• Aucun résultat trouvé

Fourth Annual Conference of the International Federation for Public...

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2022

Partager "Fourth Annual Conference of the International Federation for Public..."

Copied!
4
0
0

Texte intégral

(1)

CFP for the 4th Annual Conference of the International Federation for Public History, Ravenna, Italy, 5-9 June 2017

Ravenna, Basilica di Sant’Apollinare in Classe, Picture by Berthold Werner, 6 March 2009, available in Wikimedia Commons

Call for Individual Papers and Panels for #IFPH2017, 5-9 June, 2017, Faculty of Cultural Heritage, University of Bologna, Ravenna Campus

History is a public issue. Historical knowledge and practice is not limited to academic settings.

History is also produced and shared in a wide range of settings by professional and non- professional historians alike. Museums and other exhibiting places, films and documentaries, historical novels, anniversaries and commemorations, re-enactments and living history, public policies, transitional justice commissions, television, radio, websites, and social media, are some of the venues in which history comes alive. All these settings stimulate interaction and

collaboration with large audiences, turning historians into public historians.

From 5th to 9th June 2016, the fourth international annual conference of the International

Federation on Public History (IFPH) will be held at the University of Bologna, Cultural Heritage Department (Dipartimento dei Beni Culturali) located on the Campus of the city of Ravenna. The conference is organized in co-partnership with the first national branch of the IFPH, the Italian Association for Public History (Associazione italiana di Public History) (AIPH), created in

(2)

Rome in June 2016. The AIPH will hold its first national conference (see its own CFP) with sessions in Italian during the 4th IFPH conference.

Born in 2011, the IFPH aims at building an international and multi-lingual community of practitioners. IFPH role is to foster the development of Public History worldwide creating and coordinating networks and national associations for public history, promoting teaching, research and all kind of activities engaging the public with the past, history and individual and collective memories.

The IFPH international conference in Ravenna will bring together practitioners, experts and activists from all over the world to discuss and share their experiences in the many challenges and rewards involved in engaging with the public to diffuse historical knowledge. The

conference will not be limited to a specific theme but, on the contrary, will engage with the very different public history activities. So, proposals may present examples of historians’ engagement with communities through different media, building different forms of narratives and looking at different public uses of the past.

The conference’s goal is to open up a space to give visibility and to share the innovative

practices and skills that public historians around the world creatively use in their daily practice.

History is increasingly produced through collaborative projects that are used for different political, economic, and cultural purposes, often defining collective identities along the way.

Furthermore, public history explores, challenges, and discusses the historians’ role and has recently attracted global attention. In this sense, the Conference also provides room to discuss the scope, aims, and challenges, among other critical issues raised by public history and history as a general field.

Possible practices and topics may include:

(3)

Faculty of Cultural Heritage, University of Bologna, Ravenna Campus

Museums and Exhibiting the Past

Oral History and Community Projects

Digital Public History

Participatory Knowledge: Social Media, Mobile App and User-Generated Contents

Moving Images and documentaries

Public History and the use of Photography

Historical Fiction

Re-enactments and Living History

Historic Preservation and Community Cultural Heritage

Identity and Memory issues

Public Commemorations

Public Archaeology

Public Policies and Applied History

Teaching Public History

Current debates related to public history as a practice

How to create national associations of public history?

Who are the Public Historians in Europe?

How to foster Public History as a discipline in Europe?

Is there a European Public History?

Both individual papers and session proposals (90 minutes each) are welcome. Session proposals should include a general abstract for the session, the name of the session’s coordinator as well as abstracts for all individual papers.

Please send your proposal of no more than 150 words, as well as any questions or inquiries, to the following email: pubhisint@gmail.com

Deadline for all proposals is 30th November 2016 Program Committee:

Paula Hamilton (AUS) for the Australian Centre for Public History, Sidney

Chantal Kesteloot (BE) Secretary of the IFPH Steering Committee, Cegesoma, Brussels

Enrico Natale (CH) for InfoClio.ch, professional portal of the historical sciences in Switzerland

Catalina Munoz (COL) for the History Department, Universidad de Los Andes, Bogotà, IFPH Patron

Andreas Etges (DE) Delegate in the IFPH Steering Committee, Amerika- Institut, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, Munich

Marko Demantowski (DE) for the Journal Public History Weekly

Catherine Brice (FR) for the Master en Histoire Publique, Paris-Est Créteil

Jerome De Groote (GB) School of Arts, Languages and Cultures, University of Manchester, Keynote for #IFPH2014 in Amsterdam

(4)

Serge Noiret (IT) President of the IFPH Steering Committee, European University Institute, Florence

Luigi Tomassini (IT) Head of Department of Cultural Heritage and Vice Dean of the School “Lettere e Beni culturali”, Univ.Bologna, Campus Ravenna.

Marcello Flores D’Arcais (IT) Scientific Director of INSMLI, the network of Istituti per la storia della Resistenza e della società contemporanea in Italia

Andreas Fickers (LU) Head of the Institute for History and Director of the Digital History LAB, University of Luxembourg

Phil Scarpino (USA) for the Public History Program, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI), IFPH Patron

Mark Tebeau (USA) Associate Professor of Public History, Arizona State University, IFPH Patron

Marla Miller (USA) for University of Massachusetts Amherst Public History Program, IFPH Patron

Références

Documents relatifs

This is true for epistemological debates, such as the one that took place around post- modernism and the historiographical turns associated with it (the linguistic and cultural

We aim to understand them through a typology of perspectives on public debt accounting and hereby distinguish three ideal-types that cor- respond to different ways of defining

The contributions to this special issue have not only pointed at problems with the particular shape and form of the modernisation agenda of European higher education, but have

2 nd International symposium on calorimetry and chemical thermodynamics. Sao

in the same way, the public is socially and demographically diversified. Most of the people don’t need to dance: the festival’s aims is to re-create the community by putting itself

Then it tracks a user’s session on a website, compares it to sessions of past users, clusters similar sessions together, and computes the likely cognitive style of the user using

In his PhD dissertation, Grandjean (2012) provides relevant shock wave mitigation by polydisperse bubble curtain model which takes into account several phenomena

At each of these stages of the policy cycle, the administration can assert itself, which it may do either more or less proactively; it is central in