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Appel à candidatures pour des bourses de recherche en islamologie / Date limite de candidature : 01/09/2023

Le Ministère de l’Europe et des Affaires Etrangères et le réseau des UMIFRE souhaitent soutenir la jeune recherche en islamologie en proposant des bourses de terrain d’une durée de trois mois à destination d’étudiants de Master ayant le souhait de poursuivre des recherches dans ce domaine. Les boursiers et boursières seront accueilli/es par les centres membres du réseau des UMIFRE et d’autres instituts de recherche partenaires du programme: IRMC, CJB, IFRA-Ibadan, IFRA-Nairobi, CSH Inde, IFEA Istanbul, CEDEJ, IFEAC, IFPO, CEFREPA, IRASEC, CFEE, IDEO.

MASTER 2 (3 mois)

Durée et condition de la mobilité :

  • Séjour de 3 mois
  • 1000 euros/mois
  • Les candidat/es devront répondre aux critères suivants :
  • Ne pas avoir déjà bénéficié de la bourse de recherche islamologie du MEAE
  • Les candidat/es devront avoir achevé leur Master 1 et être inscrit/e en Master 2 dans une université française (ou en co-direction avec un enseignant d’une université française).
    En savoir plus ici

————————————————————————

Doctorants/Jeunes docteurs (6 mois)

Descriptif de la bourse :

L’octroi d’une bourse de mobilité devra permettre aux doctorant/es ou jeune docteur/esd’accomplir un travail de terrain de recherche en islamologie en étant accueilli/es dans uneou deux UMIFRE (ou instituts partenaires du programme). La discipline « islamologie » estentendue au sens large et pourra intégrer les axes suivants (sans s’y limiter) :

  • Analyse, sciences et critique des textes et des doctrines
  • Etude historique de l’Islam
  • Etude en sciences sociales (histoire, sociologie, anthropologie, science politique,géographie, démographie) des groupes musulmansUne attention particulière sera portée à l’insertion du projet de recherche dans les axesdéveloppés par leur(s) UMIFRE ou instituts de recherche d’accueil et/ou auxcollaborations envisagées avec les institutions universitaires et de recherche locales.En savoir plus ici
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CALL OF PAPERS - CfA CEST Symposium, Sciences Po Paris, Nov. 17-18: State, Party, and Society in Turkey and Beyond Deadline: 15 June 2023

The Centre for International Studies at Sciences Po, together with the Consortium of European Symposia on Turkey (CEST), is delighted to invite paper submissions for a Symposium to be held on November 17-18th, 2023 at Sciences Po in Paris, France.

The topic “State, Party, Society” hints at a debate on Turkey in the last years, both in the media and academia, around the question of how to qualify the place and role of the hegemonic party in the political field. Has Turkey under the AKP/Justice and Development Party rule become a “state party” or perhaps a “party state”? To what extent do these qualifications make sense, what do they uncover and enlighten - and possibly make invisible? This questioning has also fueled debate about the single party period that Turkey went through between 1923 and 1946 and that recent historical works have questioned anew. Parallels have even been drawn between Turkey’s single party period and today’s situation. Disentangling the relations and functioning of state and party seems particularly relevant in this respect, as well as thinking about possible historical continuities and discontinuities.

This questioning requires disentangling “state” and “party” by looking at their internal organization, conflicts, and workings, and the impact of these on their relationships. As far as the “state” is concerned, several works have shown that it may be more relevant to speak about public institutions in plural in order to avoid any reification of the “state”. Regarding the party, the alliance between the AKP and the Turkish nationalist MHP since the mid-2010s appears as an important parameter. What has this alliance produced in terms of relations between party/parties and state institutions? A further question is to what extent power concentration in the AKP has come along with, or given impetus to, concentration of power in public institutions. Finally, how have the reconfigurations between party and public institutions, and especially the concentration of power, impacted state capacity over time? The aftermath of the recent earthquake casts doubt on the common idea that concentration of power leads to more efficacy.

Complicating the picture is the question of what anchors public institutions and the hegemonic party and its allies in society. Relocating both party and institutions in their social environment complicates what would seem to be a face-off between state and party by introducing other social actors and social dynamics. To what extent and how do these social anchors fuel, hinder or refract relations between state and party? Social anchoring may include organized society (NGOs, labor unions, religious communities and brotherhoods, professional chambers, business, media, activists, vigilantes, etc.), but also broader social groups. What roles are played by the social anchoring of institutions and parties in exercising, consolidating or contesting power and government, and what forms does that take? To what extent do these anchors take various shapes and have divergent implications in diverse social fields? To what extent can we speak about a “hegemonic bloc” that extends throughout state, party, and society – and throughout various social fields?

A comparative perspective is particularly relevant, bringing in cases where these questions have been much worked on (USSR, Russia, the People's Republic of China). Another important comparative angle might be how Turkey’s diasporas abroad reconfigure the triangle between party, state and society in different locations.

