CFP: Migration, Diaspora, Pilgrimage
From H-Museum:
CALL FOR PAPERS - 2nd Announcement
"Migration, Diaspora, Pilgrimage"
ICOM-ICME annual meeting, Jerusalem
November 17-19, 2008
ICME (the ICOM International Committee for Museums of Ethnography) will hold its 2008 annual conference "Migration, Diaspora, Pilgrimage" in Jerusalem on 17-19 November, 2008. The meeting will be hosted by The Isaac Kaplan Old Yishuv Court Museum and the Jerusalem Foundation in collaboration with ICOM-Israel, L.A. Mayer Museum for Islamic Art, Tower of David Museum of the History of Jerusalem, and U. Nahon Museum of Italian Jewish Art. Final details are still being confirmed, but the general format of the annual meeting will consist of paper and discussion sessions, museum visits including discussions with staff, and walking tours with community scholars.
The conference will be preceded by a one-day walking tour of pilgrimage sites in Jerusalem and will be followed by a two-day post-conference tour of pilgrimage sites in northern Israel.
Registration forms, registration fee information, hotels, post-conference tour costs and other details will be available on the ICME web site in early February at http://icme.icom.museum/
CALL FOR PAPERS: "MIGRATION, DIASPORA, PILGRIMAGE"
People move. Some movement is voluntary - better economic and political situations are sought. Other movement is involuntary. Through the processes of migration and in the diaspora, many people keep alive their identity through the continuity of language, social structure, traditional culture, and belief systems. Part of this latter cultural expression leads people to return to their places of origin to reverence sites they consider to be holy or to hold power. Many as individuals and as groups return from the diaspora to their places of origin in the process of pilgrimage. The
sites to which they return might be sacred or they might be secular. Nonetheless, pilgrimage is a process that crosses many lines of meaning.
Museum of ethnography and ethnology hold material culture, which speaks to the origins of many peoples.
What is the role of museums of ethnography and ethnology in these processes - migration, diaspora, pilgrimage?
Do research and collecting policies and public programs bring light to these processes with reference to communities in which the museums are located?
On the other hand, have museums become sites of pilgrimage for those who cannot make return visits home?
Do museums of ethnography and ethnology work with community leaders to help members keep alive their traditional culture, beliefs and memories?
ICME invites papers discussing "Migration, Diaspora, Pilgrimage" for the 2008 Annual Conference. Paper proposals of up to 300 words should be submitted to: president@icme.icom.museum by April 31, 2008.
Annette B. Fromm
3060 Alton Road
Miami Beach, Fl 33140
305-532-3530
CALL FOR PAPERS - 2nd Announcement
"Migration, Diaspora, Pilgrimage"
ICOM-ICME annual meeting, Jerusalem
November 17-19, 2008
ICME (the ICOM International Committee for Museums of Ethnography) will hold its 2008 annual conference "Migration, Diaspora, Pilgrimage" in Jerusalem on 17-19 November, 2008. The meeting will be hosted by The Isaac Kaplan Old Yishuv Court Museum and the Jerusalem Foundation in collaboration with ICOM-Israel, L.A. Mayer Museum for Islamic Art, Tower of David Museum of the History of Jerusalem, and U. Nahon Museum of Italian Jewish Art. Final details are still being confirmed, but the general format of the annual meeting will consist of paper and discussion sessions, museum visits including discussions with staff, and walking tours with community scholars.
The conference will be preceded by a one-day walking tour of pilgrimage sites in Jerusalem and will be followed by a two-day post-conference tour of pilgrimage sites in northern Israel.
Registration forms, registration fee information, hotels, post-conference tour costs and other details will be available on the ICME web site in early February at http://icme.icom.museum/
CALL FOR PAPERS: "MIGRATION, DIASPORA, PILGRIMAGE"
People move. Some movement is voluntary - better economic and political situations are sought. Other movement is involuntary. Through the processes of migration and in the diaspora, many people keep alive their identity through the continuity of language, social structure, traditional culture, and belief systems. Part of this latter cultural expression leads people to return to their places of origin to reverence sites they consider to be holy or to hold power. Many as individuals and as groups return from the diaspora to their places of origin in the process of pilgrimage. The
sites to which they return might be sacred or they might be secular. Nonetheless, pilgrimage is a process that crosses many lines of meaning.
Museum of ethnography and ethnology hold material culture, which speaks to the origins of many peoples.
What is the role of museums of ethnography and ethnology in these processes - migration, diaspora, pilgrimage?
Do research and collecting policies and public programs bring light to these processes with reference to communities in which the museums are located?
On the other hand, have museums become sites of pilgrimage for those who cannot make return visits home?
Do museums of ethnography and ethnology work with community leaders to help members keep alive their traditional culture, beliefs and memories?
ICME invites papers discussing "Migration, Diaspora, Pilgrimage" for the 2008 Annual Conference. Paper proposals of up to 300 words should be submitted to: president@icme.icom.museum by April 31, 2008.
Annette B. Fromm
3060 Alton Road
Miami Beach, Fl 33140
305-532-3530
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