Networks between Mountain and Sea: Circulation of People, Goods, and Ideas in Central and Southern Italy (16th-18th Century)

Networks between Mountain and Sea: Circulation of People, Goods, and Ideas in Central and Southern Italy (16th-18th Century)

Organizer
Isabel Harvey, Université du Québec à Montréal; Milena Sabato, Università del Salento
ZIP
80067
Location
Sorrento
Country
Italy
From - Until
02.06.2022 - 05.06.2022
Deadline
01.03.2022
By
Connections Redaktion, Leipzig Research Centre Global Dynamics, Universität Leipzig

This panel aims to explore the communication routes and points of exchange allowing the circulation of people, goods, and ideas between the Papal States and the Kingdom of Naples during the early modern period. The objective is to rethink this central Mediterranean territory both in relation to its local particularities, detailing the multiple and polysemic spaces it contains, and in relation to its global context, the Italian peninsula, Europe, and the World.

Networks between Mountain and Sea: Circulation of People, Goods, and Ideas in Central and Southern Italy (16th-18th Century)

The Papal States and the Kingdom of Naples are generally considered separately by the historiography of the early modern period. The political division between the two states thus becomes, from a simple disciplinary boundary, a frontier that divides spaces whose social, intellectual, and religious history is represented as two different entities. The localisms that characterize these historiographies – caused as much by the particularities of local archives as by academic divisions – nevertheless allow to see some coherent spaces: the Adriatic maritime space or the pastoral paths of Abruzzo, for example. While recent works inspired by global and connected history and propose revisiting the separate construction of spaces, as with Atlantic or Mediterranean history, this panel aims to explore the communication routes and points of exchange allowing the circulation of people, goods, and ideas between the Papal States and the Kingdom of Naples during the early modern period. The objective is to rethink this central Mediterranean territory both in relation to its local particularities, detailing the multiple and polysemic spaces it contains, and in relation to its global context, the Italian peninsula, Europe, and the World.

Possible topics include:
• Network analyses
• How to define an historical space: theory and methods
• Case studies about travels, pilgrimages, immigration
• Circulation of ideas and religious movements
• Mapping and digital reconstruction
• Historiography and historiographical issues
• Papal States and Kingdom of Naples: frontiers and connections
• Environmental history of roads and ways of communication
• Circulation of books and writings
• Circulation of goods
• Roles of women in networks
• Dialogues and exchanges between religions: Hebraism and Islam

We are particularly interested in papers addressing issues of theory and methodology working with the concept of space, in papers that analyze an unedited, newly founded, or little-known source, or in papers that present a social network analysis.
Papers should be 15-20 minutes.
Please email your abstract (max 300 words) and a short CV (max 1 page) in English, French, or Italian to Isabel Harvey (harvey.isabel@courrier.uqam.ca) and Milena Sabato (sabato.milena@libero.it) by the deadline of March 1, 2021.

Contact (announcement)

Isabel Harvey, Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM)
harvey.isabel@courrier.uqam.ca

Editors Information
Published on
25.02.2022
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Language(s) of event
English
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