We welcome applications from all fields related to the study of society and politics, with a particular interest in comparative work. We would also like to stress our interest in historical studies and a critical debate on the conclusions that can be drawn from those historical cases for our understanding of the relations between state party, and society today. Our emphasis is on Turkey and its region, but we welcome comparative or conceptual work from other world regions, as long as it promises valuable insights for our regional angle.

Applicants are invited to submit to: Cette adresse e-mail est protégée contre les robots spammeurs. Vous devez activer le JavaScript pour la visualiser.

  • an abstract of max. 300 words,
  • a CV of max. 300 words,
  • a full CV with publications, if applicable.

The submission deadline is 15 June 2023. Please note that incomplete applications will not be considered.

Factsheet

     Convenor: Elise Massicard

     Who can apply? Advanced PhD students and post-doctoral scholars (within six years of graduation) from Turkey and Europe

     Submission deadline: 15 June 2023

     Submission requirements: 300 word abstract, 300 word CV, publication list.

     Submission mailbox: Cette adresse e-mail est protégée contre les robots spammeurs. Vous devez activer le JavaScript pour la visualiser.

     Expenses: Accommodation for two nights and travel expenses will be reimbursed.

                       Travel expenses will be reimbursed according to the country of your institution, i.e. for Europe up to 350 Euro.

     Submission of papers: Draft papers must be submitted by October 15.

     Publication: A publication of the best papers is planned.

     Successful applicants will be informed mid-July 2023.

     Please consult Dr. Elise Massicard for further information: Cette adresse e-mail est protégée contre les robots spammeurs. Vous devez activer le JavaScript pour la visualiser.

This Symposium is convened as part of the Consortium for European Symposia on Turkey (CEST) which is funded by Stiftung Mercator. CEST is committed to the study of modern Turkey by bringing together the expertise of leading European research institutions: SciencesPo Paris, Stockholm University, University of Vienna,Universita Ca’Foscari, Duisburg/Essen Universität, L’Orientale Napoli.

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Makale Çağrısı: Channels of transmission of astronomical knowledge in the ottoman world - SON BAŞVURU TARİHİ 25/06/2023

Uluslararası Kongre Duyurusu: “Channels of Transmission of Astronomical Knowledge in the Ottoman World (14th-18th Centuries)”

“Channels of Transmission of Astronomical Knowledge in the Ottoman World (14th-18th Centuries)” Başlıklı Uluslararası Kongrenin Başvuruları Başladı.

İstanbul Üniversitesi Edebiyat Fakültesi Bilim Tarihi Bölümü ve Fransız Anadolu Araştırmaları Enstitüsü (IFEA) iş birliğiyle, 21-24 Kasım 2023 tarihleri arasında “Channels of Transmission of Astronomical Knowledge in the Ottoman World (14th-18th Centuries)” başlıklı uluslararası bir kongre düzenlenecektir.

Bu uluslararası kolokyum, Akdeniz ve Osmanlı İmparatorluğu'nun bir parçası olan tüm topraklar dahil olmak üzere, 14. yüzyıldan 18. yüzyıla kadar Osmanlı dünyasında teorik ve uygulamalı astronomi tekniklerine ait yöntem ve üretimin tarihini araştırmayı amaçlamaktadır.

Astronomi teknik ve yöntemlerinin zaman ve mekân içinde aktarımının izini sürmeyi arzuladığımız bu uluslararası kolokyumda, Çin'den Avrupa'ya uzanan ve Osmanlı döneminde sentetik ve kapsamlı bir şekilde geliştirilen karmaşık yapbozun bir parçasını yeniden inşa etmeyi hedefliyoruz. Bu sebeple geniş bir kitleye ulaşmayı arzuladığımız kongremizde; Helen, Bizans, İran, Arap ve Osmanlı kültürlerine ait çalışmalarla ilgilenen akademisyen ve meslektaşların yanı sıra Avrupa'daki astronomi tarihi alanından uzmanların da ağırlanması hedeflenmektedir.

Bildiri özetlerinin 250 kelimeyi geçmemesi ve başvuruların https://ottomanastronomy.org/registration-submission/ üzerinden yapılması gerekmektedir. Kongreye gönderilecek olan özetler bilimsel komite tarafından değerlendirildikten sonra kabuller ilan edilecektir.

Kongre hakkında daha detaylı bilgi almak ve özet göndermek için aşağıdaki bağlantıyı ziyaret edebilirsiniz:

https://ottomanastronomy.org/

İletişim için: Cette adresse e-mail est protégée contre les robots spammeurs. Vous devez activer le JavaScript pour la visualiser.

Önemli Tarihler:

Son Özet Gönderme Tarihi: 25 Haziran 2023

Ön Kabullerin İlanı: 20 Temmuz 2023

Sempozyum Tarihi: 21-24 Kasım 2023

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Call for papers: Channels of transmission of astronomical knowledge in the ottoman world - DEADLINE 25/06/2023

 

Channels of Transmission of Astronomical Knowledge in the Ottoman World (14th-18th Centuries)

Canaux de transmission de la connaissance astronomique reçue et pratiquée dans le monde ottoman (15ème-19ème siècle)

Le but de ce colloque international est d’investiguer l’histoire et le développement des savoirs et des techniques astronomiques dont ont hérités les spécialistes des sciences des astres dans l’espace ottoman. Cette rencontre permettra une discussion approfondie sur le matériel (intellectuel et physique) astronomique et astrologique diffusé à travers diverses adaptations et emprunté à différentes sources anciennes.

