THE BIRTHA THE BRISTOL INSTITUTE FOR RESEARCH IN THE HUMANITIES AND ARTS

Conference BIRTHANEWSLETTER 2 0CTOBER 2005 Language History From Below of Historical Sociolinguistics, this bias is being challenged. In Linguistic Variation in the Germanic the first ever BIRTHA-sponsored conference (also funded by Languages from 1700 – 2000 the British Academy and the Linguistics Association of Great A message from Britain), scholars from 14 countries, specialising in both 6th – 8th April 2005 “smaller” languages such as ,, Flemish, Organised by Nils Langer (Bristol), Stephan Elspaß , and Surinamese Dutch but also “bigger”ones the Director (Augsburg), Joachim Scharloth (Zürich),Wim such as German, English and Norwegian came to Clifton Hill Vandenbussche (VU Brussel). House in April 2005 to discuss a new angle to language historiography.Rather than adopting the traditional focus on newsletter.Various schemes have That history is not an independently existing object but the standard varieties of their languages, these scholars BIRTHA’s been set up, including one for rather the construct of the interpretation of people also proposed a view of “language history from below” whereby first year was pertains to the field of historical linguistics.Therefore, it comes non-standard data from 1700-2000 is not ignored as it was definitely a official BIRTHA conferences (3 a as no surprise that histories of languages can vary,depending previously the case but is openly endorsed as the focus of successful one, year, fully supported not just on the empirical data available but also the study.In this context, typical topics covered by several papers as a result, in no administratively), and one for motivations of the historian. In particular it is the historian’s include the use of non-standard features in private letter small measure, of the hard work of postgraduate conferences.This choice to ignore or devalue certain developments as peripheral correspondence (e.g. the variation of you was vs. you were in the administrator, Sam Barlow.The autumn we shall have the first or ‘merely regional’. C18; the spelling of {have} as which was already annual BIRTHA lecture, which The historiography of the , e.g., is attested in the late C18!), the effectiveness of prescriptive office in no 7 Woodland Road has will be a good opportunity to heavily influenced by a certain bias towards what is grammarians to stigmatised particular constructions (e.g. split been set up, and Sam is always considered to be beautiful and what is seen to be correct.This infinitives in C18 English, würde in in C19 German), or the willing to welcome colleagues there celebrate our collective view has led to a striking asymmetry in that scholars devote a close interconnection between the creation of national and for a chat.The website, apart from achievements.You will find the lot of time to the “beautiful”variability of languages and linguistic identity,esp. in multilingual settings (e.g. C19 being generally informative, is details of these and other BIRTHA dialects from the beginning of textual evidence (c. 800AD for Hungary,C19 Poland, or modern Luxembourg). getting across the message to the activities on the website.The English and German, somewhat later for Scandinavian and An intense three days of discussion were completed with the world outside that the Bristol Executive Committee meets once a other Gmc. languages) until the beginning of the foundation of a Historical Sociolinguistics Network term to consider proposals for standardisation in the Early Modern period (c. 16th/17th (HISON) which aims to provide a platform for coordinated Faculty of Arts constitutes a grants of over £500, while I can century) when contemporary variation was considered to be research, exchange of information and further collaboration dynamic and thriving research irritating, incorrect and ugly.In the recently developed field with regard to conferences and summer schools. environment, with a huge variety of help colleagues wherever possible activities (too many indeed easily to with smaller sums.This year funds keep track of). Please do keep will be somewhat tighter, but there is still enough to make a real THE BRISTOL INSTITUTE FOR RESEARCH IN THE HUMANITIES AND ARTS sending Sam details of current and future events, so she can keep the difference. I am anxious to talk to colleagues about their research BIRTHA, Faculty of Arts, University of Bristol, diary of events up-to-date. needs, and am always glad to Graduate Centre 7 Woodland Road, Bristol BS8 1TB BIRTHA was able to offer Tel: 0117 928 8892 Fax: 0117 331 7469 significant financial support to the 5 receive suggestions on what Email: [email protected] newly-launched Faculty research BIRTHA might additionally offer. themes, the main subject of this

