2018 // Narrating Power and Authority in Late Antique and Medieval Hagiographies from East to West
CALL FOR
PAPERS
Narrating
Power and Authority in Late Antique and Medieval Hagiographies from East to
West
International
Conference at Academia Belgica (Rome, Italy)
Thursday
15th-Saturday 17th February 2018
In hagiographies,
saints often confront a number of obstacles and it is their conduct in faith
that marks them as saints; women and men who stand apart and are presented as
exemplars to be modeled. Often, and this is especially the case of martyr acts,
the obstacles are of a religiopolitical nature and the focus of the saint’s
conduct is her/his defiance. However, there are instances, especially within
the medieval Sufi context, where the relationships between saints and rulers
are more nuanced, depicting a symbiotic relationship, where both parties draw
upon the authority of the other. There are also those cases in which authority
belongs neither to the saint or the king but to ordinary people from across the
socio-political and religious spectrum.
In recent
years, there has been interest in exploring these relationships as depicted in
histories, hagiographies, and martyr acts and recent studies have shed light on
the concept of sainthood, doctrine, and more generally, the history of various
societies. However, the literary aspects of these narratives remain
underexplored despite the wealth of information such analyses offer on the
socio-cultural and political thought world of various courts and societies
across the Indo-Mediterranean world.
This
conference takes a diachronic and cross-cultural approach to the study of power
and authority from above (courts/saints) and below (saints/ordinary people). We
invite papers from scholars who work on different types of late antique and
medieval hagiographical narratives (Lives, Martyr Acts, hagiographical
romances) working on Persian, Arabic, Syriac, Georgian, Coptic, Armenian,
Greek, and Latin hagiographical texts. Of particular interest are papers
that will explore:
• how texts
construct and understand the roles of saints and rulers vis-à-vis one another
(positive, negative,
symbiotic/exploitative)
• how
authority is negotiated between saints and the populace
• the power
of the life of the saint after death (relics, the authority of hagiographers)
• the role
of characterization in the portrayal of figures of power and authority (stock
characters, intermediaries, secondary figures)
• audience
milieu and reader reception
• literary
history
Please send
your abstracts to: Ghazzal Dabiri (ghazzal.dabiri@ugent.be) by 15 July 2017.
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