Le critère astronomique nous permet de resserrer une étude transversale de la circulation de ce savoir qui mettra également en évidence le rôle des élites professionnelles capables de maîtriser de telles compétences et montrera quelques voies de transmission et d'irradiation que les milieux les plus savants pourraient jouer dans la diffusion de ces connaissances transculturelles et transreligieuses.

Cette étude permettra la réunion de spécialistes qui ont rarement l’occasion de travailler ensemble. La participation des collègues hellénistes, byzantinistes, turquisants, sinologues, iranologues, arabisants, ottomanistes ainsi que des spécialistes de l’histoire des techniques astronomiques en Europe pourra permettre de définir un champ d’investigation dans ce domaine alliant à la fois, à travers l’histoire de l’astronomie, les chercheurs des sciences humaines et des sciences de la nature. 

Nous souhaitons ouvrir des pistes afin de permettre de retracer le cheminement de la transmission des techniques et méthodes astronomiques à travers le temps et l’espace. Les contributions viseront également à mettre en lumière les moments clefs des contacts entre les détenteurs de savoirs et les commanditaires qui vont assurer la continuité historique de ces connaissances à travers un réseau antique et médiéval allant de la Chine à l’Europe.

Notre approche part d’un postulat diachronique, à savoir l’état de ces savoirs développés synthétiquement et extensivement, puis se propose de remonter le temps pour retrouver les origines des différents éléments assimilés à l’époque ottomane.

En outre, ce colloque permettra de rendre accessible une série de sources en langues diverses dont la pluralité (turc (cagataï et ottoman), arabe, persan, grec, chinois, syriaque, arménien, sanskrit, moyen-perse) n’est pas systématiquement analysée en parallèle.

Ultimement, nous souhaitons tenter de reconstituer une partie du puzzle complexe du cheminement des techniques et méthodes astronomiques dans différentes aires culturelles et historiques qui ont contribué au développement des sciences astronomiques liées à la temporalité. Ce colloque sera un premier pas vers la mise en place d’un réseau de collaborations entre les chercheurs et l’approfondissement des divers domaines utilisant l’astronomie notamment par le biais de stages de formation théoriques et pratiques. Le premier stage dans la lignée de ce colloque portera sur les instruments astronomiques utilisés à bord des navires ottomans.

Appel à communication: voir le site https://ottomanastronomy.org/

 

Lire la suite : Call for papers: Channels of transmission of...

Soutenance de thèse - Florence Somer

Toutes nos félicitations à Florence Somer (laboratoire CeRMI, IFEA) qui a brillamment soutenu sa thèse en histoire des religions et anthropologie religieuse intitulée "Quand les astres écrivent l’Histoire : transmission de la tradition jāmāspienne dans les textes persans, arabes et ottomans" et dirigée par Philippe Huyse et co-encadrée par Samra Azarnouche, le 30 mars 2023 à la Maison des Sciences de l'Homme.

 

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Dépôt des articles prolongé jusqu'au 1er mai – Appel à Contribution pour Anatolia Antiqua XXXI (2023)

Anatolia Antiqua

 

Dépôt des articles prolongé jusqu'au 1er mai – Appel à Contribution pour Anatolia Antiqua XXXI (2023)

La préparation du prochain numéro d’Anatolia Antiqua (XXXI) a commencé. La parution est programmée à Novembre 2023.

Revue scientifique annuelle de l’IFEA dédiée à l’archéologie, Anatolia Antiqua couvre un large éventail de disciplines, allant des travaux de terrain aux thématiques du patrimoine culturel en passant par l’archéométrie et l’étude de matériel. Elle se compose de deux parties : une première partie consacrée aux articles de synthèse et une seconde partie intitulée « Chroniques des travaux archéologiques en Turquie », laquelle est destinée aux rapports des fouilles et études archéologiques en Turquie et ses régions avoisinantes de la préhistoire à la période médiévale au sens large.

Les articles soumis ne doivent pas avoir été publiés antérieurement dans un autre périodique. Les articles seront soumis au comité scientifique international assisté du comité de rédaction. Les décisions en matière d’acceptation ou de refus sont souveraines.

Les articles dont les sujets relèvent du domaine susmentionné doivent être préparés conformément à nos normes de publications (https://journals.openedition.org/anatoliaantiqua/274) et peuvent être rédigés en français ou en anglais.

Les auteur.e.s sont prié.e.s d’envoyer leurs articles et leurs chroniques de fouille au plus tard le 1 mai 2023. Les articles soumis au-delà de la date fixée seront considérés pour le numéro de l’année suivante. L’acceptation ou le refus des articles par les comités scientifique et de rédaction sera annoncé à compter du 15 mai 2023. Il est possible et encouragé de prendre contact avec la rédaction avant l’envoi des manuscrits.

