Thursday, Dec 7th
17.00
Welcoming Addresses
Andreas Eckert (Humboldt Universität zu Berlin/Forum Transregionale Studien)
Hans van Ess (Max Weber Stiftung/ LMU München)
17.30 Roundtable: TRACING CHRONOTYPES IN EAST ASIAN PERCEPTIONS OF THE PAST
Chair: Hans van Ess (Max Weber Stiftung/ LMU München)
Pablo Blitstein (Universität Heidelberg)
An East Asian History of the “Multiple Renaissances” Thesis
Jon Chappell (London School of Economics)
Finding ‘Imperialism’ in China: Power and the Politics of Periodisation in Chinese History
Martin Dusinberre (Universität Zürich)
Maritime: The "Pacific Age" and the Japanese Chronotype of Expansion
Joachim Kurtz (Universität Heidelberg)
When Were the Chinese “Middle Ages”? East Asian Travails of a Colligatory Concept
David Mervart (Universidad Autónoma de Madrid)
The Four Monarchies and the Three Dynasties: Translating European Past in Japan
Birgit Tremml-Werner (Universität Zürich)
Translation and Temporalities in Transcultural Diplomacy
(Papers 15 Minutes, 30 Minutes Discussion)
20:00 Welcome Reception
Friday, Dec. 8th
9.00
Introduction
Thomas Maissen (Deutsches Historisches Institut Paris)
Barbara Mittler (Universität Heidelberg/Forum Transregionale Studien/ HCTS)
Pierre Monnet (Institut franco-allemand de sciences historiques et sociales, IFRA/SHS)
9.30 THE MAKING OF PERIODIZATION SCHEMES
Chair: Eva Cancik-Kirschbaum (Freie Universität Berlin/Einstein Center Chronoi)
Heather Ferguson (Claremont McKenna College)/ David Moshfegh (IE University Madrid)
Producing Islamic History: Schemes of Medieval and Modern and the Racialization of the Past
Justus Nipperdey (Universität des Saarlandes)
Modernity’s Early Modernity - Periodizing European History in Europe and the United States
Milinda Banerjee (LMU München/ Presidency University, Kolkata)
Mastery, Servitude, and the Dialectics of Conquering Time: Periodization and Counter-Periodization in South Asian and Global Intellectual Histories
(Papers 2o minutes, 30 minutes discussion)
11.00 Coffee Break
11.30 MORPHOLOGIES AND MODELS OF PERIODIZATION, PART I
Chair: Andreas Eckert (Humboldt Universität zu Berlin/Forum Transregionale Studien)
Eloi Ficquet (CéSor / EHESS, Paris)
L’entrée de l’Ethiopie en modernité comprise à travers les découpages de l’histoire biblique
Bodhisattva Kar (University of Cape Town)
Since Time Immemorial: Connected Histories of an Anti-Period
Andrew Fearnley (University of Manchester)
Periodization and Place: The ‘Harlem Renaissance’ and the American Racial Imagination
(Papers 2o minutes 30 minutes discussion)
13.00 Lunch
14.00 AXIAL TIMES AND EPOCHAL BREAKS
Chair: Pierre Monnet (Institut franco-allemand de sciences historiques et sociales, IFRA/SHS)
Gerrit Jasper Schenk (Technische Universität Darmstadt)
Ende der Unschuld? Periodisierungsversuche des sozioökologischen Weltsystems für die „Vor-moderne“ in der Anthropozän-Debatte
Achim Landwehr (Heinrich Heine Universität, Düsseldorf)
Where have all the ages gone? Trouble with the European 17th century
Alessandro Stanziani (EHESS, Paris)
Notions et pratiques de la « révolution » : une vue eurasiatique (mi-XVIIe-fin XVIIIe siècles)
(Papers 2o minutes 30 minutes discussion)
15.30 Coffee Break
16.00 TIME AND POWER—PERIODIZATION IN A GLOBAL CONTEXT, PART I
Chair: Thomas Maissen (Deutsches Historisches Institut Paris)
Tatiana Artemyeva (Russian Adademy of Sciences, Moscow)
The Epoch of Enlightenment in Russian and Soviet Periodisation Schemes
Youngmin Kim (Seoul National University)
Politics of the Early Modern: the Dynamics behind Periodization Schemes of East Asian History
Frederico Navarrete (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México)
Fighting over the Pre-Columbian period: the past, the present and the future in the Americas
