Showing posts with label Conferences. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Conferences. Show all posts

Thursday, 13 March 2025

ENSIE in Vilnius: Program published

ENSIE participation in the biannual conference of ESSWE at Vilnius University in Lithuania, Thursday June 26 to Saturday June 28 will be announced when the ESSWE program is published.

The program of the ENSIE workshop on Wednesday June 25, also at Vilnius University, is as follows:

12:30–12:45: Welcome
12:45–14:15: Panel 1: Foundational

  • Liana Saif (Amsterdam), “Esotericism and Antinomianism (8th-9th centuries).”
  • Fares Gillon (Aix-Marseille), “‘Human Angels’ in Early Shi'ism and Ismailism.”
  • Jannis Kostelnik (Hamburg), “Magic Squares as a Weapon of War: The Manuscript WMS Arabic 723 as an Expression of Applied Esotericism in West Africa.”
14:15–14:30: Break
14:30–16:00: Panel 2: Conceptual
  • Charles Burnett (Warburg Institute), “Sūra and Figura.”
  • Antonio de Diego González (Malaga), “Ajami-beings. An Onto-Epistemic Aperture to Islamic Esotericism.”
  • Mark Sedgwick (Aarhus), “Islam, Esotericism, and NRMs.”
16:00–16:30: Break
16:30–18:00: Panel 3: Modern
  • Oleg Yarosh (Aarhus), “Trajectories of Sufi Healing in the Post-Soviet Esoteric Milieu.”
  • Rasoul Namazi (Duke Kunshan), “Ahmad Fardid: Westoxification and Mystical Politics in Modern Iran.”
  • Maryam Abbasi (Erlangen), “Digital Mediumship: An Ethnographic Study of Spirit Mediumship on Social Media Platforms in Contemporary Iran.”
18:00–18:15: Meeting of members
19:00: ENSIE dinner

The workshop is open to all members of ENSIE and/or ESSWE. There is no fee, but please send your name to secretary@ensie.site if you intend to attend, indicating whether or not you wish to join the ENSIE dinner on June 25, which participants will pay for themselves.

Monday, 28 October 2024

ENSIE Call for Papers for ESSWE10

Vilnius, Lithuania  25-28 June 2025


ENSIE is again organising panels for the biannual conference of ESSWE, which in 2025 will be at Vilnius University in Lithuania, Thursday June 26 to Saturday June 28. The theme of the ESSWE conference is "Esotericism and Rationality." Proposals are therefore invited for papers dealing with any aspect of Islam, esotericism, and rationality. ​As ESSWE is also inviting reflections on the past research that the study of esotericism has undertaken and its evolution, proposals are also invited for papers that reflect on the past research that the study of Islam and esotericism has undertaken and on its evolution and the diverse methodological paths it has explored over the years. ENSIE will then assemble proposals for papers into proposals for ENSIE sessions, and forward these to ESSWE. Each session will have three to four papers. 


ENSIE will also be holding an additional ENSIE workshop with round tables purely for ENSIE members in conjunction with the ESSWE conference, on Wednesday June 25, also at Vilnius University. This will follow the overall aims of ENSIE, not just the ESSWE theme.

Proposals for ESSWE panels and/or the ENSIE workshop should be submitted by 15 December 2024 to esswe10@ensie.site. It is possible to participate in both events, but only one paper may be submitted for each one. Please include name, title, and institutional affiliation, and then 3-5 keywords and, for paper proposals, a title and an abstract of no more than 300 words. 

For further information, see https://www.esswe.org/current-conference.

 

Saturday, 13 January 2024

ENSIE 2024 deadline approaching

15 February 2024 is the deadline for proposals for the 2024 Meeting of the European Network for the Study of Islam and Esotericism (ENSIE), 2-3 July 2024, University of Exeter, England.

The theme for the meeting is “Dreams and Visions in Islam”. Although we especially invite papers that engage with the meeting theme, proposals that do not relate to the meeting theme are also welcome. See http://ensie.site/conferences.html for more details.

Friday, 13 October 2023

ENSIE 2024 Call for papers (updated)

“Dreams and Visions in Islam” 

2024 Meeting of the European Network for the Study of Islam and Esotericism (ENSIE), 2-3 July 2024, University of Exeter, England.

