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(Re)productive Traditions in Ancient Egypt (Liège, Belgium, 2013) - Programme

Monash University
Carlo Rindi Nuzzolo (Aggregated by)
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ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=info:doi10.26180/5c887c538b99c&rft.title=(Re)productive Traditions in Ancient Egypt (Liège, Belgium, 2013) - Programme&rft.identifier=http://doi.org/10.26180/5c887c538b99c&rft.publisher=Monash University&rft.description=(Re)productive Traditions in Ancient Egypt - Conference, Liège (Belgium), Feb 6-8, 2013 - Post-conference summary The University of Liège recently hosted the conference (Re)productive Traditions in Ancient Egypt, attracting an array of international participants from all over Europe, the United States, Australia, and Russia. The aim of the conference was to bring together Egyptologists working in fields from the Predynastic to the Late Period and even Hellenistic times, and specializing in archaeology, art history and philology, to talk about a concept central to the study of ancient Egypt: tradition. Such an open topic provoked many different responses and resulted in insights from many different points of view and dealing with largely disparate sets of data. An especially eclectic mix of material took us from the artists in the Theban foothills to potters in present-day India, and from changing ideas about literary texts to the place of cupreous statuary in Egyptian art. With themes of diachrony persisting at the centre, aspects of tradition were discussed as sets of conventions abstracted from continuity of artefactual forms; as processes of knowledge (and practice) acquisition and transmission; and as relevant to the individuals and groups involved in artefactual production. The viability of reproductivity and productivity was discussed as concepts for describing cultural change and the (dis)continuity of traditions. The conference resulted in the publication of a thematic volume handling the concept of tradition in the study of ancient Egypt, and is published in the series Aegyptiaca Leodiensia.Title: Tradition and Transformation. Different Aspects of the same tradition: a diatopic reassessment on the production of Ptah-Sokar-Osiris Carlo Rindi Nuzzolo https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8183-8483 http://www.calipsoproject.net/ &rft.creator=Carlo Rindi Nuzzolo&rft.date=2019&rft_rights=&rft_subject=CALiPSO Project&rft_subject=Ptah-Sokar-Osiris&rft_subject=ancient egyptian religion&rft_subject=Ancient Egypt&rft_subject=Burial practices&rft_subject=burial furniture&rft_subject=Egyptology&rft_subject=Egittologia&rft_subject=wooden figures&rft_subject=funerary practices&rft_subject=excavations&rft_subject=Regionalism&rft_subject=Ancient Art&rft_subject=ancient history&rft_subject=Late Period&rft_subject=Third Intermediate Period&rft_subject=Ptolemaic Egypt&rft_subject=Graeco-Roman Period&rft_subject=funerary beliefs&rft_subject=Archaeological Context&rft_subject=museum collections&rft_subject=Egyptian Collections&rft_subject=Egyptian tradition&rft_subject=Local variations&rft_subject=regional style&rft_subject=Akhmim&rft_subject=Thebes&rft_subject=Upper Egypt&rft_subject=Middle Egypt&rft_subject=Ptolemaic Period&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

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(Re)productive Traditions in Ancient Egypt - Conference, Liège (Belgium), Feb 6-8, 2013 - Post-conference summary


The University of Liège recently hosted the conference (Re)productive Traditions in Ancient Egypt, attracting an array of international participants from all over Europe, the United States, Australia, and Russia.


The aim of the conference was to bring together Egyptologists working in fields from the Predynastic to the Late Period and even Hellenistic times, and specializing in archaeology, art history and philology, to talk about a concept central to the study of ancient Egypt: tradition. Such an open topic provoked many different responses and resulted in insights from many different points of view and dealing with largely disparate sets of data. An especially eclectic mix of material took us from the artists in the Theban foothills to potters in present-day India, and from changing ideas about literary texts to the place of cupreous statuary in Egyptian art. With themes of diachrony persisting at the centre, aspects of tradition were discussed as sets of conventions abstracted from continuity of artefactual forms; as processes of knowledge (and practice) acquisition and transmission; and as relevant to the individuals and groups involved in artefactual production. The viability of reproductivity and productivity was discussed as concepts for describing cultural change and the (dis)continuity of traditions.


The conference resulted in the publication of a thematic volume handling the concept of tradition in the study of ancient Egypt, and is published in the series Aegyptiaca Leodiensia.


Title: Tradition and Transformation. Different Aspects of the same tradition: a diatopic reassessment on the production of Ptah-Sokar-Osiris

Carlo Rindi Nuzzolo



Issued: 2019-03-13

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