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Article contents
Beyond the Islamicate Chancery: Archives, Paperwork, and Textual Encounters across Eurasia, a Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 January 2021
Abstract
This thematic issue of Itinerario brings together a selection of papers presented at the international conference Beyond the Islamicate Chancery: Archives, Paperwork, and Textual Encounters across Eurasia, which was held at the Austrian Academy of Sciences in Vienna in early October 2018. The conference was the third instalment in a series of collaborations between the Institute of Iranian Studies at the Austrian Academy of Sciences and the University of Pittsburgh examining Islamicate cultures of documentation from different angles. Surviving precolonial and colonial chancery archives across Eurasia provide an unparalleled glimpse into the inner workings of connectivity across writing cultures and, especially, documentary practices. This particular meeting has attempted to situate what has traditionally been a highly technical discipline in a broader historical dialogue on the relationship between state power, the archive, and cultural encounters.
- Type
- Introduction
- Information
- Itinerario , Volume 44 , Special Issue 3: Beyond the Islamicate Chancery: Archives, Paperwork, and Textual Encounters Across Eurasia , December 2020 , pp. 471 - 473
- Copyright
- Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Research Institute for History, Leiden University
Footnotes
Paolo Sartori is Senior Fellow of the Austrian Academy of Sciences. He specialises in the history of the Muslim communities of the Russian empire and the Soviet Union. His latest book is Visions of Justice: Sharīʿa and Cultural Change in Russian Central Asia (Leiden: Brill, 2016).
References
Notes
1 See the special thematic issue “Islamic Cultures of Documentation,” guest-edited by Pickett, James and Sartori, Paolo, in the Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient 62:5–6 (2019)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
2 For important, innovative reflections on this subject, see the article by Heather Ferguson in this volume.