Language Contact and the Early Slavs

Akce
Centrum pro studium člověka a společnosti
Datum konání: 19. 10. 2017

THE WORKSHOP

Dates: 19.-22. 10. 2017
Location: nám. Jana Palacha 2, Praha 1 (room no. 18) | Hybernská 3, Praha 1 (Sweerts-Špork’s Palace, room no. 303)
Organizing Institution: MIndME research group (Humanities Research Centers)

Program: Program_Language Contact and the Early Slavs

The workshop addresses one of the most controversial issues in contemporary medieval studies, which is the extremely fast expansion of the Slavic language(s) across great parts of Europe in the Early Middle Ages. While traditional scenarios assume unity of language, ethnicity, and material culture, leading alternative models emphasize the active role of material culture, through which ethnic identity was constructed to mobilize linguistically extremely heterogeneous population. The traditionalists explain the spread of the Proto-Slavic language by migrations in the 6th-7th century and associate that with specific material culture and with early mentions of ethnic Slavs in written sources. The alternative hypotheses attribute the same material culture and written references to linguistically and genetically very varied communities and associate the subsequent spread of the Proto-Slavic with its status as an ‘official’ language or ‘koiné’. In other words, early ethnic Slavs did not speak Proto-Slavic, no Slavic ‘Urheimat’ did exist, and Slavic speakers may not have common roots.

MINDME RESEARCH GROUP

FACULTY OF ARTS, CHARLES UNIVERSITY

In the last decades, there have been radical shifts in our understanding of ethnicity, religion, and their dialogic relationship. Ethnicity, similar to religion, is not viewed as a biologically or culturally stable identity, but as a behavior – as a cultural construct created, transmitted, and maintained by discourse and practice and in effect expressed both by language or/and non-verbal semiotic means, such as material culture. However, there is a lack of knowledge of interaction and substitutability of language and material culture in this process under various social, economic, and demographical circumstances. The MIndMe research group aims to advance the research in how ethnicity was constructed in the specific situation of migration or cultural and language contact in Early Medieval Europe. In addition, the research will focus on links between ethnicity and other kinds of identities, especially religion.

In order to achieve these objectives, the project (1) includes various disciplines, territories, and contact situations, (2) advances comparative approaches and new methods, and (3) organizes several international conferences and workshops. The first one is ‘Language contact and the early Slavs’.