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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260622T232445Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20220502T050000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20220504T130000
SUMMARY:In Search of Zera Yacob 
UID:20260623T022104Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/London
LOCATION:1 Walton Street\, Oxford\, United Kingdom\, OX1 2HB
DESCRIPTION:<p><strong>[UPDATE - Conference postponed till May 2022]<br></strong></p>\n<p>In Search of Zera Yacob will be the first international and interdisciplinary conference on two remarkable philosophical texts from early modern Ethiopia\, the <em>Ḥat&auml\;ta Z&auml\;r&rsquo\;a Ya‛ǝqob</em> and the <em>Ḥ</em><em>at&auml\;ta Walda Heywat</em>. These texts have fascinated and puzzled alike on account of their philosophical depth\, beauty and apparent historical singularity. They have been called the &lsquo\;jewel of Ethiopian literature&rsquo\;\, and served to demonstrate\, in the words of Claude Sumner\, that &ldquo\;modern philosophy\, in the sense of a personal rationalistic critical investigation\, began in Ethiopia with Zera Yacob at the same time as in England and in France&rdquo\;.&nbsp\;<br><br>This conference aims to examine the ideas\, language and history of the <em>Ḥat&auml\;ta Z&auml\;r&rsquo\;a Ya‛ǝqob</em> by putting scholars from across the world\, and across disciplinary boundaries\, into dialogue. It aims to stimulate a productive discussion between scholars from philosophy\, history\, philology\, and Ethiopian studies\, and to serve as a prolegomenon to broader philosophical study of the <em>Ḥat&auml\;ta Z&auml\;r&rsquo\;a Ya‛ǝqob</em>. Contributors to the conference will explore the text&rsquo\;s philosophical arguments and their significance\, the historical context of intellectual exchanges in Ethiopia\, issues of translation and the forging of philosophical vocabularies\, notions of authorship and authenticity in philosophical writing\, the legacy of colonialism for Ethiopian studies\, and the methodology of a truly global history of philosophy.<br><br>One of the guiding threads of the conference is the century-long controversy over the authorship of the <em>Ḥat&auml\;ta Z&auml\;r&rsquo\;a Ya‛ǝ</em><em>qob</em> and the <em>Ḥat&auml\;ta Walda Heywat</em>: do the texts have a genuine 17th century Ethiopian authorship\, as asserted in the texts\, or was the supposed &lsquo\;discoverer&rsquo\; of the texts\, the Capuchin monk Giusto d&rsquo\;Urbino\, in fact their secret author? In addition to bringing new research to bear on the debate\, we hope that the conference will provide an opportunity to analyse the history and politics of this controversy\, from the first scholars who admired and enthusiastically catalogued and edited the texts in the early 20th century\, to its rejection by Carlo Conti Rossini\, an orientalist\, and apologist for the fascist invasion of Ethiopia\, and the reassertion of a 17th century authorship by Almeyahu Moges\, Amsalu Alkilu and Claude Sumner in the 1970s. We hope also to explore the suggestions of scholars such as Binyam Mekkonen that the <em>Ḥ</em><em>at&auml\;ta Z&auml\;r&rsquo\;a Ya‛ǝqob</em>\, &lsquo\;authentic&rsquo\; or not\, can obscure other rich philosophical resources to be found elsewhere in Ethiopian literature. The conference will thus also provide an opportunity to interrogate the often fraught and often ideological underpinnings of these arguments\, examining the role of colonial knowledge production in shaping the controversy\, and the history of Ethiopian studies at large. Addressing this controversy with an eye to its troubled history is important if the <em>Ḥat&auml\;ta </em>is to receive the attention it deserves.<br><br>Further study of the <em>Ḥat&auml\;ta Z&auml\;r&rsquo\;a Ya‛ǝqob</em> might have profound implications for the history and historiography of philosophy in Africa and in a global orientation\, for understanding processes of philosophical translation and connected intellectual histories\, as well as the history of Ge&rsquo\;ez philology and literature.</p>\n<p>Invited Speakers:<br><strong>Dr</strong> <strong>Teshome Abera</strong>\,&nbsp\;Addis Ababa Science and Technology University<br><strong>Prof. Peter Adamson</strong>\, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich/King's College London<br><strong>Prof.</strong> <strong>Wendy Belcher</strong>\, Princeton University&nbsp\;<br><strong>Mr Eyasu Berento</strong>\, Kotebe Metropolitan University<br><strong>Prof. Getatchew Haile\,&nbsp\;</strong>Curator Emeritus of the Ethiopian Study Center at the Hill Museum &amp\; Manuscript Library<br><strong>Dr Chike Jeffers</strong>\, Dalhousie University<br><strong>Dr Ralph Lee</strong>\, SOAS<br><strong>Prof. John Marenbon</strong>\, University of Cambridge<br><strong>Prof. Binyam Mekonnen</strong>\, Addis Ababa University<br><strong>Dr Fasil Merawi</strong>\, Addis Ababa University<br><strong>Prof. Justin E. H. Smith</strong>\, University of Paris 7 - Denis Diderot<br><strong>Dr&nbsp\;</strong><strong>Ana&iuml\;s Wion</strong>\,&nbsp\;Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique</p>\n<p><br><strong>Dates: May 2022 (exact date TBD\, pending pandemic developments)</strong></p>\n<p>For all enquiries\, please contact: <a href="mailto:yacobconference@gmail.com">yacobconference@gmail.com</a>. <br><br>The conference is organized with the generous support of the Royal Institute of Philosophy\, the Mind Association\, the Aristotelian Society\, and the Hinton Clarendon Fellowship\, Worcester College.</p>\n<p><strong><br></strong></p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Robin Brons;CN=Lea Cantor;CN=Jonathan Egid;CN=Johann Go;CN=Justin Holder:
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