www.bristol.ac.uk/arts/birtha Director: Professor Charles Martindale, Classics and Ancient History ([email protected]) Administrator: Samantha Barlow ([email protected]) BIRTHA BIRTHA Postgraduate Conference Every day in their research, scientists of every stripe encounter the interplay between the natural and mathematical sciences. However, this exchange of ideas and methods is not often to be found in the philosophical disciplines that analyse these two realms of Faculty knowledge. At the start of June this year, aided financially by BIRTHA,the Mind Association, the Analysis Trust and the British Society for the Philosophy of Science, the Department of Philosophy held a postgraduate conference entitled ‘Novel Approaches in the Philosophies of the Natural and Mathematical Sciences’ that was intended to bridge this gap. Six excellent papers were presented by graduate students from Edinburgh, Oxford, Cambridge and Bristol on topics as diverse as the philosophy of arithmetic, the analysis of our concept of causation and the grounding for our statements about counterfactual situations. These graduate papers were interspersed with three keynote addresses by Professor John MacFarlane from the University of California at Berkeley and Bristol’s THEMES own Professor Alexander Bird of the Department of Philosophy and Dr. John P.Mayberry of the School of Mathematics. The exchange of ideas and methods that the organizers had hoped to encourage was prolific from the beginning until the end. For further in the press, offer much food for Middle Ages.The emphasis of the information please visit the conference website, which will remain at http://www.maths.bris.ac.uk/~rp3959/conference.htm. Colonialism contemporary thought. faculty research theme on ‘cultures’ Theme Leader: Professor Activities of Colonialism theme resonates strongly with the Centre’s Robert Bickers participants this year have focused on a well-established attention to has just finished her PhD in cultural (Department of Historical busy schedule of seminars and interdisciplinary debate and Performativity, Reception studies in Leeds, has been appointed Studies) workshops, on turning the theme into a collaboration across departments.The Place, Space Theme Leader: Professor Faculty Lecturer in Reception.And the Faculty research centre, and on taking a Centre regularly holds seminars and Charles Martindale Theme Leader: Professor future looks at least as exciting, with Fu Manchu stalked a Bristol seminar major bid for a Leverhulme Research conferences, to which specialists in a (Department of Classics Martin White plans for new publication ventures as room this year, as participants in a Project grant to the shortlisting stage. wide range of disciplines are invited to and Ancient History) (Department of Drama) well numerous events Centre for the Study of Colonial and Highlights of the year included a well- contribute, and it organizes an annual Postcolonial Societies workshop attended interdisciplinary workshop on postgraduate conference. Recent This year, in addition to a regular debated ‘Limehouse nightmares’ with ‘Colonial and Postcolonial Genders and international conferences organized by The first year of activity has been busy seminar series and several publications visiting speaker Professor Jeffrey Sexualities’, the award of £50k by the members of the Centre include ‘The Science, Knowledge and productive.The seminar series was within the area, we have had a number Richards. Richards put the ‘Devil AHRC to the Centre to co-ordinate a World of Eleanor of Aquitaine’ (2003) and Reality very well attended by staff and research of significant events, including: the doctor’ -- the ‘Yellow Peril incarnate in two-year national programme of and ‘Envisaging Heaven in the Middle students from departments across the Arts relaunch of the Institute of Greece, Theme Leader: Professor one man’ as his creator memorably postgraduate research training in Ages’ (2004). The Centre also plays an Faculty and beyond. Participants were Rome, and the Classical Tradition,with Alexander Bird conceived him -- in to his place in Colonial and Postcolonial Studies, and active role in various Worldwide asked to explore how their own work a provocative lecture 