Nous vous remercions et réjouissons d’ores et déjà de votre intérêt, de votre fidélité et de vos contributions à ce prochain numéro.

Au nom du comité de rédaction,

Deniz Genceolu, secrétaire de rédaction

Adresse de communication :

Cette adresse e-mail est protégée contre les robots spammeurs. Vous devez activer le JavaScript pour la visualiser.

 

Anatolia Antiqua

 

 

 

 

Deadline for submissions extended to May 1 - Call for papers - Anatolia Antiqua XXXI (2023)

Preparations for the next issue of Anatolia Antiqua (XXXI) have started. The publication is scheduled for November 2023.

IFEA’s annual scientific journal dedicated to archaeology, Anatolia Antiqua, covers a wide range of disciplines from fieldwork to various themes related to cultural heritage including archaeometry and materials science. The journal is composed of two parts; the first part being devoted to scientific articles and the second part, namely the “Chronicles of archaeological works in Turkey”, including reports of all archaeological excavations and studies in Turkey, encompassing a chronological span from prehistory up to the medieval period in the broadest sense.

Articles submitted for publication must be original works and must not have been published previously in another journal. Submitted articles will be reviewed by the international scientific committee, assisted by the editorial board of the journal, whose decisions regarding acceptance or rejection are sovereign.

Articles whose subjects fall within the above-mentioned scope, should be prepared according to our publishing principles (https://journals.openedition.org/anatoliaantiqua/429) and written in French or English.

Authors are requested to submit their articles and excavation reports by May 1, 2023 at the latest. Articles submitted after the deadline will be considered for the next year’s issue. The decisions regarding acceptance or rejection of articles by the scientific committee and the editorial board will be announced starting on May 15, 2023. It is possible and encouraged to contact the editorial board before submitting the manuscripts.

We appreciate your interest and loyalty, and look forward to your contributions to the next issue of Anatolia Antiqua.

In the name of the editorial board,

Deniz Genceolu, secretary of publications

Contact address:

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Appel à contribution / Call for Papers - IFEA / CETOBAC / IISMM - DATE LIMITE / DEADLINE : 30/04/2023

We are pleased to inform you of the organization of a colloquium focusing on the socio-political implications of quantification in Turkey, which will be held on September 28 and 29, 2023 at the French Institute for Anatolian Studies (IFEA) in Istanbul, Turkey. 

This colloquium invites young researchers at all levels (master, doctorate, post-doctorate) to share original research about the uses of numbers and their socio-political implications in the Turkish context, past and present. Numeric arguments are omnipresent in political discourse. As the time for Turkey’s presidential election approaches in the aftermath of the seismic crisis, this observation may become even more relevant. Figures and estimates on key ballot issues are generated, disseminated, and interpreted by a complex body of interconnected actors: pollsters, scholars,
think-tank members, political party advocates, and so forth. Inflation, for instance, is a daily topic in mainstream newspapers. The ‘true’ numbers of inflation are calculated by economists and then shared by journalists in the public arena where they become the subject of heated controversies
in board-rooms, coffee shops, and at dinner-tables. Competitive statistical narratives also circulate as executives and ordinary people seek to make sense of current trends and likely future scenarios. As some narratives win out over others, certain public institutions have been brought
into disrepute; whereas, conversely, private expertise companies have acquired new levels of credibility and trust.
By organizing this colloquium, we wish to build a springboard for importing and discussing the numerous studies dealing with the social history of statistics (see Anderson 1988, Desrosières 2010 [1993], 2008a; Didier 2000; Wuthnow 2015; Labbé 2019), the socio-political
life of numbers in the public arena (see Schweyer 1991; Porter 2017 [1995]; Desrosières 2008b, 2014; Bruno, Didier & Prévieux 2014; Gasquet et al. 2021), and the renewal of quantitative methodologies and techniques in the academic field (see Bugeja-Bloch & Couto 2021) along with
their impact on reframing theories (see Field 2019; Bréchon & Zwilling 2020) and shaping state policies (see Aldrin 2010). Research on quantification and the social life of numbers has been fruitful in many parts of the world but has not yet been well established in Turkey. This event
represents an effort to advance a scholarly conversation about the Turkish case, including the social history of ottoman and republican censuses (see Dündar 2001, 2005), statistics in relation to technopolitics and institutional reform (see Silverstein 2020), and the sociology of the public
opinion and market research industry (see Abadan-Unat 1991).
This colloquium aspires to focus on a twofold research axis. On the one hand, we intend to dissect the chain of production of statistical artifacts that we are likely to encounter in our3 respective research areas. This focus entails a genealogical endeavor. To prevent the risk of
anachronism or teleology, we encourage pragmatist approaches that examine each step of the quantification process as a practical and contingent accomplishment. Chronological patterns should therefore be embedded with grounded accounts of quantification as a social activity
undertaken by specific actors (interviewers, pollsters, statisticians…), integrated into various institutional networks (companies, think-tank, NGOs, administrations…), on particular objects (public opinion, social attitudes, political trends…), by relying on evolving techniques (sampling,
questionnaire design, data collection...), and requiring a handful of aptitudes (counting, calculating, estimating, predicting…).
On the other hand, we wish to study the social life of statistical artifacts, narratives, and arguments inasmuch as they provide inputs for engaging in public controversies. What kind of public issues catalyze or magnetize statistical disputes within fields as various as, for instance, state
policy, administration of religious affairs, or social movements? And how discourse and collective action are framed and reframed regarding competitive figures on controversial issues such as inflation, immigration, work-related accidents, natural hazards, or feminicides?

