Tjebbe van Tijen on Fri, 20 Jun 2008 04:19:44 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Orbis Pictus - Theatrum Mundi |
The "Orbis Pictus/Theatrum Mundi Congress" will take place in October 2008 in Amsterdam, its aim is to give a 21st century perspective on World, Picture and Theatre; it is the 9th international congress of the Gesellschaft f?r Theaterwissenschaft". The call for papers has been written by Kati R?ttger who is the new professor for theatre science at the University of Amsterdam. It opens with the following statement: "When Johannes Comenius died in 1670 in Amsterdam, he left behind a comprehensive, revolutionary humanistic work, with which he sought to champion for world peace through education. His text Orbis sensualium pictus: The visible world (1658) is the first European school text book, a teaching tool replete with pictures and texts, which aimed at employing sensual, pictorial observation to arrive at an understanding concepts and thus to an extensive system of knowledge.#01 At the end of the Thirty Years' War, Comenius sought to counter the old theological moral systems with a new order of universal world knowledge laid down his Didactica Magna. (1657) #02 One century later his didactical ideas can be found in a proposal of Georg Crhistoph Lichtenberg for an "Orbis pictus for German dramatists, novelists and actors" (1780). #03 At roughly the same time, the figure of Theatrum Mundi began to acquire an enormous heuristic energy as a metaphor for viewing the world, for the world as stage, for the art of viewing. It was a metaphor that underlined the endeavour of that period to conceive the world (Schramm 1996). #04 The bracketing of the modern topoi of Orbis Pictus and that of Theatrum Mundi informs the thematic scope of the conference by way of offering a historical perspective on the interrelation between world, picture and theatre under the present conditions of globalisation. This invites debating the question of the relevance of these two concepts in describing a culture of knowledge that places picture and text in a new mutual relationship, particularly against the backdrop of the global effects of digitised mass media." The full text can be found at http://www.theatrummundi.com The website of the congress is both in German and English. The website has been constructed in such a way that it expresses the content of the conference also in a visual way. A series of panoramic scrolls will display the ideas of the conference, the first one is now on-line "Orbis Digitalium Pictus" and other ones will soon follow: "Dionysia and other Pleasure Parades" and "Kirkus and Arena, a visual history of mass audience facilities." The dead-line for submitting abstracts/proposals for the conference has just been extended to July 1. 2008. Tjebbe van Tijen Imaginary Museum Projects Dramatizing Historical Information http://imaginarymuseum.org # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org