'Greek Tragedy (Department of British culture, and the culture of the appointment of Stephen Howe to Universities Network programmes, related to the Theme, and papers were Today' by Colin Burrow (Cambridge); a Philosophy) colonial racism that lay embedded in it. the new Chair in the History and most notably a project on delivered by colleagues from Arts`and commemoration of the work of Jacques Author Sax Rohmer’s 1912 creation Cultures of Colonialism. ‘Multilingualism in the Middle Ages’ Social Sciences in Bristol and by two Derrida; a 3-day international Participants in this theme have been was contrasted sharply with the realities and a new collaboration on ‘Visual visiting scholars from the USA – conference 'Crossing Cultures: Identities pushing forward interdisciplinary of Chinese life and experience in early Translation’.Members of the Centre Professor Tracy C. Davis (Northwestern) in the Material World';a visit as Meaker research on a number of fronts, twentieth century Britain, in a Medieval Cultures run regular sessions at the two principal and Professor Michael Shanks (Stanford). Professor by Kenneth Haynes (Brown), including (i) the Royal Society’s presentation from speaker Anne international medieval conferences, at Theme Leader: Dr The theme is the beneficiary of two an important figure in English/Classics Medawar Lecture,“The Truth About Witchard, which covered that and the Leeds and Kalamazoo.Thanks to the Marcus Bull (Department RCUK Academic Fellowships. The first relations and translation studies; a strand Science’ (Professor Peter Lipton, exoticising reportage and fictions of creation of the ‘Medieval Cultures’ of Historical Studies) – Dr Angela Piccini - was appointed in 'Art History and the Uses of Reception' Cambridge); (ii) a seminar series on the another ‘chronicler’ of London’s research theme, the University was able February,and Dr Jo Carruthers joins us in at the 31st Annual Conference of the history and philosophy of science; (iii) a Limehouse Chinatown,Thomas Burke. to make an appointment to a new September from the University of Association of Art Historians at Bristol; a conference to mark the 250th Perhaps nothing demonstrates the The ‘Medieval Cultures’ faculty Professorship in Medieval Studies in Lancaster. debate about reception at the Classical anniversary of the Lisbon Earthquake saliency of the study of colonialism and research theme is an exciting initiative April 2005.The appointee is Professor The programme for the coming Association Conference in Reading; (28-29 October 2005); (iv) a major its aftermaths more than the way even that builds on the success of Bristol’s Pamela King, who will take up her academic year will focus on aspects of and, a fitting climax, a lecture by one of international conference on Causes and these offspring of Edwardian popular Centre for Medieval Studies.The duties as Theme Leader and Director of place and space via travel, transitions, the Dioscuri of reception theory, Dispositions (2-4 December 2005); (v) fiction continue to resonate with us. Centre has been operating since 1993, the Centre in January 2006. Professor mappings, representation and movement. Professor Wolfgang Iser (Constance and workshops on the philosophy of biology The demonisation of an immigrant its aim to draw together, and to provide King, who joins us from St Martin’s Anyone with any interest in this Irvine). (A full report of these and other and methodology in the theory of community,the host culture’s fear of a dynamic forum for, the research College, Lancaster, is an expert on late Theme is very welcome to take part and activities is posted on the BIRTHA knowledge; (vi) a postgraduate alien plots and conspiracies, and the interests of all the staff and postgraduate medieval English mystery plays, as well is invited to contact website.) Institute fellow Katherine conference on novel approaches in the crude and often harsh ways which the students within the Faculty of Arts who as many other aspects of late medieval [email protected] for further Harloe has been working on 'Nietzsche philosophies of the mathematical and community was policed and portrayed work on aspects of the European art and literature. details. and the Greeks', and Dr Ika Willis, who natural sciences.

The BIRTHA Office is situated on the ground floor of the Graduate Centre in 7 Woodland Road.Colleagues are warmly invited to visit the Office either to talk to the Administrator, or consult the available archive. www.bristol.ac.uk/arts/birtha