Applicants should submit the following materials: a 500-word abstract for a 15 to 20-minute-long communication in English, and a short resumé including past and current research activities. These materials should be sent before April 30 to the following email address: Cette adresse e-mail est protégée contre les robots spammeurs. Vous devez activer le JavaScript pour la visualiser..


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Appel à contribution / Call for Papers - Open Archaeology (OPAR) - DEADLINE : 15 February 2024

Open Archaeology invites manuscripts for the Special Issue Digital Religioscapes: Current Methodologies and Novelties in the Analysis of Sacr(aliz)ed Spaces. The study of ancient religions—their materiality and practices—was subject to enormous changes, especially since different approaches from other disciplines, such as sociology, cultural studies, or anthropology, were made fruitful for the archaeology of ancient religions and subsequently enabled a qualitative approach to the research questions. This led to an understanding of religious spaces on the one hand as an outcome of social interaction, and on the other hand as a shared space with its own locally produced identity. However, the digital humanities have yet to find a meaningful way to integrate the resulting qualitative data into existing digital infrastructures and correlate it with quantitative data. The purpose of this special issue is to highlight the variety of methods when gathering, modelling/visualising, presenting, and analysing digital data and to discuss the diverse ways in which these heterogeneous methods and tools can be usefully combined. Approaches that use mixed data (qualitative and quantitative), such as Story Maps or Deep Map(ping) are discussed, as well as the advantages and disadvantages of various individual tools and applications, such as network models, cartograms, modelling of movement patterns, agent-based modelling, temporalities or sensoryscapes (soundscapes, smellscapes, viewsheds), to name a few. Since we are concentrating on the methodological approaches and applications for investigating religious spaces, the special issue is opened to case studies from a variety of chronological periods and geographical regions, reaching from the circum-Mediterranean to central Asia, and at least from the Iron Age until the Early Modern Period.

The authors are kindly invited to submit their contribution via the online submission system Editorial Manager available at: http://www.editorialmanager.com/opar/Default.aspx

We are looking forward to your submission between 15 February 2024

If you have any questions please contact Anaïs Lamesa (Cette adresse e-mail est protégée contre les robots spammeurs. Vous devez activer le JavaScript pour la visualiser.) or Katarzyna Inga Michalak (Cette adresse e-mail est protégée contre les robots spammeurs. Vous devez activer le JavaScript pour la visualiser.)

 

 

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Appel à Contributions pour Anatolia Antiqua XXXI (2023)

La préparation du prochain numéro d’Anatolia Antiqua (XXXI) a commencé. La parution est programmée à Novembre 2023.

Revue scientifique annuelle de l’IFEA dédiée à l’archéologie, Anatolia Antiqua couvre un large éventail de disciplines, allant des travaux de terrain aux thématiques du patrimoine culturel en passant par l’archéométrie et l’étude de matériel. Elle se compose de deux parties : une première partie consacrée aux articles de synthèse et une seconde partie intitulée « Chroniques des travaux archéologiques en Turquie », laquelle est destinée aux rapports des fouilles et études archéologiques en Turquie et ses régions avoisinantes de la préhistoire à la période médiévale au sens large.

Les articles soumis ne doivent pas avoir été publiés antérieurement dans un autre périodique. Les articles seront soumis au comité scientifique international assisté du comité de rédaction. Les décisions en matière d’acceptation ou de refus sont souveraines.

Les articles dont les sujets relèvent du domaine susmentionné doivent être préparés conformément à nos normes de publications (https://journals.openedition.org/anatoliaantiqua/274) et peuvent être rédigés en français ou en anglais.

Les auteur.e.s sont prié.e.s d’envoyer leurs articles et leurs chroniques de fouille au plus tard le 1 mars 2023. Les articles soumis au-delà de la date fixée seront considérés pour le numéro de l’année suivante. L’acceptation ou le refus des articles par les comités scientifique et de rédaction sera annoncé à compter du 15 mai 2023. Il est possible et encouragé de prendre contact avec la rédaction avant l’envoi des manuscrits.

Nous vous remercions et réjouissons d’ores et déjà de votre intérêt, de votre fidélité et de vos contributions à ce prochain numéro.

Au nom du comité de rédaction,

Deniz Genceolu, secrétaire de rédaction

Adresse de communication :

Cette adresse e-mail est protégée contre les robots spammeurs. Vous devez activer le JavaScript pour la visualiser.