(Papers 2o minutes 30 minutes discussion)
17.30 Coffee Break
18.00 KEY NOTE LECTURE
REGION, NATION, WORLD: SCALE AND THE PROBLEM OF PERIODISATION
Sanjay Subrahmanyam (University of California, Los Angeles)
Introduction: Sebastian Conrad (Graduate School Global Intellectual History, FU Berlin/ Forum Transregionale Studien)
20.00 Dinner for the participants
Saturday, Dec. 9th
9.00 POPULAR AND PEDAGOGICAL DIMENSIONS OF PERIODIZATION
Chair: Margrit Pernau (Graduate School for Global Intellectual History/Max Planck Institute for Human Development)
Özlem Caykent (İstanbul 29 Mayıs Üniversitesi)
Nationhood and its Imposing Power over Time and Chronology
Anubhuti Maurya, (University of Delhi )
The Mythical Medieval: Periodization, Historical Memory and the Imagination of the Indian Nation
Susynne McElrone (CAORC, Washington/ACOR, Amman)
The Paradox of Palestinian National History: Colonized Periodization
(Papers 2o minutes 30 minutes discussion)
10.30 Coffee Break
11.00 TIME AND POWER—PERIODIZATION IN A GLOBAL CONTEXT, PART II
Chair: Kris Manjapra (Tufts University, Medford/ Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin)
Ihediwa Nkemjika Chimee (University of Nigeria, Nsukka)
African Historiography and the challenges of European periodization: A Historical Comment
Bernard Cooperman (University of Maryland)
Inventing Jews by Periodizing Jewish Time
Özen N. Dolcerocca (Koҫ Üniversitesi, Istanbul)
Transnational Modernism and the Problem of Eurochronology
(Papers 2o minutes 30 minutes discussion)
12.30 Lunch
13.30 MORPHOLOGIES AND MODELS OF PERIODIZATION, PART II
Chair: Manu Goswami (New York University/Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin)
William deJong Lambert (CUNY / Columbia University)
Neo-Darwinism, Synthesis, Neo-Synthesis: The Problem of Periodizing Evolution
Tilman Frasch (Manchester Metropolitan University)
Time, Teleology and History: “Metteyyanism” in Theravada Buddhism
Meltem Toksoz (Boğaziçi Üniversitesi, İstanbul)
Periodization in Late Ottoman Universal Histories, Re-Modeling Time and Empire
(Papers 2o minutes 30 minutes discussion)
15.00 Concluding Roundtable: WORLD HISTORY RECONSIDERED: TIME, SPACE, MATERIAL
Chair: Barbara Mittler (Universität Heidelberg/ Forum Transregionale Studien/ HCTS)
Comment: Sanjay Subrahmanyam (UCLA)
Ulrike Kirchberger (Universität Kassel)
Chronologies of Ecologial Change in the Indian Ocean World, 1850-1920
Jörn Rüsen (Universität Witten-Herdecke)
Making Periodization Possible. The Concept of the Course of Time (Zeitverlaufsvorstellung) in Historical Thinking
Michael Geyer (University of Chicago)
After the “Provincialization of Europe”: The Time of World History in Marshall G. S. Hodgson’s Work on Ismalicate Societies and World History
(15 minutes Input papers, 30 minutes Panel discussion)
16.30 Concluding Remarks by the Conveners and General Discussion
17.15 End of the Conference
The conference is part of the strategic cooperation between the Forum Transregionale Studien and the Max Weber Stiftung – Deutsche Geisteswissenschaftliche Institute im Ausland. The conference is convened by Thomas Maissen (Deutsches Historisches Institut Paris, DHIP), Barbara Mittler (Forum Transregionale Studien/Heidelberg Centre for Transcultural Studies/Universität Heidelberg), and Pierre Monnet (Institut franco-allemand de sciences historiques et sociales, Frankfurt am Main).It is arranged in cooperation with the Einstein Center Chronoi and the Graduate School Global Intellectual History at the Freie Universität Berlin and the Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. It is supported by the German Federal Ministry for Education and Research (Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung, BMBF).