Institut français
d’archéologie orientale du Caire

IFAO

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1526

Colloque international

Du mardi 20 juin 2023 au jeudi 22 juin 2023 à 9h00 (heure du Caire), IFAO géolocalisation IFAO

Writing Performances
Symbolic representations of writing’s power

Chloé Ragazzoli & Carole Roche-Hawley

Partenaire(s) de l’Ifao : Orient et Méditerranée - UMR 8167 & IFPO

Langue : anglais.

Organized by the Institut français d'archéologie orientale (Ifao), Orient et Méditerranée - UMR 8167 and the Institut Français de Proche-Orient (IFPO), this conference is intended to question and advance our understanding of the specificity of writing, as symbol, as pragmatic tool and as social instrument, moving beyond the traditional auxiliary view of writing, which reduces it to a system of encoded linguistic signs. 
 
The conference will be held at the Institut français d’archéologie orientale (Ifao) in Cairo, 20-22 June 2023, and will bring together historians and specialists in written cultures from the world, including contemporary writing and the digital humanities.

Programme

The conference is open to attendance. In order to attend the conference sessions at the Ifao in Cairo, please register by filling this form (Link to registration for attendance form).

Remote attendance is also available. If you wish to attend remotely, please fill the Remote Attendance inscription form here.

About the conference

Writing is much more than a transcriptional tool at the service of the spoken word, of a message or of a memory; it’s purview is not limited to transmitting or preserving statements. Beyond its status as vehicle for a signifié, writing also has great social power, often intimately connected with its visual and graphic shape, but also with the physical and social contexts linked with the acts of inscribing and viewing. This conference is devoted to these broad questions of the social and symbolic uses of writing, as studied through the prism of a very revealing phenomenon, which we consider especially conducive to comparative approaches, and which we have labelled “writing as spectacle”. By this we are referring to those occasions in which an act of writing is itself represented in narrative discourse and/or in iconography. [On this, see http://abecedaire.enssib.fr/s/spectacle-decriture/notices]

By focusing on such cases of overtly ostentatious acts of writing, we can observe and better understand just how writing, in its various typological forms, is being socially instrumentalized. Self-representational texts such as funerary biographies, historical annals or commemorative inscriptions are the first to catch our attention, but further examples taken from other genres will also be considered in counterpoint (funerary texts; narrative literature; sapiential and didactic texts; heroic or royal gestes; ephemeral documents such as letters, reports, etc.).

We will also take iconography into consideration, for example the decorative planning of private tombs in the pharaonic world of ancient Egypt, which falls under the logic of self-representation within an established social and decorative model. We will add other cases: for example those in which a document is displayed in a symbolic context, either being quoted, or visually represented in figurative art, by the presence of handwritten documents in iconography or among the accessories of a statue.

This conference is intended to question and advance our understanding of the specificity of writing, as symbol, as pragmatic tool and as social instrument, moving beyond the traditional auxiliary view of writing, which reduces it to a system of encoded linguistic signs. 

The conference is structured around three principal axes or themes:

These three axes should make it possible to answer, through the study of lexicon, of iconography, of sign forms and paleography, of writing habits, jargon and discourse about writing, a wide range of questions about the power of writing in the societies under study. Among these: How exactly do we refer to the act of writing? What are the social and symbolic values attached to acts of writing? Why should such be placed on display? What role does the written word and the act of writing play in establishing knowledge and truth, of a person or group’s identity, or in establishing and affirming social prestige? What status is accorded to the written sign, in the context of accounting purposes but also in interactions with the divine, sacred and even magical worlds?

Organized in cooperation with Ifao and Sorbonne University’s scientific program entitled “Ecritures: Toward an archeology and an anthropology of ancient Egyptian writing practices”, this conference is also the fruit of the “transversal” project “ “writing as spectacle” conducted in the laboratory “Orient et Méditerranée” UMR 8167 (https://www.orient-mediterranee.com/spip.php?article3965). It has also benefited from financial support provided by the Institut français du Proche Orient (Beirut).  

Organisers and contacts: Chloé Ragazzoli (Sorbonne Université, UMR 8167 Orient et Méditerranée) et Carole Roche-Hawley (UMR 8167 and Institut français du Proche-Orient) : chloe.ragazzoli[at]sorbonne-universite.fr & c.roche-hawley[at]ifporient.org

List of participants

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