Colloque – The Aura of the Word in the Early Age of Print (1450-1600)

This conference applies Walter Benjamin’s famous concept of ‘aura’, namely the unique existence of the work of art at the place where it happens to be, to different instances of early modern writing.

The notion of aura has been influential in art history. It made scholars reflect on, for example, the interaction of a painting or a sculpture and the place where it was/is exhibited, or on the differences between original works of art and copies. It has received far less attention in the study of literature and other instances of writing, however, especially those produced after the onset of print. While medievalists still pay attention to the individual manuscript in which a text came down to us, early modern studies tends to treat text as something abstract and intangible that can be transferred from one context or material support to another without change of meaning. Scholarship on the impact of print during the early modern period has focused almost exclusively on the ways in which print affected the dissemination of abstract knowledge and ideas rather than the material manifestation of texts.

There are, however, numerous indications that, during the early modern period, the place where a text happened to be, as well as the object it was written or printed on, could affect the meaning and function of that text. Pre-modern forms of writing, such as, for example, the illuminated manuscript, inscriptions on objects and buildings and the veneration and burning of books or pieces of paper containing religious writings continued to be important after the invention of the printing press. The early modern period also saw the appearance of new auratic practices like the veneration of the artist’s signature and the Reformation text altarpiece. All of these examples make us wonder if the visible word might not have been perceived as more than a purely functionalist medium in the early modern period.
Objective

The aim of this conference is to ascertain if, how and to what degree movable type influenced the early modern significance of the aura and appearance of the word. This will be done through a series of papers that reflect on how texts could gain or bestow meaning through their relationship to their material support and physical contexts or in the process of the act of writing itself. What was the significance of the unique existence of writing at the place where it happened to be? And what about the moment when, the way in which and the person by whom it was created? Did writing lose its aura when mechanically reproduced, as Benjamin believed to have been the case for images? Was it altered, or, as the German art historian Horst Bredekamp has argued for devotional images, unaffected by it?

The question of the aura of early modern text relates at the same time to the content, the material manifestation and the social and cultural contingency of language. Its relevance also transcends narrow temporal and national boundaries. The Aura of the Word in the Early Age of Printtherefore has a deliberately broad interdisciplinary and international approach. Speakers come from a variety of fields (literary history, art history, cultural history, architectural history) and of scholarly traditions (notably European and North American). Their papers will explore different instances of writing (in print and manuscript, in books, on scraps of paper, on paintings, liturgical objects and in buildings) from a wide geographical area (The Low Countries, France, Germany, the Italian Peninsula, New Spain), in a variety of languages (French, Dutch, Hebrew, German and Spanish) and from a broad temporal framework (1450-1600). Since the theme of the conference relates to the materiality of text, the programme also features a visit to the print collections of the Royal Library.

Practical information : here
Programme :

Thursday 13 September 2012


13:00  : Registration and coffee
13:30 : Welcome by Jürgen Pieters (Ghent University – Group for Early Modern Studies)
13:40 : Jessica Buskirk (Technical University Dresden) & Samuel Mareel (Ghent University) – Introduction

14:00 – Session One – Material Words

Johan Oosterman (Radboud University Nijmegen) – A brief message on salvation. Minor textual amulets: form, use, transmission
Kathryn M. Rudy (University of St Andrews) – Printed, Baked, and Swallowed: the Aura of the IHS-Monogram
Martin Przybilski (University of Trier) – Jewish Concepts of the Holiness of Script in the Age of Printing: The Case of the Genizah

16:00 : Coffee Break

16:20 – Session Two – The Word and the Image

Joost Keizer (Yale University) – Referentiality of the Image ca. 1500
Stijn Bussels (University of Groningen) – The Diptych of the Lentulus Letter: Building Textual and Visual Evidence for Christ’s Appearance

18:00 – Keynote Lecture

Adrian Armstrong (Queen Mary, University of London) – Literary Countermonuments of the Late Middle Ages


Friday 14 September 2012

9:30 – Session Three – Traveling Words

Tom Deneire (Huygens Institute, The Hague)Sermo inter absentes. The Auratic Word in Justus Lipsius’s Neo-Latin Correspondence
Christopher P. Heuer (Princeton University) – Speech as Object in the North
Arjan Van Dixhoorn (Ghent University) – Tactility, Intermediality and Fictions of Orality in a Scribal Letter from Delft (1574)

11:30 – Visit

Visit to the print room of the Royal Library of Belgium with lecture by Joris Van Grieken (Royal Library of Belgium) – What’s in a Name? On Verses, Addresses and Signatures. The Appearance of Text on Printed Images in Antwerp 1530 – 1560

12:30 : Lunch

14:00 – Session Four – The Word in Three Dimensions

Maarten Delbeke (Ghent University / Leiden University) – The Building as Book. The case of Notre-Dame-des-Marais in Ferté-Bernard
Sara Ryu (Yale University) – Inscription and Embodiment: The Place of Text in Early Modern Sculpture
Jeroen Vandommele (University of Groningen/Ghent University) – 

16:00 : Coffee Break

16:30 – Keynote Lecture

Christopher Wood (Yale University) – How to Recognize a Prophecy
19:00 : Conference Dinner
Saturday 15 September 2012

9:30 – Session Five – The Word of the Book

Nelleke Moser (Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam) – Capitalizing Cornelis Crul. Aura, Ornaments, and Order in BL Sloane Ms 1174
Rebecca Dixon (University of Leeds) – Reading Defacement: Illustration and Labels in the Roman de Buscalus (BnF, ms fr. 9343-9344)

10:50 : Coffee Break

11:10 : Session Six – The Word in Manuscript and Print

Anne-Laure Van Bruaene (Ghent University) – The Adieu and Willecomme for Jan van Hembyze or the Battle between Manuscript and Print in Calvinist Ghent
Arnoud Visser (Utrecht University) – Customizing the Classics: Manuscript Marginalia and the Authority of the Reader

12:30 : Closing discussion
13:00 : Lunch

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