CFP: Magic and Intellectual History

Submission deadline: October 15, 2014

Conference date(s):
March 5, 2015

Go to the conference's page

Conference Venue:

CREMS, University of York
York, United Kingdom

Topic areas

Details

This symposium will explore the place of magic in the intellectual culture of early modern England and Europe. It will focus on how magic was perceived and understood in philosophical, religious and scientific thought, and the ambivalence that surrounded it as topics of scholarship. 

Papers might attend to the following:

How did early modern thought accommodate magic into its disciplines?

Why was magic the object of so much ‘elite’ scientific and philosophical thought?

Magic and the study of nature

Magic and the ineffable

Redefining the parameters of magic

Magic and religion.

The occult and hidden operations of nature

Scepticism and magical thought

Magic and language / magic and metaphor

Literature and the portrayal of magic

Magic and the devil

Magicians and their day-jobs. 

Call for Papers: Abstracts by 15th October (c. 250 words)

Contact: Kevin Killeen, [email protected]

This symposium is part of a diffuse and ongoing Thomas Browne Seminar that has digressed quite far: 

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