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Genealogies of World Comparatism

Type: Virtual

Virtual Session

Description

The journal published in Cluj/Kolozsvár/Klausenburg, starting in 1877, Acta Comparationis Litterarum Universarum, is considered the first journal of Comparative Literature. It functioned as a microcosm of late nineteenth-century European comparatism, aspiring to collaborations with comparatists around the world, and theorizing an emerging “discipline of the future.” It is often invoked today as part of various, contested genealogies of comparative literature. We invite papers on any aspect of the journal, its editors and collaborators, other early journals of Comparative Literature, and alternative genealogies of the discipline.   

Papers could focus on the following:
• the principles of comparatism (translation and multilingualism) as defined by the journal; 
• comparatist figures published in the journal (Hugo Meltzl, Sámuel Brassai, Dora d’Istria, Heinrich von Wlislocki, Grigore Silasi, etc);
• collaborators of the journal around the world (Steingrímur Thorsteinsson, Ramon León Maínez, Rasmus B. Anderson, Nishikanta Chattopadhyay, Enrique de Olavarría y Ferrari, etc.); 
• the theory of World Literature modelled by the journal;
• the interdisciplinarity at work in the journal; 
• literary developmentalism and the concept of decaglottism; 
• the treatment of literary traditions attached to “small languages” like Yiddish, Romani, Armenian, Ukrainian;
• varieties of geopolitical positions, including Orientalism and Occidentalism, at work in the journal; 
•  the relation between oral literary traditions and World Literature; 
• the journal’s relation to Cluj/Kolozsvár/Klausenburg, Transylvania, Hungary, the Austro-Hungarian Empire;
• the return to Acta Comparationis and especially one of its editors, Hugo Meltzl, in contemporary Comparative Literature;
• other genealogies of Comparative Literature around the world. 
 

Schedule

Friday, May 30, 2025
10:30 AM CDT - 12:15 PM CDT
Room: Virtual Conference

Papers

Living and Writing Outside the Box in Early Comparative Literature: Patterns of Subversiveness and the Figures of Hugo von Meltzl and Sámuel Brassai
Levente T. Szabó — Universitatea Babe?-Bolyai (Babe?-Bolyai University)
Inter-Imperial Comparatism: Thomas Frühm’s Concept of Weltliteratur
Emanuel Modoc — Universitatea Babe?-Bolyai (Babe?-Bolyai University)
The Scandinavian contribution to Acta Comparationis Litterarum Universarum. Case study: Rasmus B. Anderson
Gianina Druta — Oslo Metropolitan University
Reconsidering the History of Comparative Studies with Acta Comparationis
Letitia Guran — University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Saturday, May 31, 2025
10:30 AM CDT - 12:15 PM CDT
Room: Virtual Conference

Papers

Transnational and Comparative Perspectives in Early Hungarian Literary Criticism
Zoltán Varga — HUN-REN Institute of Literary Sudies, Research Center for Humanities
The Many Origins of Comparative Literature: Matija Murko and the early years of Slavia
Blaz Zabel — Univerza v Ljubljani (University of Ljubljana)
Polyglottism and anticolonial nationalism in the early Latvian literary culture
Karlis Verdins — University of Latvia
The Scandinavian Model: The North as Terra Comparationis of the Romanian Populists from the Beginning of the Twentieth Century
Cosmin Borza — Romanian Academy, Cluj-Napoca Branch, Sextil Pu?cariu Institute of Linguistics and Literary History
Sunday, June 1, 2025
10:30 AM CDT - 12:15 PM CDT
Room: Virtual Conference

Papers

Salvage Anthropology and Early Comparative Literature: the Acta Comparationis and the Journal of American Folklore.
Angus Nicholls — Queen Mary University of London
The place of Romani Literature in the global context of Wold Literature
Medeleanu Medeleanu — Universitatea din Bucure?ti (University of Bucharest)
From Mexico City to World Literature: Enrique de Olavarría y Ferrari’s Collaboration with Hugo Meltzl’s Global Literary Project
Sarah María Medina Pérez — Washington University in St. Louis
From Comparative Philology to Comparative Literature: India's Interrupted Transitions since Middle Modernity
Vinay Dharwadker — University of Wisconsin-Madison