Dear Colleagues,
Apologies for Cross-posting. Please see the CFP below and distribute to
everybody who may be interested.
Many thanks and all the best,,
Michal Biran
International Conference:
Mobility and Transformations: Economic and Cultural Exchange in Mongol
Eurasia
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, June 29th - July 1st 2014
Call for Papers:
The ERC project Mobility Empire and Cross-Cultural Conquest in Mongol
Eurasia will sponsor an international conference in * June 29--July 1,
2014.*
The conference will examine how various forms of mobility – of people,
ideas and artifacts – were instrumental in creating economic social,
cultural and intellectual exchanges in the realm ruled by the Mongol
empire and its successor states (and beyond) in the 13th and 14th
centuries, and what was the impact of these movements. Culture is meant
here in a broad definition, including also reference to religious and
artistic and exchanges.
The conference also aims to reconstruct and characterize commercial,
religious and intellectual/scientific networks that operated in the Empire
on a local, regional, and continental scale.
Papers, for instance, can also deal with a certain migrant groups, a
cultural biography, the study of a text or artifact, or larger questions of
an aspect of mobility that led to meaningful transformation. Papers dealing
with the Mongol state in Central Asia (the Chaghadaid Khanate) or with the
impact of Mongolian culture on the empire’s subjects and/or neighbors are
especially welcome. Among the questions that we like to see addressed:
How did different migrating groups (e.g., professional, ethnic, and
confessional) facilitate or hinder cultural cross-fertilization?
What were the inter-cultural dialogues that emerged in various contexts?
What was their impact? Why were certain features disseminated more easily
than others?
What role did various migrating groups play in different facets of
economic exchange? To what extent were different regions, both within and
outside the empire, dependent on one another? In other words, how global
was the world in the 13th and 14th centuries?
What Mongolian economic, social, and administrative policies are
discernible in all the four khanates? Did these policies merge with the
local traditions of each region?
What was the impact of Mongolian policies and institutions on the future
development of each area and the continent at large?
The conference will be followed by a three days summer school (2-4 July
2014) related to the Cambridge History of the Mongol Empire, now being
edited by Michal Biran and Hodong Kim. This means that a significant group
of scholars of the Mongol empire will attend the conference and serve as
presenters, chairs and discussants.
We hope to be able to provide a certain support for accommodation and
travel expenses for part of the participants: the exact amount of the
support will be determined by early 2014. People applying for both the
conference and summer school increase their chances of receiving support.
Please send the paper’s title and abstract (up to 250 words), accompanied
by a short (2 pages max) CV to the addresses below:
ercmongol@gmail.com and jeniay@savion.huji.ac.il
Deadline for abstracts' proposals: November 1st, 2013.
For more info about the conference and the summer school see
http://mongol.huji.ac.il/
Professor Michal Biran
The Max and Sophie Mydans Foundation Chair in the Humanities
Director, The Louis Frieberg Center for East Asian Studies
Institute of Asian and African Studies
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Mt. Scopus, 91905, Israel
Telefax: 972-2-6794354
E-mail: biranm@mail.huji.ac.il
http://www.eacenter.huji.ac.il/?id=1119
http://mongol.huji.ac.il/