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Theme: Dialogues of Enlightenment
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Conference Statement
Programme
Optional
Tours: 14 June
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The Institute for Advanced
Studies in the Humanities was the host for the Annual Conference of the
Consortium of Humanities Centers and Institutes
in Edinburgh on 11-13 June 2009.
140 delegates from around the world met to discuss the conference theme
of Dialogues of Enlightenment.
Conference
Statement
Much of the interdisciplinary
research conducted in humanities centres and institutes is advanced through
the lively exchange of ideas, including formal and informal conversations
in which views are formed, evidence is tested, and conclusions are modified.
At their best, these conversations become dialogues. In both European
and other traditions dialogue has been a key mechanism for generating
inquiry, leading to enlightenment across many fields of human endeavour.
Dialogue allows the present to confront the past and the past to confront
the present. As a genre in its own right, it is important for detailed
study.
The resources of Edinburgh
and the history of IASH make this theme particularly appropriate for a
CHCI meeting. 'Dialogues of Enlightenment' will however have a thoroughly
contemporary focus: local facilities and historic sites will come into
active relation with the conference through involvement with non-academic
partners and historic and current venues of Enlightenment. Together we
shall engage in interrogating locality and mobility; intellectual, religious,
verbal and imaginative exchange; communication and misunderstanding across
space and time; lines of servitude, oppression and emancipation; and the
possibilities and limitations of knowledge generated through dialogue.
Some panels will take the
form of actual dialogues focusing on polarities in conversation; others
will consider dialogue as a theoretical and generic concept of Enlightenment,
in the work of Hume and Kant, for example. Panels will feature pairs of
speakers reflecting the diversity of dialogues among disciplines - science,
religion, philosophy, politics, and music; other sessions will be devoted
to dialogues between East and West, and to contemporaneous conversations
with the past. Music - in performance and in academic dialogue - will
be a significant feature of the conference. In a new departure for CHCI,
one session will take the form of a group conversation about a particular
text. We shall use Hume's Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion,
to address the idea of dialogue, the possibility of cultural difference,
and questions of belief. We ask that all attendees familiarise themselves
with the Hume text in the Penguin edition.
Conference
Programme
Thursday,
11 June 2009
Playfair Library, Old College
University of Edinburgh
6.00 pm onwards: Registration
6:30 pm: Reception for Conference
participants. Welcome by Professor April McMahon, Vice Principal and Head
of College of Humanities and Social Science, The University of Edinburgh.
Music provided by the Rose Street Quartet.
Friday, 12 June 2009
Playfair
Library, Old College
| 9.00
am |
Session
1/Plenary Lecture
Baroness Onora O’Neill (President, The British Academy) Making
Reason Public: the Necessary Conditions for Dialogue
Chair: Susan Manning (Director, Institute for Advanced Studies in
the Humanities, University of Edinburgh) |
| 10.30 am |
Break |
| 11.00
am |
Session
2/Dialogue: Whose Enlightenment?
Maria Rosa Menocal (Director, Whitney Humanities Center, Yale University)
Akeel Bilgrami (Director, Heyman Center for the Humanities, Columbia
University)
Chair: Carole Hillenbrand (Emeritus Professor of Islamic History,
University of Edinburgh) |
| 12:30
pm |
Lunch |
| 1.30
pm |
Session
3/Workshop: Trans-Regional Conditions of the Humanities
Hsiung Ping-Chen (Academia Sinica, Taiwan)
Timothy Murray (Director, Society for the Humanities, Cornell University)
Debjani Ganguly (Head, Humanities Research Centre, Australian National
University) |
| 4.00
pm |
Tour of
the Scottish Parliament |
| 5.30
pm |
Session 4/Plenary
Lecture in the Debating Chamber of the Scottish Parliament
Wole Soyinka (Writer, Poet, Playwright, Nobel Laureate in Literature)
Enlightenment and the New Enthusiasms
Chair: The Deputy Presiding Officer of the Scottish Parliament
Vote of thanks: Srinivas Aravamudan (President, CHCI)
|
| 6.30
pm |
Reception
in the Garden Lobby of the Scottish Parliament. Guests were addressed
by Michael Russell, MSP (Minister for Culture, External Affairs and
the Constitution) on behalf of the Scottish Government |
Saturday,
13 June 2009
Playfair Library, Old
College
| 9.00
am |
Session
5/Dialogue: David Hume's Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion
Discussion Leader: Robert Gibbs (Director, Jackman Humanities Institute,
University of Toronto) |
| 10.30
am |
Coffee |
|
11.00 am
|
Session
6/Workshop: Creating Dialogue
Sarah Buie (Director, Higgins School of the Humanities, Clark University)
Daniel Herwitz (Director, Institute for the Humanities, University
of Michigan) |
| 12.30
pm |
Lunch, with New Directors'
Introductions and CHCI Business Meeting
|
| 2.30
pm |
Session
7/Dialogue: Placing Enlightenments, Then and Now
Charles McKean (Professor of Architectural History, University of
Dundee)
Stuart Taberner (Professor of Contemporary German Literature, Culture
and Society, University of Leeds, and Director, Leeds Humanities Research
Institute)
Chair: Frédéric Ogée (Professor of English Literature and Vice Président,
Bureau des relations internationales, Université Paris VII - Denis
Diderot) |
| 4.00
pm |
Tea |
| 4.30
pm |
Session
8/Dialogue: Music: The Language of the Enlightenment?
Michael Steinberg (Director, Cogut Center for the Humanities, Brown
University)
Ruth HaCohen (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem) |
| 6.15
pm |
St. Cecilia's
Hall, Cowgate
Lecture/Recital by Kirsteen McCue and David Hamilton commemorating
Robert Burns' 250th Anniversary, followed by reception at the Scottish
Storytelling Centre, 43-45 High Street |
OPTIONAL
TOURS: Sunday 14 June 2009
These tours must be pre-booked
and places will be allocated on a first-come-first-served basis.
1. Day tour to Paxton House,
Berwick upon Tweed (cost £35)
Set in the beautiful Scottish Borders and built in 1758
for a young Scottish Laird, Patrick Home of Billie, award winning Paxton
House is one of the finest 18th century Palladian country houses in Britain.
Built by John Adam on a ridge overlooking the River Tweed, Paxton House
features 12 period rooms many boasting interiors by Robert Adam and fine
collections of Chippendale and Trotter furniture. The magnificent Picture
Gallery houses over 70 paintings from the National Galleries of Scotland,
including masterpieces by Raeburn, Wilkie and Lawrence. You can also enjoy
over 80 acres of gardens, woodland and park-land and a mile of the breathtaking
River Tweed.
The cost
of the tour includes:
- coach
travel from Edinburgh
- a full
guided tour of the House plus a summary session with the Curator giving
access to the collection in more detail and a visual presentation showing
the Paxton collection and particularly the Chippendale furniture in
context
- lunch
- time to explore
the extensive grounds.
2. Morning Walking
Tour of Edinburgh's Old and New Towns (cost
£15)
Explore
the delights of the city of Edinburgh, a World Heritage Site, with architectural
historian, Professor Charles McKean -
Twin Citadels - Beginning on the Castle Esplanade, walking
through the crucible of the Enlightenment, the homes of its literati and
clubs, down into the Canongate, and up Jacob's ladder to the Acropolis
of Modern Athens, through its streets to Charlotte Square.
N.B. Please bring
comfortable shoes!
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