Sponsored by: AEGIS at the UCLouvain, Louvain-la-Neuve
Call for Papers Deadline: May 30, 2018
OIKOS
Archaeological approaches to House Societies in the ancient Aegean
International Workshop organised by AEGIS at the UCLouvain, Louvain-la-Neuve, 6th-7th December 2018.
1st Circular
Conveners: M. Relaki & J. Driessen
“Lévi-Strauss was the first to recognize the potential of Houses as “moral persons holding an estate made up of material and immaterial wealth which perpetuate themselves through the transmission of their name, fortune and titles down a real or imaginary line, considered legitimate as long as this continuity can express itself in the language of kinship or of affinity, and most often of both” for bridging kin-based and class-based social orders. The rigour of the model in illuminating the intersection between individual or small-scale social units and larger, collective structures from a diachronic perspective has generated a wealth of anthropological and archaeological scholarship in recent years. While the flexibility and diversity embodied in the model offer clear advantages for analysing ancient social practices, a lot of its features require greater critical scrutiny. We propose to approach Houses as heuristic devices for exploring social relations and modelling social interactions in the past, viewing the House society model as an inherently flexible set of structuring principles capturing relations, behaviours and patterns that subvert traditional categories of social interaction. Houses are resolutely entangled with material culture and the world of things making them an interpretive model rooted in post-humanist and new materialist approaches; they can encompass and operationalise multiple spatial and temporal scales, without subsuming one to another in overarching hierarchical schemata; their material, social and political facets (e.g., combining hierarchical and heterarchical structures; being focused on collective representation whilst allowing for the emergence of individual identities; deploying architectural elaboration as both a method of unification and differentiation), allow for a more nuanced and sophisticated understanding of the past, which we think is worth exploring further. The geographical and cultural context of the ancient Aegean (broadly defined) offers a meaningful setting in which to situate these concerns, allowing us to follow up materialisations and expressions of Houses through time with reference to social processes and practices with transformative power and long-term implications.
We invite colleagues to discuss, embellish, and debate the usefulness of the House Society model in the context of the ancient Aegean in any of the following fields of investigation (although by no means limited to these areas).
Confirmed speakers: T. Brogan, D.C. Haggis, C. Knappett, C. Morris, A. Peatfield, C. Sofianou, S. Todaro.
Scholars interested in participating are invited to submit a preliminary title and an abstract (up to 300 words) before May 30, 2018 to maria.relaki@uclouvain.be or jan.driessen@uclouvain.be . Participants will have 25 minutes to present their paper, followed by a discussion of 10 minutes. The language of the workshop is English. The papers will be published in the Aegis series.”