Date: 6 - 7 November 2024

Timezone: Amsterdam

This introductory workshop is intended for graduate (MA and PhD) students and researchers who have an interest in Arabic handwritten materials and the scholarly traditions that have engaged with these materials in the past and present. No previous experience with manuscripts is necessary, but knowledge of written Arabic and spoken English are required, as are curiosity and engagement, including the willingness to prepare (a limited amount of) readings and assignments before the meetings.

Theoretical lectures and practical exercises using reproductions of manuscripts from the world-famous Leiden collection of Oriental manuscripts and other collections will introduce students to the material and textual features of Arabic manuscripts, including codicological concerns such as scripts, writing materials, book bindings, decorations, and the development of the text through additions, mistakes, corrections, and collation. Special attention will be given to the recent development in the field of book studies that examines manuscripts for their use and meaning in society as objects that are owned, traded, gifted, read, studied and handled as manuals, guides or symbols of power. We will also discuss how digitalisation and online database projects involving manuscripts are changing our engagement with and view of manuscripts and what that means. 

Requirements

  • Knowledge of written Arabic and spoken English. The lectures will be in English, the materials we work with are in Arabic.  

  • An academic background (BA degree, MA degree or PhD) in Arabic literature, history, art history or a related field.  

  • Willingness to prepare including (a limited amount of) readings and assignments to be completed before the workshop.

Please register before 5 August 2024. Note that the maximum number of participants is 15 people.

registration

Programma

Wednesday November 6

9:30–11:00       Introductionby Olly Akkerman & Petra SijpesteijnWhy Arabic manuscripts? Content, use, meaning

11:00–11:30     Coffee break

11:30–13:00     Olly Akkerman & Petra Sijpesteijn - Describing a manuscript: Materials, scripts, paper. 

13:00–14:00     Lunch

14:00–15:30     Students work on codicological assignments

15:30–16:00     Coffee break

16:00–17:00     Students describe findings

 

Thursday November 7

9:30–11:00      Petra Sijpesteijn - The digital turn in manuscript studies: Chances and challenges

11:00–11:30     Coffee break

11:30–13:00     Olly Akkerman - Case study: Social life of Bohra manuscripts

13:00–14:00    Lunch

14:00–15:30     Students work on a whole manuscript: what can be ‘read’?

15:30–16:00     Coffee break

16:00–17:00     Students present findings

17:00–17:30     Closing

18:00                 Public lecture by Petra Sijpesteijn: Reading beyond the words: what Arabic papyri can tell us

Lecturers

  • Olly Akkerman is lecturer and research associate at the Institut für Islamwissenschaft, Freie Universität Berlin. She is specialised in Arabic manuscripts, social codicology and archiving practices with a special interest in the Ismaʿili traditions of Egypt, Yemen and South Asia.  

  • Petra Sijpesteijn is professor of Arabic at Leiden University. She is a social and cultural historian of the medieval Islamicate world with an interest in documentary cultures, especially Arabic papyri, manuscripts and related materials such as seals.

Go to the Netherlands-Flemish Institute in Cairo website

Share on Facebook
Share on X
Share on LinkedIn
Share by WhatsApp
Share by Mastodon

Venue: Netherlands-Flemish Institute in Cairo (NVIC)

City: Zamalek 1iro


Activity log