Published on Monday, March 24, 2025
Abstract
The conference will bring together scholars from diverse fields – including book history, print culture, Baroque studies, and documentary heritage – to explore the evolution of books, printing, and readership from the fifteenth to eighteenth centuries. Through interdisciplinary dialogue and innovative research approaches, we aim to reveal new insights into early printed books and their vibrant journey across time and space.
Announcement
Argument
What makes a book sharp and witty? How did early modern print culture shape the way we read, think, and communicate today? The Martynas Mažvydas National Library of Lithuania and the National Museum of Lithuania invite scholars to unravel these questions at the international conference “Acutus et Argutus: Early Modern Print Culture in Motion.” The event celebrates the legacy of Matthias Casimirus Sarbievius (1595–1640), a master of Baroque poetry and literary theory, whose work “De acuto et arguto” delves into the aesthetics of wit and piercing style in literature. This concept of sharpness and agility in expression mirrors the dynamic transformations that swept through book culture during the early modern period.
The conference will bring together scholars from diverse fields – including book history, print culture, Baroque studies, and documentary heritage – to explore the evolution of books, printing, and readership from the fifteenth to eighteenth centuries. Through interdisciplinary dialogue and innovative research approaches, we aim to reveal new insights into early printed books and their vibrant journey across time and space.
We welcome proposals that explore but are not limited to the following topics:
- Books and print culture in the early modern period: The rise of printing houses, evolution of book design, typography, and the interplay between Baroque visual culture and book aesthetics.
- Readers, circulation, and provenance: The dissemination of books, evidence of reading practices, and the rich cross-cultural exchanges fascilitated by the printed word.
- New approaches to early printed heritage: Harnessing digital humanities, AI–driven research, forensic analysis, and conservation techniques to uncover hidden stories in early modern printed texts.
- Diverse voices in early modern book culture: highlighting women’s roles, exploring the influence of different cultural groups, and integrating non-European book cultures into the broader narrative of early modern print networks.
Submission guidelines
Deadline for submissions: 30 April 2025
Length of abstract: 200-250 words
Mandatory documens - Short bio (max. 150 words)
Email: acutus.argutus@lnb.lt
- Notification of acceptance: 2 June 2025
- Conference: 8–10 October 2025
- Deadline for submitting presentation slides: 6 October 2025
- Article submission deadline: 31 January 2026
Format: In-person (exceptions will be considered on a case-by-case basis).
Venue: Martynas Mažvydas National Library of Lithuania, Vilnius, Gediminas Ave. 51 and National Museum of Lithuania, Vilnius, Kosciuškos St. 3
Conference language: English
Duration of the presentation: 20 minutes.
Scientific committee
Renāte Berga (University of Latvia)
Dr. Agnieszka Franczyk-Cegła (Ossoliński National Institute, Consortium of European Research Libraries (CERL) Provenance Working Group)
Dr. Milda Kvizikevičiūtė (Martynas Mažvydas National Library of Lithuania, National Museum of Lithuania)
Dr. Jolita Liškevičienė (Vilnius Academy of Arts)
Dr. Zanna van Loon (Museum Plantin-Moretus)
Gintarė Petuchovaitė (Vilnius University)
Dr. Viktorija Vaitkevičiūtė (Martynas Mažvydas National Library of Lithuania)
All necessary information and link for submissions is on the conference page: https://konferencijos.lnb.lt/acutus-et-argutus/
Subjects
Places
- Arsenalo g. 3
Vilnius, Lithuania
Event attendance modalities
Full on-site event
Date(s)
- Wednesday, April 30, 2025
Attached files
Keywords
- book history, print culture, documentary heritage, early modern, rare book
Reference Urls
Information source
- Milda Kvizikevičiūtė
courriel : Acutus [dot] argutus [at] lnb [dot] lt
License
This announcement is licensed under the terms of Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal.
To cite this announcement
« Acutus et Argutus: Early Modern Print Culture in Motion », Call for papers, Calenda, Published on Monday, March 24, 2025, https://doi.org/10.58079/13jxs