Deadline for submissions: 15 February 2024. 

The theme for the meeting is “Dreams and Visions in Islam”. See http://ensie.site/conferences.html for more details. Although we especially invite papers that engage with the meeting theme, proposals that do not relate to the meeting theme are also welcome. 

There is no fee for attending the meeting and subsidized accommodation on campus will be provided, but the cost of travel is the responsibility of individual participants.

Friday, 17 March 2023

Art, Aesthetics and Islamic Mysticism

From Fachbereich Interreligiöser Dialog, Akademie der Diözese Rottenburg-Stuttgart:

During the 20th and 21st centuries, Islamic mysticism, or Sufism, spread extensively throughout Western society. Today’s Sufis, whilst still practicing the traditional arts, also express themselves through plastic and visual arts, performing arts, architecture, music and other forms of artistic conceptualizations.

This conference will focus on the aesthetic engagement of contemporary artists with Sufi practices, rituals, and discourses in the two-day international interdisciplinary online Conference Art, Aesthetics and Islamic Mysticism: Contemporary Perspectives on March 30th - 31st 2023

The Conference will bring together international scholars as well as artists, and will include the screening of two movies, “Light upon Light” und “Wajd Sufi (Sufi Ecstasy)”. The conference language will be English. You can register via our online form here.

Saturday, 5 March 2022

ENSIE at ESSWE

The three ENSIE panels for the ESSWE conference on “​Western Esotericism and Creativity: Art, Performance and Innovation” on 5-7 July 2022 are now confirmed and listed at http://ensie.site/conferences.html. Conference registration is open at http://esswe8.com/?page_id=90. See you in Cork!

Thursday, 3 March 2022

Call for Papers: The Eranos Experience

A conference on “The Eranos Experience: Spirituality and the Arts from a Comparative Perspective” will be held in Venice on the 17th-18th-19th of November 2022. The conference is organised jointly by Fondazione Giorgio Cini and the Centre for the History of Hermetic Philosophy and Related Currents (Amsterdam), in collaboration with the Chair for Literature and Cultural Studies at the ETH (Zurich). The event will take place over three days and will be complemented by three artistic events (two musical performances and one dance performance). See the full Call here.

Friday, 23 April 2021

Wednesday, 14 April 2021

Sufism and Gender in Contemporary Societies

The Center for Comparative Studies of Civilisations and Spiritualities at the Fondazione Giorgio Cini in Venice has issued a Call for Papers for a conference on Sufism and Gender in Contemporary Societies.
This conference aims to explore these themes of gender and sexuality within contemporary and historical Sufi traditions. Keeping in mind the call to decolonize knowledge production and epistemologies that subvert binaries of “resistance versus subordination” in Muslim women’s life-worlds, we aim to take an expansive discussion of the complex processes of the agentive formation of gendered Sufi subjectivities.
Conference to be held in Venice on 3 December 2021. Abstracts by 1 June 2021. See https://www.cini.it/en/events/sufism-and-gender-in-contemporary-societies

Wednesday, 10 March 2021

2021 Meeting of ENSIE: Call for Papers

Islam and Esotericism: Societies, Politics, and Practices

2021 Meeting of the European Network for the Study of Islam and Esotericism (ENSIE) 
29 September-1 October 2021 on Zoom 

The European Network for the Study of Islam and Esotericism (ENSIE) invites proposals for its 2021 meeting, to be held on Zoom 29 September-1 October 2021. The theme for the meeting is “Islam and Esotericism: Societies, Politics, and Practices.” 

Religious studies, and especially the study of esotericism, tend to focus on text production and ideas. Societies, politics, practices—and also economics, social forms, and the material—are often neglected in the study of esotericism, partly due to methodological challenges. We would therefore like to invite scholars to submit proposals focusing on these dimensions of Islam and esotericism, of esotericism and Islam, and of Islamic esotericism. 

We especially invite proposals from sociologists and anthropologists, as well as other scholars. The chronological scope stretches from medieval to contemporary times. 

We invite papers that engage with these aims, but—as usual—proposals relating to Islam and Esotericism that do not relate to the meeting theme are also welcome. 

The meeting will be held over successive afternoons to make it possible for both European scholars and scholars in American time zones to participate. 

