2015 Gingko Library Conference Call for Papers


2015-9-20


Iran’s Constitutional Revolution of 1906 and the Narratives of the Enlightenment
Gingko-BIPS Conference 15-16 September 2015 British Academy, London
Convened by Professor Ali Ansari, British Institute of Persian Studies Dr Barbara Schwepcke, Gingko Library

 

The Constitutional Revolution of 1906 is widely recognised by historians of Iran as the moment in which the foundations of the modern Iranian state and politics were laid. For all its practical and immediate failures, the Constitutional Revolution had a profound effect on the political culture of the country, establishing the principles of parliamentary representation and shaping popular attitudes towards the state long after the turmoil of revolt had subsided. Giving voice to powerful nationalist impulses, the causes and consequences of the Constitutional Revolution continue to dominate political discourse in Iran to this day.

This international conference will bring together scholars from East and West to discuss the intellectual roots and consequences of the Revolution. It will focus, in particular, on the impact of Enlightenment thought on the intellectuals that formed the vanguard of the Constitutional Movement and the means and ways in which they engaged with new ideas of political organisation and sought to make them their own. How did Iranian thinkers, scholars and political activists draw on and apply ideas of constitutionalism and the rule of law? How did they understand the challenges facing their country, and how, in particular, did they seek to inculcate a popular sense of patriotism and national purpose? The conference will also look at the historiography of the Constitutional Revolution; how it has been subsequently interpreted by both academics and politicians.

A central theme of the conference will be the intellectual engagement between East and West and the inter-relationship of ideas that emerged. It will be of interest to scholars of Iran, Europe and broader intellectual history.

Abstracts for papers should be submitted by Friday 17 April to Aran Byrne, details below. Proposals should be no more than 300 words long. Speakers will be given 15-20 minutes to present their papers at the conference. Papers should present original research, which expands the boundaries of knowledge, and which the scholars would like to be considered for publication.

Key dates:
Deadline for submission of abstracts and panel proposals: 17 April
Accepted papers and panels announced: 15 May
Deadline for participant registration: 10 July
Deadline for paper submission: 14 August
Conference dates: 14-16 September
Deadline for submission of revised papers for peer-review and inclusion in conference publication: 16 October
Publication of conference proceedings: Autumn/Fall 2016

For further details please contact:
Aran Byrne, Gingko Library, 70 Cadogan Place, London SW1X 9AH
Tel: +44 (0)20 7838 9055
Fax: +44 (0)20 7584 9501
aran@thegingkolibrary.com

The Gingko conference series brings together scholars from the East and the West. The Gingko conferences are designed to complement the Gingko Library, a project to publish one hundred books over the next ten years that present the latest work in all languages and across the full range of humanities, social sciences and sciences relating to the MENA region.

The conference will include an event in celebration of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe’s West-East Divan, published almost 200 years ago – with Mahmoud Dowlatabadi and Joachim Sartorius – and will conclude with an plenary discussion open to the interested public to provide a contemporary perspective and present an opportunity to take part in this scholarly debate.

The presentations and discussions will be recorded and made available as podcasts to reach a wider audience. Funding opportunities to cover travel and accommodation are available for scholars selected to speak at the conference. Selected papers delivered at the conference will be published together in a volume in the Gingko Library, following peer review. Speakers at the conference may also develop their papers into book-length proposals to be submitted to the Gingko Library.



 
Number of Visits: 4022


Comments

 
Full Name:
Email:
Comment:
 

Destiny Had It So

Memoirs of Seyyed Nouraddin Afi
It was early October 1982, just two or three days before the commencement of the operation. A few of the lads, including Karim and Mahmoud Sattari—the two brothers—as well as my own brother Seyyed Sadegh, came over and said, "Come on, let's head towards the water." It was the first days of autumn, and the air was beginning to cool, but I didn’t decline their invitation and set off with them.
Oral History School – 7

The interviewer is the best compiler

According to Oral History Website, Dr. Morteza Rasoulipour in the framework of four online sessions described the topic “Compilation in Oral History” in the second half of the month of Mordad (August 2024). It has been organized by the Iranian History Association. In continuation, a selection of the teaching will be retold:
An Excerpt from the Narratives of Andimeshk Women on Washing Clothes During the Sacred Defense

The Last Day of Summer, 1980

We had livestock. We would move between summer and winter pastures. I was alone in managing everything: tending to the herd and overseeing my children’s education. I purchased a house in the city for the children and hired a shepherd to watch over the animals, bringing them near the Karkheh River. Alongside other herders, we pitched tents.

Memoirs of Commander Mohammad Jafar Asadi about Ayatollah Madani

As I previously mentioned, alongside Mehdi, as a revolutionary young man, there was also a cleric in Nurabad, a Sayyid, whose identity we had to approach with caution, following the group’s security protocols, to ascertain who he truly was. We assigned Hajj Mousa Rezazadeh, a local shopkeeper in Nurabad, who had already cooperated with us, ...