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Appel à contribution / Call for Papers - EAA 2023 Belfast

Theme: 1. Artefacts, Buildings & Ecofacts

 

Session format: Regular session

 

Title: Carved Features and Carved Landscapes. Investigating the Technical and Topographical Links between Quarries and Rock-Cut Sites

 

Main organiser: Claudia Sciuto (Italy) 1

 

Co-organisers:

Marie-Elise Porqueddu (Spain) 2
Anaïs Lamesa (Turkey) 3
Daniel Morleghem (France) 4

 

Affiliations:

1. University of Pisa
2. École des hautes études hispaniques et ibériques, Casa de Velázquez, Spain
3. Institut Français d'Études Anatoliennes, Istambul, Turkey
4. UMR 7324 Citeres-LAT, Tours, France

In the last ten years, an international exchange has been initiated amongst scholars on the methodological and theoretical challenges in the study of quarries and rock-cut sites. A lively community has been discussing the different approaches used for documenting and interpreting features that are generated in the liminal space between human lives and geologies.
The human activity of excavating geological outcrops results in features that are classified according to two main macro categories:
- rock-cut sites which are linked to the life and death of human beings– including dwellings, shelters, burials, and places of worship.
- quarries are mostly defined as production spaces in which technical solutions are aimed at optimizing the extraction of stone from the bedrock.
Despite the difference in the purpose of hewing, conceptual links exist between features carved in the rock. Similarities can be found in the techniques used for hewing as well as the management of waste and by extension, the same networks of knowledge and know-how transmission. Moreover, dwellings or evidence of places of worship have been found in quarries and blocks extracted from rock-cut sites are often used for construction elsewhere.
Quarries and rock-cut sites can often be found associated with the same outcrops, thus outlining a complex taskscape in which the interaction of human communities and bedrock can result in different carved features.
This session will be dedicated to investigating the connections between quarries and rock-cut sites on different scales. We invite contributors, particularly early careers researchers/scholars, working on different case studies, without chronological or geographical boundaries, to discuss:
- methods for mapping carved landscapes, highlighting the human and geological agencies in shaping a taskscape.
- the more detailed study of tool marks and techniques used for extracting stone blocks and carving specific elements, outlining systems of knowledge transfer in communities through time.

 

Keywords:

Quarries, rock-cut sites, technology, taskscapes

https://eaa.klinkhamergroup.com/eaa2023/

 

How to submit the proposal

An oral / poster contribution has to be submitted via an online form available after logging in at submissions.e-a-a.org/eaa2023.

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Offre d'emploi de post-doctorat ANR SPACEPOL "Space and Politics: Capital Cities as Instruments of Political Struggle and Power"

Capture décran 2022 10 28 à 11.25.28

 

Offre d'emploi de post-doctorat dans le cadre du projet ANR SPACEPOL "Space and Politics: Capital Cities as Instruments of Political Struggle and Power" piloté par Gülçin Erdi (IFEA-Istanbul)

Poste en CDD de 3 ans à partir de janvier 2023

Date limite de candidature: 30 novembre 2022

Entretien avec les candidat-e-s: 15 et 16 décembre 2022

Contact: Pour des informations supplémentaires et pour candidater, contacter Cette adresse e-mail est protégée contre les robots spammeurs. Vous devez activer le JavaScript pour la visualiser.

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Appel à candidatures pour des bourses de recherche en islamologie (Doctorants/Jeunes docteurs (6 mois) )

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Appel à candidatures pour des bourses de recherche en islamologie (Master 2)

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Appel à candidature pour un post-doc spécialisé sur la Turquie dans le cadre de l’ANR CALOT « Les conséquences de la loyauté forcée »

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Political exile and Arab migration in Turkey : Activism, mobilizations and impacts on the host country

Political exile and Arab migrations in Turkey min

       

 

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          Since the popular uprisings of 2011 in several Middle Eastern and North African countries, political, social and economic developments have led to the rise of migratory flows that converge, pass through or settle in Turkey. This latter emerged as a prime destination for populations fleeing war, especially from Syria1. Beyond that, Turkey offers new opportunities to several populations in the region to offset the economic constraints and the shutdown of political spaces in their home countries. For these populations, it provides a viable alternative in light of the EU’s increasingly blocked borders. Economic migrations as well as political exiles to bypass authoritarian regimes are intermingled and recomposed with the forced migrations due to armed conflicts. As a result, throughout the country, and especially in Istanbul, a multinational Arab space has emerged and is being consolidated.


          While the academic literature on Syrian migration in Turkey is quite substantial, migrations from other countries in the region remains understudied. Building on the collective work that has been conducted in IFEA over the past few years, this conference seeks to explore the political dimension of the "contemporary Arab presence" (Mermier, 2020) in Turkey. The simultaneous coexistence of several communities, some of which marked by political activities, was made possible thanks to the Turkish government's position in support of the popular uprisings in the Arab world. Turkey can be examined as a privileged place for political expression. New initiatives, exploring alternative connections to politics, appear to have emerged as a result of exile. Istanbul also appears to be a privileged destination for some Arab political groups or parties. This is remarkably the case for the Muslim Brotherhood, which was driven out of Egypt by Abdelfattah al-Sissi’s Coup d’Etat, and is currently being supported by the AKP government. Following the example of this "Brotherhood exopolity" (Vannetzel, 2018), several other Arab groups or political parties have chosen Istanbul as a place of refuge and reorganization. Both media and political organizations are therefore guests of the Turkish government, but also hostages of its potential foreign policy reorientations.

 

          A good illustration is provided for by the evolution of Ankara’s position towards the Jamal Khashoggi, which was opportunely classified ahead of Erdogan’s official visit to KSA in April 2022. More than ever, the very existence of these spaces of (relative) freedom in Turkey depends upon the evolution of Turkey's diplomatic relations with the countries of the region.
          Economically, the 'Arab Spring' has been a golden opportunity for multiple actors. Most prominently, the strengthening of Turkish-Arab economic networks enables an increased transnational activism since 2011 (Vannetzel, Yankaya, 2017). Indeed, in the previous decade, Turkish exportations mainly grew through trade relations with the Middle East, widely studied in the literature (Kirişçi, 2009 ; Atlı, 2011; Özdemirkıran, 2015). The involvement in the media sector is especially noteworthy (Mermier 2021; Alrmizan 2020) and has made Istanbul one of the capital of a new (pan)Arab media scene, with the financial support of Qatar.
          This call for papers echoes studies on exile mobilizations and political activities (Dufoix, 2005; Grojean and Massicard, 2005; Allioua 2009; Dazey and Zederman, 2017); taking into consideration the impact of the 2011 popular uprisings in their relationship to politics (Napolitano, 2012; Beaugrand and Geisser, 2014; Fourn 2018; Lamblin 2018) and its articulation to the political field and to Turkish policy in the region. It intends to bring together researchers in order to assess the hypothesis of the emergence of an Arab political space in Turkey, its transformations and its interdependency relations with Turkish domestic politics and foreign policy.

Some themes will be, especially, discussed during this event : 


- Various forms of political activism in exile
Political activism cannot be reduced to involvement in a political party. Arab journalists, writers, intellectuals, artists and academics promote the creation of new spaces, forums and media for politicization in exile. To what extent can their various activities be considered political? How are these actors doing politics outside of political organizations? What are their goals and to which audiences do they appeal? How do these forms of expression include or target public opinion in countries of origin?


- Memories, politics and disillusions during exile
Disillusions are also part of exile and may lead to forms of withdrawal and depoliticization. An entire generation within these communities, strongly marked by the political sequence initiated in 2011, seeks to redefine itself in exile. We are particularly interested in the (de)construction of political networks, the impacts of political socialization and the common relationship of these migrations to politics. What memories of these commitments and mobilizations remain within the migratory experience? What influence can the migration experiences have on individuals’ relation to politics?

 

- Influence and repression from governments of countries of origin
This theme aims to explore the nature and impact of coercive tools of repression by the governments of the countries of origin on Arab populations in exile, and on their relations with the host society. Governments in countries of origin can rely to various means to track and clamp down on activists abroad. These include retaliation measures by administrative means, surveillance, violence, pressures on the host country, and, as per the case of Khashoggi political assassination. Instability and fear are an integral part of political exile, conditioning the relationship to politics and citizenship, but also the very modalities of engagement.


- Relationship to the political agenda of the host country
Despite their diversity and degree of integration within the hosting society, Arab communities in Turkey all face the instrumentalization of their presence by various local political actors, ranging from government to opposition figures. It is however possible to observe their growing integration into Turkish society, through various channels: work, school and university mostly. How do Arab communities adapt to an increasingly xenophobic and nationalist Turkish political debate? How might this affect their integration process? How do they participate in the public debate in Turkey? What are their relations with the different Turkish political parties?


- Migration and Turkish foreign policy
These Arab communities’ presence on Turkish soil has become a major political issue in Turkey's diplomatic relations with countries of the Middle East and North Africa. How does the AKP government use it in its foreign policy? In a changing regional political landscape, how do theses various Arab political actors represent allies, proxies but also tools for Turkish foreign policy?

 


Organization Team:
Nouran Gad (Mesopolhis, Aix-Marseille University)
Enrique Klaus (Galatasaray University, Transitions – Université Côte d’azur)
Yohanan Benhaïm (IFEA)


Scientific Committee:
Yohanan Benhaïm (IFEA)
Didem Danış (Galatasaray University)
Nouran Gad (Mesopolhis, Aix-Marseille University)
Enrique Klaus (Galatasaray University, Transitions – Université Côte d’azur)
Franck Mermier (Iris, EHESS)
Maïssam Nimer (Istanbul University)
Laura Ruiz de Elvira (CEPED, ERC LIVE-AR)

 

Bibliography

Allal, Amin (2011), “Avant on tenait le mur, maintenant on tient le quartier ! ” Germes d’un passage au politique de jeunes hommes de quartiers populaires lors du moment révolutionnaire à Tunis, Politique africaine, 121(1), pp. 53-67

Allioua, Mehdi (2009), « Le “passage au politique” des transmigrants subsahariens au Maroc. Imaginaire migratoire, réorganisation collective et mobilisation politique en situation de migration transnationale », in Ali Bensaâd éd. Le Maghreb à l'épreuve des migrations subsahariennes. Immigration sur émigration, Karthala, pp. 279-303.

