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[ecrea] CFP: Closing the Door on Globalization: Cultural Nationalism and Scientific Internationalism in the 19th and 20th centuries
Sat Nov 08 21:04:48 GMT 2014
Closing the Door on Globalization: Cultural Nationalism and Scientific
Internationalism in the 19th and 20th centuries
Lisbon, 15-18 July 2015 | Submissions deadline: 19 December 2014
Eijkman's report on scientific Internationalism - L'internationalisme
scientifique, La Haye 1911 - could well be considered the swan song of a
globalization process that had been molding the world since the mid
19th-century. Three years later the Great War would put a strong brake
on that process with a most significant and highly symbolical first act
of war: Britain's cutting off the transatlantic cables that linked
Germany to the western world. Communication, that is also, information
and knowledge transfer was thus at the very centre of that particular
conflict (and, of course, of conflicts to come).
The disruptions brought about by wars to the flow of communication,
information and knowledge during the first half of the 20th-century were
the obvious and visible results of the tensions between two
contradictory movements that had been developing side by side since the
mid 19th-century: on one hand, the scientific and technological
Internationalism that provided the conditions for the "integration of
the world through large flows of goods, capital, and people" (H. James,
The creation and destruction of value: the globalization cycle,
Cambridge 2009); on the other hand, the Cultural Nationalism that was
increasingly pervading the national public opinion of most European
countries to the point of academic institutionalization (e.g. the epic
foundation of some of the modern national philologies by the mid
19th-century).
Focussing mainly on the second half of the 19th-century and on the first
half of the 20th-century, the panel seeks papers dealing with:
- the internationalization of science (building of international
knowledge transfer networks);
- the nationalization of culture (development and institutionalization
of cultural national movements);
- the tensions and dialectical interactions between these networks and
the evolution of each of them.
The panel is part of the II CHAM International Conference on Knowledge
Transfer and Cultural Exchanges, that will be held at the
FCSH/Universidade NOVA de Lisboa, 15-18 July 2015.
Conference language is English. The Conference Website
(http://www.nomadit.co.uk/cham/cham2015/) has several information
regarding Travel, Accomodation, Registration Fees etc.
Details regarding this panel are (and will be) available at the
conference website
(http://www.nomadit.co.uk/cham/cham2015/panels.php5?PanelID=3287)
Please note that paper proposals should be submitted online at:
http://www.nomadit.co.uk/cham/cham2015/paperproposal.php5?PanelID=3287
Fernando Clara
Faculdade de Ciências Sociais e Humanas
Universidade Nova de Lisboa
Av. de Berna, 26-C
P 1069-061 Lisboa
PORTUGAL
Telf.: +351 217 908 300
Fax: +351 217 908 308
email: (f.clara /at/ fcsh.unl.pt)
Cláudia Ninhos
Instituto de História Contemporânea
Faculdade de Ciências Sociais e Humanas
Universidade Nova de Lisboa
Av. Berna, 26 C
1069-061 LISBOA
Telf.: +351 217 908 300 - 1545
Fax: +351 217 908 308
email: (claudia.sn /at/ sapo.pt)
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