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Call for Papers

Theme: Reframing Wisdom Literature
Subtitle: Problematising Literary and Religious Interactions in
Ancient Wisdom Texts
Type: Postgraduate Conference
Institution: Department of Classics, King's College, University of
London
Location: London (United Kingdom)
Date: 30.–31.5.2019
Deadline: 24.2.2019

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Introduction

The label ‘wisdom literature’ has been a focus of contemporary
scholarly debate centring on issues of categorisation and definition.
In particular, its application to Mesopotamian texts has recently
been problematised (cf. Lambert 1996: 1-2; scholarship overview in
Cohen 2013: 8-12). This conference will explore whether and how
similar questioning should lead us to rethink the traditional and
deep-seated applications of this label to the so-called ‘wisdom
books’ of the Hebrew Bible (Proverbs, Job and Ecclesiastes) and to
Greek texts (such as Hesiod, Theognis and Phocylides). Another
problem deserving consideration is the juxtaposing of other labels
such as ‘advice’ and ‘didactic literature’ to the tag ‘wisdom
literature’. This eventually takes us to the central issues of the
status of ‘wisdom literature’ as a genre, its oral origins, and its
perception and circulation in antiquity. It is with the aim of
bringing these problems to the surface, and reframing the debate
about them, that this conference intends to approach ‘wisdom
literature’.

Focus and aims of the conference

With this postgraduate conference we aim at exploring and dissecting
the intertwining of literary and religious elements in texts that are
normally labelled as ‘wisdom literature’. The Pseudo-Phocylidea was
the work that inspired this conference, as ‘in the dynamics of its
textual interactions, the poem evidences what may be called a
principle of dual referentiality, integrating elements from two
distinct referential fields, the literature of Hellenistic Jewish
morality and the literature of classical Greek poetics’ (Wilson 2005:
14). Indeed, we seek to investigate whether and how, in general, a
dual religious-literary referentiality is a constitutive aspect of
those texts traditionally considered as ‘wisdom’ texts. We are
interested in looking at how this integration embodies the
‘cumulative’ character of wisdom, and we finally aim to consider how
such an approach can contribute to the debate concerning the status
of ‘wisdom literature’ as a genre.

To foster discussion on these themes, we invite papers that explore
the integration of religious elements and literary echoes in wisdom
texts dated from the Ancient Near Eastern Civilizations to Late
Antiquity, while engaging with the definition and application of the
label ‘wisdom literature’. We are particularly interested in
contributions that reflect on cross-fertilisation and transcultural
influences.

The aim of the two-day conference is to create a fruitful and
synergic environment for debate by bringing together postgraduates
and early career researchers from across the UK and abroad working
on, or interested in, ancient wisdom literature. Speakers will
receive detailed feedback from advanced academics, and attendants,
getting insights from experts in a range of fields of study, which
will broaden their own perspective on ancient wisdom and its literary
products.

Suggested topics  

Suggested fields and topics include but are not limited to:
- the Near-Eastern and Mesopotamian traditions
- Egyptian ‘wisdom literature’ and instruction genre
- biblical ‘wisdom books’ and problematisation of this label
- Greek advice and gnomic poetry
- in general, cross-cultural interactions between wisdom traditions
- religious framework and cross-cultural influences: ethics, theology
  and theodicy
- wisdom texts and authorship: the role of self-presentation
- proverbs and paroemiographic collections
- ainoi and fables
- literary expressions of personified wisdom

Instructions

We invite postgraduate students and early career researchers (within
three years from PhD completion) to submit proposals for
twenty-minute papers. Each paper will be followed by a personalised
response from an advanced academic with research interests in wisdom
literature, and a plenary discussion. In order to facilitate the
response and discussion, delegates will be asked to circulate their
papers in advance to both the respondent and the organisers of the
conference. Selected papers will be considered for publication in
peer-reviewed proceedings.

Abstracts of no more than 300 words for twenty-minute papers and a
working title should be sent to reframing-wis...@kcl.ac.uk by Sunday
24th February 2019. Please include also full name, affiliation,
academic status and, if relevant, date of PhD completion.

Small bursaries will be available for speakers travelling from
outside of London as partial contribution towards accommodation and
travel costs.

Keynote speaker:
Prof. Dimitri Gutas, Yale University

Organisers:
Sara De Martin and Anna Lucia Furlan

Venue:
Bush House Lecture Theatre 2 (room 4.04)
King’s College London – Bush House
Strand, London WC2R 1ES

You can download the Call for Papers here:
https://hcommons.org/app/uploads/sites/1001234/2019/02/RWL-CfP_extension.pdf


Contact:

Sara De Martin & Anna Lucia Furlan, Research students
Department of Classics
King’s College London
Email: reframing-wis...@kcl.ac.uk
Web: https://reframingwisdom.hcommons.org
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/reframingwisdom
Twitter: https://twitter.com/ReframingWisdom




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