The collection "Places and Spaces of Knowledge," edited by Sabrina Corbellini and Margriet Hoogvliet, welcomes articles discussing places and spaces connected to knowledge and its practices in the premodern period. In order to be fully understood and investigated, knowledge should be spatialized and studied in relation to the spaces, either physical or conceptual, in which it is produced, transformed, and disseminated. In addition, practices of knowledge are spatially determined and create social and discursive spaces as such, through the dialogical relationship between the participants. Ideally the contributions will address lieux de savoir (Christian Jacob) and situated knowledge in the premodern world, with a special attention to micro-historical approaches and urban contexts, including cartographic representations.
Editorial
Introduction: lieux de savoir and archéologie du savoir
Sabrina Corbellini and Margriet Hoogvliet
2021-03-29 Volume 7 • Issue 1 • 2021 • 1–10
Also a part of:
Research
Writing as a Religious Lieu de Savoir
Margriet Hoogvliet and Sabrina Corbellini
2021-04-19 Volume 7 • Issue 1 • 2021 • 1–17
Also a part of:
Close Reading Michel Foucault's and Yves Lacoste's Concepts of Space Through Spatial Metaphors
Yann Calbérac
2021-06-01 Volume 7 • Issue 1 • 2021 • 1–21
Also a part of:
In Ecclesia Nostra: The Collatiehuis in Gouda and Its Lieux de Savoir
Pieter H. Boonstra
2021-05-17 Volume 7 • Issue 1 • 2021 • 1–13
Also a part of: