Exploring the Social and Cultural Contexts of Historic Writing Systems - 14-15-16/03/2019, Cambridge
Writing systems are not just abstract systems to be deciphered and analysed but an important part of culture, integrated into a multiplicity of other facets of human life, practice and material culture. The study of writing systems is not just a question of epigraphy, palaeography or linguistics but a matter of cultural history. Yet this aspect of early writing often receives less attention. How are writing systems embedded in society and culture? How are they shaped by human practice and agency, and how in turn do they affect these things? What is their relationship with material culture and what would an ‘archaeology of writing systems’ look like?
FECHA / DATE/DATA: 14-15-16/03/2019
LUGAR/LOCATION/LUOGO: Faculty of Classics, University of Cambridge (Cambridge, England)
ORGANIZADOR/ORGANIZER/ORGANIZZATORE: The CREWS Project
INFO: web
INSCRIPCIÓN/REGISTRATION/REGISTRAZIONE: Gratis/free/gratuito
Se ruega enviar un email a /please contact /sono pregati di inviare una e-mail a pjb70@cam.ac.uk
PROGRAMA/PROGRAM/PROGRAMMA: Aquí/here/qui
Thursday 14th
Writing and Culture
8.30 Registration
9.00 Welcome
9.05 Yves Duhoux – Scripts’ secondary purposes
9.50 Theo Nash – Cultures of Writing: The Invention and Re-Invention of Greek Writing in Context
10.35 Break
11.00 Eleanor Robson – A family of script practices: deconstructing Mesopotamian cuneiform, reconstructing post-conflict Iraq
11.45 Cécile Guillaume-Pey – A Script ‘good to drink’. Invention of an alphabet and Emergence of a Religious Movement among the Sora (central India)
12.30 Lunch
Literacy, Learning and Writing in Society
2.00 Aurélie Névot – How to decrypt the secret writings of the Masters of psalmody (Yunnan, China)? Words beyond writings
2.45 Christopher Rollston – Scribes, Seal Makers, Bureaucrats, Masons, and the Military Brass: The Social Context of Writing in the Iron Age Southern Levant
3.30 Break
4.00 Piers Kelly – Writing systems invented by non-literates and what they tell us
4.45 Katherine Forsyth – Literacy beyond the limes: the social and cultural contexts of ogham and Pictish symbol writing
5.30 End of papers
Friday 15th
Archaeologies of Writing
9.00 Philip Boyes – The Social Archaeology of Writing Systems
9.45 Karenleigh Overmann – A Cognitive Archaeology of Writing: Concepts, Models, Goals
10.30 Break
Materiality and Artefacts
11.00 Nancy Highcock – The Afterlives of Inscribed Commemorative Objects: the transformation of personal memory in Mesopotamian temple contexts
11.45 Marie-Lousie Nosch & Agata Ulanowska – Materiality of the Cretan Hieroglyphic Script
12.30 Break
Writing for Display
2.00 Christian Prager – Visual-Iconographic Dimension of Maya Hieroglyphic Writing: Meanings Beyond the Surface
2.45 Sophie Heier – The visibility of runic writing and its relation to Viking Age society
3.30 Break
4.00 Alex West – Why did people in medieval Java use so many different scripts?
4.45 Claus Jurman – Towards socio-graphematics: Learning and adopting lapidary script(s) in the multilingual/multi-ethnic environment of Egypt during the 8th century BCE
Saturday 16th
Writing and elite culture
9.00 Kathryn Hudson & John S. Henderson – Script, Image, and Elite Culture in the Maya World: A Southeastern Perspective
9.45 Sarah Finlayson – Writing and elite status in the Bronze Age Aegean
10.30 Break
Agency and Personhood
11.00 Marcia-Anne Dobres – An Outsider’s Musings on the Meaningful and Embodied Practice, Technology, and Social Agency of (Some) Early Writing Systems
11.45 James Whitley – Why με? Personhood and agency in Greek inscriptions (800-550 BCE).
12.30 Lunch
Writing and Identity
2.00 Katherine McDonald – Connectivity and competition: alphabets as identities in Italy
2.45 Natalia Elvira Astoreca – Names and authorship in the beginnings of Greek alphabetic writing
3.30 Olga Tribulato & Valentina Mignosa – A graphic sign of identity? History and meaning of an arrow-shaped alpha
4.15 End of papers