Alrmizan, Mohammed (2020), “Arab diasporic media in Turkey: A story of (trans)national narratives in the Middle East”, Journal of Applied Journalism &Media Studies, King Fisal Center for Research and Islamic Studies (online).

Atlı, Altay (2011), “Businessmen as Diplomats: The Role of Business Associations in Turkey’s Foreign Economic Policy,” Insight Turkey 13(1), pp. 109-128.

Beaugrand, Claire et Geisser, Vincent (2014), "Immigrés, exilés, réfugiés, binationaux etc. : les enfants "illégitimes" des révolutions et des transitions politiques", Migrations société156, pp.3-6.

Daniş, Didem (2018), “Etude des migrations internationales en Turquie : interactions triangulaires entre les faits, la politique et la recherche”, Anatoli 9, pp. 143-153.

Daniş, Didem (2019), “De la “porte ouverte” aux menaces d’expulsion : la présence syrienne en Turquie”, Migrations Société, n°177, pp.35-52.

Dazey, Margot, Zederman, Mathilde (2017), “Oppositions islamistes à distance, Mobilisations tunisienne et égyptienne en France (1990-2016)”, Revue française de science politique 67, pp.837-855.

Dufoix, Stéphane (2005), “La communauté politique des exilés, une nation hors l’Etat”, Hommes et migrations, pp. 6-14.

Dunne, Michel et Hamzawy Amr (2019), “Egypt’s political exiles: going anywhere but home”, Carnegie (online).

Fourn, Léo (2018), “Soutenir la révolution à distance : mobilisations de deux générations d’exilés syriens en France”, Migrations Société 171(1), pp. 59-73.

Grojean, Olivier et Massicard, Elise (2005), “Mobilisations transnationales et environnement politique. La dynamique des organisations kurdes et alévistes, entre Turquie et Europe”, L’Etranger en question, du Moyen-Age à l’an 2000, Le Manuscrit, pp. 401-430.

Grojean, Olivier (2015), “Politique d’exil : les mobilisations des Kurdes d’Europe », In Jean-Paul Chagnollaud (dir.), Communautés en exil. Arméniens, Kurdes et Chrétiens d’Orient en territoires franciliens, Paris, L’Harmattan, pp. 53-68.

Merve Özdemirkıran (2015), “Soft power and the challenges of private actors: Turkey – Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) relations and the rising role of businessmen in Turkish Foreign Policy », European Journal of Turkish Studies 21 (online).

Hage Ali, Mohanad (2020), “Exiles on the Bosphorus”, Carnegie (online).

Hage Ali, Mohanad (2020), “Istanbul - the Arab world’s beacon on the Bosphorus”, Qantara, (online).

Kirişçi, Kemal (2009), “The Transformation of Turkish Foreign Policy: The Rise of the Trading State,” New Perspectives on Turkey 40, pp. 29-57.

Lamblin, Célia (2018), “Vivre la révolution de 2011 à distance. Sociologie des migrations égyptiennes en France”, thèse de doctorat.

Menshawy, Mustafa (2020), “Leaving the Muslim Brotherhood. Self, Society and the State”, Middle East Today.

Mermier, Franck (dir. 2021), “Les présences arabes contemporaines à Istanbul”, Dossiers de l’IFEA, Istanbul: Institut français d’études anatoliennes.

Mermier, Franck (2021), “A Istanbul, une scène médiatique arabe sous influence”, Orient XXI, Janvier 2021 (online).

Napolitano, Valentina (2012), “La mobilisation des réfugiés palestiniens dans le sillage de la “révolution” syrienne : s’engager sous contrainte”, Cultures & conflits, pp.119-137.

Thiollet, Hélène (2013), “Migrations, exils et printemps arabes", in Frédéric Charillon, Alain Dieckhoff, Afrique du Nord Moyen-Orient 2013-2014, pp.133-146.

Vannetzel, Marie (2018), “Sous le signe de Rabia : circulations et segmentations des mobilisations (trans)nationales en Turquie”, Critique internationale, pp.41-62.

Vannetzel, Marie, et Yankaya, Dilek (2017), “Crafting a business Umma? Transnational networks of ‘Islamic businessmen’ after the Arab Spring”, Mediterranean Politics(online).

Zederman, Mathilde (2019), “Faire parti" à distance. Partis politiques tunisiens pro et anti régime Ben Ali en France”, Revue internationale de politique comparée 26, pp.33-56.

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Call for papers Panel Digital Religioscapes: Current Methodologies and Novelties in the analysis of sacr(aliz)ed spaces - 28th EAA Meeting, Budapest 31/8-3/9/2022

This Call for Paper is aimed at constituting a panel organized by Anaïs Lamesa (IFEA) and Asuman Lätzer-Lasar (Erfurt University) focused on Digital Religioscapes: Current Methodologies and Novelties in the analysis of sacr(aliz)ed spaces to be presented at the 28th Annual Meeting of the European Association of Archaeologists (EAA), which will be held in Budapest, Hungary from 31 August to 3 September 2022.

Applications must be made online before February, 10, 2022

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