There is no fee for attending the meeting. 

Timing
The meeting is being held in 2021 rather than 2022 (when it would normally be held, following ENSIE’s standard practice) because the 2021 meeting of the European Society for the Study of Western Esotericism (ESSWE), of which ENSIE is a thematic network, has moved its 2021 conference to 2022 because of Covid, and ENSIE’s 2022 meeting will therefore be part of ESSWE’s 2022 conference. 

Proposals 
By 15 May 2021, please send to ensie21@ensie.site
  • The title and abstract (250 words maximum) of your proposed paper.
  • Your name, institution, academic position, a brief bio
  • A short CV. 
Scientific committee 
The meeting is organised by
  • Mark Sedgwick, Professor of Arab and Islamic Studies, Aarhus University, and Convener of ENSIE
  • Liana Saif, assistant professor in the History of Western Esotericism in The Middle Ages, University of Amsterdam
  • Francesco Piraino, Postdoc, Università Ca’ Foscari, Venice, and Fondazione Giorgio Cini
  • Michele Petrone, Adjunct professor, Università di Milano
Updates at http://ensie.site/conferences.html.

Friday, 5 March 2021

Esoteric Transfers and Constructions

Just published: the book of the 2018 ENSIE conference, held in Venice. Esoteric Transfers and Constructions: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, ed. Mark Sedgwick and Francesco Piraino (New York: Palgrave, 2021).

Similarities between esoteric and mystical currents in different religious traditions have long interested scholars. This book takes a new look at the relationship between such currents. It advances a discussion that started with the search for religious essences, archetypes, and universals, from William James to Eranos. The universal categories that resulted from that search were later criticized as essentialist constructions, and questioned by deconstructionists. An alternative explanation was advanced by diffusionists: that there were transfers between different traditions. This book presents empirical case studies of such constructions, and of transfers between Judaism, Christianity, and Islam in the premodern period, and Judaism, Christianity, and Western esotericism in the modern period. It shows that there were indeed transfers that can be clearly documented, and that there were also indeed constructions, often very imaginative. It also shows that there were many cases that were neither transfers nor constructions, but a mixture of the two.

See https://www.palgrave.com/gp/book/9783030617875 for full table of contents and other details. 

Monday, 1 February 2021

ENSIE at ESSWE

Because of Covid restrictions, the eighth ESSWE conference, for which ENSIE has arranged three panels, which was originally scheduled for 5-7 July 2021, has been postponed until the summer of 2022, probably also 5-7 July, and still in Cork.

Given this, the third ENSIE conference, originally planned for the summer of 2022, will be brought forward to 2021, almost certainly online. Further details will be announced later.

Thursday, 14 January 2021

ENSIE 3 (2021/22)

Following our successful 2020 conference on "Islamic Esotericism in Global Contexts" (ENSIE 2), our next conference (ENSIE 3) will be on "The Social History of Islamic Esotericism." We understand "social" to include both the economic and the political, and everyday life. A formal Call will be issued later, but as usual we will also accept papers of relevance to the study of Islam and esotericism that do not directly address the conference topic.

We are still hoping that the 2021 ESSWE meeting, scheduled for 5-7 July in Cork, will happen according to plan, including the ENSIE panels that have been submitted. In that case, ENSIE 3 will be in 2022. If, however, Covid-19 means that the 2021 ESSWE meeting is delayed until 2022, we may well hold ENSIE 3 online in 2021 instead.

Islamic Occult Studies Working Group, March–December 2021

Guest post by Matthew Melvin-Koushki:

The study of Islamic occultism and esotericism as an interdisciplinary field has grown with astonishing rapidity over the last several years, as showcased in recent volumes, conferences and workshops. Due to this rapid growth, however, we do not yet have a full database of Islamicists working either wholly or partially on matters occult. Impelled by the exigencies of 2020-2021, which has seen the canceling or moving online of our events (including the wonderful December ENSIE conference), the formation of such a database would seem to be the most productive way of moving the field forward while we wait out the pandemic and its socioeconomic aftermath.

In lieu of the “Islamic Occult Studies on the Rise” symposium, organized by myself, Matthew Melvin-Koushki, and Noah Gardiner, that was to take place at the University of South Carolina last March, and whose funding remains available, we therefore propose a nine-month working group. It will consist of one three-hour meeting per month, beginning this March and going to December, with a month's break in the summer. Keeping with the spirit of our original plan, each meeting will showcase the work primarily of junior scholars in the field, with mid-career and more senior folks acting as chairs and discussants, with some exceptions based on theme.

Each meeting will feature two panels, each of which will consist of two 15-minute talks followed by a half hour of moderated conversation. There will be short breaks in between, and each meeting will conclude with a "happy hour" for those who'd like to stay on and chew the fat or otherwise network with old friends and new, including in private breakout rooms. Rather than being traditional conference papers, the 15-minute talks are intended as opportunities for presenters to briefly summarize their current research trajectory and questions as fodder for extended discussion. Each presenter will also be asked to submit a 1,000-word blog post summarizing their research, which will be published – in citable format – on the new Islamic Occult Studies working group website, islamicoccult.org (currently under construction). To further sweeten the deal, presenters who are grad students or postdocs will receive a $300 honorarium.

We realize that not everyone will be able or desire to attend every monthly meeting, but do ask that those interested attend as many as is feasible, so we can achieve critical mass at and continuity between each. Given the large number of invitees, however, it will be difficult to find a day and time that works for everyone. If the final schedule doesn't quite fit yours, feel free to come and go as necessary, or even pop in for the happy hour only. But we propose the third or fourth Friday of each month (with exceptions for MESA and AAR), from March onward, as the most likely bet. Being the day of Venus, it also accords well with our happy hour theme! And to make it accessible for everyone interested, we propose a start time of 11 am EST (UTC -5:00) [17:00 CET], so most folks from California and British Columbia to Iran and India will be able to join during waking hours.

We've created a poll to this effect. Even if you're not sure of your schedule yet, please do indicate all the Fridays you might be able to attend (two clicks on the box), just for our planning purposes. And if the 11 am EST timeslot doesn't work for you on a given Friday, but a later or earlier timeslot does, please let us know that as well in the comments: https://doodle.com/poll/a3brx73yskhx948u?utm_source=poll&utm_medium=link. Based on your responses, we'll start putting together the working group program, and send out speaker and chair invitations.

The plan, in short, is to use this working group to a) create a mutual support network, and b) compile a Who's Who in the study of Islamic occultism and esotericism for easy reference by specialists and nonspecialists alike. Now that the field, astonishingly, boasts many dozens of invested scholars internationally, most of them nontenured, we figure it's time to strike while the iron's hot, and show each other and the larger academic community exactly what we're all up to. For those of us on the job market, it will also serve as a handy database of like-minded scholars we can turn to for reference letters, tenure and promotion letters, reviewer suggestions, research collaborations, etc. Likewise, this working group will involve publication opportunities, most likely in the form of one or more special issues of Magic, Ritual and Witchcraft.

Note that this working group is not open to the public. If your scholarly focus is wholly or partially on Islamic occultism and esotericism, please fill out the above poll, then contact me with a brief description of your work and interests at mmelvink@sc.edu, and I’ll add you to the ever-growing roster!

Saturday, 14 November 2020

ENSIE2

The program for ENSIE2 is now online at http://ensie.site/2020conference.html

The conference will be 3-5 December, on Zoom. It examines Islam and esotericism, from Sufism and dreams to sorcery and magic, in al-Andalus, the historical and contemporary Middle East, Africa, and the West. Register before December 1 at https://doodle.com/poll/ahvdmz9airifz933.

Saturday, 19 September 2020

ENSIE at ESSWE8: Deadline approaching

As previously announced, ENSIE is again organising panels for the biannual conference of ESSWE, which in 2021 will be in Cork from 5 July to 7 July. 

The theme of the conference is "Western Esotericism and Creativity: Art, Performance and Innovation." Proposals are therefore invited for papers dealing with any aspect of Islam, esotericism and creativity. ​ENSIE will then assemble proposals for papers into proposals for sessions, and forward these to ESSWE. Each session will have three or four papers. 

 Proposals of max. 300 words with 3-5 keywords and the name, title, and institutional affiliation of the proposer should be submitted by 1 October 2020 to Mark Sedgwick, mjrs@cas.au.dk. The ESSWE deadline is 1 November 2020, and the ENSIE deadline is designed to allow time to meet this. For further information, visit http://esswe8.com and http://ensie.site/conferences.html.

