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Shifting Frontiers XIV: Scale and the Study of Late Antiquity

Location

Columbus, OH, USA

Dates
-
Contact person
Organizing Committee
E-Mail address
shiftingfrontiersxivatgmail.com
Meeting Category

The 14th Meeting of the Society of Late Antiquity will take place 24-27 March 2021 in Columbus, Ohio, USA.

The conference is titled "Shifting Frontiers XIV: Scale and the Study of Late Antiquity".

Venue

Ohio State University

Description

For the 14th Meeting of the Society for Late Antiquity, meeting organizers invite papers that investigate scale, which can be defined as a graduated range of values or measurements, whether, for example, of time, space, social organization, cosmology, or agency.

Participants are encouraged to explore scale either as a methodological framework used by modern historians to interpret the past and/or as a type of late Roman analytic category, developed and employed by late ancient persons for their own heuristic purposes.

Questions papers might ask include: To what extent does the world of Late Antiquity look different if we approach its events, institutions, and processes (whether political, economic, social, or religious) from a micro scale rather than a macro scale, and vice versa? How can we better understand the late Roman Empire through the examination of macro- and micro-scalar environmental phenomena, such as volcanic eruptions and mutating plague DNA, which were only partially (if at all) perceptible to the late Romans themselves? Alternatively, what graduated categories of measurement and values did late ancient thinkers deploy in their philosophical, scientific (including astrological), and religious works to make sense of metaphysical, ethical, or even physical quandaries? And what did scale mean to individuals on an everyday level, for agriculturalists or merchants whose livelihoods were embedded within multi-scalar economic, environmental, legal, social, and religious networks?

Other papers might consider the fractal replication of structures and relationships across the Empire, for example in conciliar operations (Senate, local curia, church councils), patterns of deference across the social scale, or in the provincial extensions of imperial authority. Comparativists are encouraged to consider how problems of scale inflect transhistorical arguments that encompass both late antiquity and other periods of history.

Abstracts

In order to be considered for participation in this conference, please submit an abstract of no more than 500 words by 1 September 2020 to: shiftingfrontiersxivatgmail.com

Planning Committee

Kristina Sessa
David Brakke
Anthony Kaldellis
Jaclyn Maxwell
Kevin Uhalde

Further information

Go to the official conference website: https://u.osu.edu/shiftingfrontiersxiv/