (16 papers) from North America and
Papers in the fields of history, archaeology and related disciplines are invited. The papers should present a link with parts of Europe outside the borders of the
Please send a short abstract (less than one page) and a CV by email to one of the organizers by 20 October 2009.
Invitations will depend upon available funding.
A publication following the workshop is considered.
Sunhild Kleingärtner (skleingaertner@ufg.uni-kiel.de)
Sébastien Rossignol (rossigno@yorku.ca)
Donat Wehner (donatwehner@gshdl.uni-kiel.de)