Saturday, 8 August 2020

ENSIE Call for Papers for ESSWE8

ENSIE is again organising panels for the biannual conference of ESSWE, which in 2021 will be in Cork from 5 July to 7 July. The theme of the conference is "Western Esotericism and Creativity: Art, Performance and Innovation." Proposals are therefore invited for papers dealing with any aspect of Islam, esotericism and creativity. ​ENSIE will then assemble proposals for papers into proposals for sessions, and forward these to ESSWE. Each session will have three or four papers.

Proposals of max. 300 words with 3-5 keywords and the name, title, and institutional affiliation of the proposer should be submitted by 1 October 2020 to Mark Sedgwick, mjrs@cas.au.dk. The ESSWE deadline is 1 November 2020, and the ENSIE deadline is designed to allow time to meet this.

For further information, visit http://esswe8.com and http://ensie.site/conferences.html.

Saturday, 18 April 2020

Deadline approaching: ENSIE 2020

The deadline for proposals for ENSIE 2020 (Louvain la-Neuve, 24-26 September, 2020) is approaching: 1 May, 2020. Send abstracts and CVs to 2020ensie@gmail.com. Further information at http://ensie.site/conferences.html.

We still hope that we will be able to meet physically in September, but if for any reason we cannot, we will still hold the conference one way or another, in sha Allah, so please send us your proposal, if you have not already done so.

Thursday, 13 February 2020

Call for Papers: ENSIE 2020

Call for Papers 
“Islamic Esotericism in Global Contexts” 
2020 Meeting of the European Network for the Study of Islam and Esotericism (ENSIE) 
24-26 September, 2020 
Université catholique de Louvain, Louvain la-Neuve, Belgium 
Deadline for submissions: 1 May, 2020

The European Network for the Study of Islam and Esotericism (ENSIE) invites you to submit proposals for its 2020 meeting. The theme for the meeting is “Islamic Esotericism in Global Contexts”. The aim is to consider the relationship between Islam and esotericism, and Islamic esotericism, in a global context, shifting the emphasis not only from Western perspectives, but also being more inclusive of the experience of Islam beyond the Arabo-Persian domains. We encourage proposals that give prominence to the agency of non-Western actors in negotiating and challenging social, political, and doctrinal “realities” as they manifest in the writings and activities of esoteric groups and systems. The chronological scope thus stretches from medieval to contemporary times. We encourage papers outlining suitable methods of investigation, re-evaluating accepted conceptual frameworks, formulating effective comparative research, and foraying into new textual frontiers.

We invite papers that engage with these aims, but proposals that do not relate to the 2020 meeting theme are also welcome.

There is no fee for attending the meeting and accommodation will be provided, but the cost of travel is the responsibility of individual participants.

Further information at http://ensie.site/conferences.html.

Monday, 30 December 2019

Symposium on Orientalisms and Esotericisms in Costa Rica

Just announced: a symposium on Orientalisms and Esotericisms to be held in Costa Rica, October 20-22, 2020, organised by the University of Costa Rica and the Centro de Estudios sobre el Esoterismo Occidental (CEEO-UNASUR).

The following dates have been announced:
  • January 2020: Circular 1.
  • April 2020: Circular 2.
  • July 31, 2020: Registration closing.
  • August 2020: Acceptance letter endorsed by the international scientific committee.
  • September 30, 2020: Delivery of paper for publication.
  • October 20-22 of 2020: International Symposium.
The coordination team consists of:
  • Francisco Rodríguez Cascante, UCR-SRO
  • Esteban Rodríguez Dobles, UCR-EEG
  • Juan Pablo Bubello, University of Buenos Aires and CEEO-UNASUR
  • Gabriel Terol, University of Valencia
  • Ricardo Martínez Esquivel, UCR-SRP and REHMLAC +
The conference language is Spanish, but panel proposals in English will also be accepted.

For further information, contact REHMLAC@ucr.ac.cr. This is the email address of the Revista de Estudios Históricos de la Masonería Latinoamericana y Caribeña (Journal for the Historical Study of Latin American and Caribbean Freemasonry).