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HomeListing the World Before the Age of Print

Listing the World Before the Age of Print

International Medieval Congress 2024

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Published on Monday, July 03, 2023

Abstract

Lists help us make sense of the world around us, keep track of the order of things and sometimes create a whole new order altogether. Lists were just as central to the lives and experiences of medieval people. If anything, the practice of enumeration was even more common in the Middle Ages, when lists fulfilled functions which are now served by other tools sitting at the intersection of written and visual culture, such as maps and databases. This call for paper concerns a series of panels that will be held at the next International Medieval Congress, on lists and list-making. It will investigate more precisely the agency of lists as both material objects and cultural artefacts – in their ability to create new relationships, not just transcribing existing ones, and formulate new knowledge rather than simply compile it.

Announcement

Arguments

We all have lists of things to do. We also have playlists, shopping lists and lists of pros and cons (not to mention lists of publications). Whether we make them on paper or with an app, lists are central to our lives. They help us make sense of the world around us, keep track of the order of things and sometimes create a whole new order altogether. Lists were just as central to the lives and experiences of medieval people. If anything, the practice of enumeration was even more common in the Middle Ages, when lists fulfilled functions which are now served by other tools sitting at the intersection of written and visual culture, such as maps and databases. Some of the most famous medieval sources were produced in the form of lists: annals and inventories, for example, but also land surveys and catalogues of saints.

Anthropologists have long emphasised the power of lists. As one of the most enduring devices for human thought and communication, lists are seen as key instruments for both cognitive and social transformation. Literary scholars have taken this suggestion to heart. They have demonstrated that the study of lists can tell us much about the evolution of genres and conventions, and about how writers questioned established categories and worldviews. More recently, a large project run by French scholars has also put lists on the agenda of medieval historians and shown that list-making is a promising angle to study many facets of our period: from the development of more sophisticated ways of organising society to the emergence of new modes of thinking about the relations between the individual and society itself.

This series of panels hopes to push this agenda further. We are especially interested in the agency of lists as both material objects and cultural artefacts – in their ability to create new relationships, not just transcribing existing ones, and formulate new knowledge rather than simply compile it. In essence, we propose to consider list-making not just as a system for describing the world, but as a way to actively change it. Examples might include the use and manipulation of lists in supporting political claims and ambitions, challenging existing hierarchies and social orders, flattening diversity and marginalising groups, influencing people’s views and opinions, and both shaping and recording crises.

Submission guidelines

If you would like to get involved, please get in touch by emailing both organisers with a 200-word abstract and a short bio by 31 August 2023, to the e-mail adress cited below.

This call for paper invites speakers to participate in a series of panels on lists and list-making that will be held at the next International Medieval Congress. Propositions concerning session chairing and discussing roundtable interventions are wellcome as well.

The proposals will be selected by the two researchers organising the panels.

Organisation

  • Luca Zenobi, University of Edinburgh (luca.zenobi@ed.ac.uk)
  • Benedict Wiedemann, University of Cambridge (bw423@cam.ac.uk)

Subjects

Places

  • IMC
    Leeds, Britain

Event attendance modalities

Hybrid event (on site and online)


Date(s)

  • Thursday, August 31, 2023

Keywords

  • middle ages, medieval, history, culture, society, archives, writing, lists, list-making

Contact(s)

  • Luca Zenobi
    courriel : luca [dot] zenobi [at] ed [dot] ac [dot] uk

Reference Urls

Information source

  • Luca Zenobi
    courriel : luca [dot] zenobi [at] ed [dot] ac [dot] uk

License

CC0-1.0 This announcement is licensed under the terms of Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal.

To cite this announcement

« Listing the World Before the Age of Print », Call for papers, Calenda, Published on Monday, July 03, 2023, https://doi.org/10.58079/1bih

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