Pregled bibliografske jedinice broj: 1209395
Organisation of Conference "Authority and Consent in Medieval Religious Communities" (Zagreb, 28.-29. 10. 2022.)
Organisation of Conference "Authority and Consent in Medieval Religious Communities" (Zagreb, 28.-29. 10. 2022.), 2021. (ostalo).
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Naslov
Organisation of Conference "Authority and Consent
in Medieval Religious Communities" (Zagreb,
28.-29. 10. 2022.)
Autori
Jerković, Marko
Vrsta, podvrsta
Ostale vrste radova, ostalo
Godina
2021
Ključne riječi
Authority, Consent, Religious Communities
Sažetak
Organisation of Conference "Authority and Consent in Medieval Religious Communities" (Zagreb, 28.-29. 10. 2022.) Even though the rules of religious communities anticipate primarily the vertical form of authority, with the superiors occupying quasi- monarchical position, the medieval reality demonstrates complex dynamics in power relations and continual efforts of monks/canons to transform their right of advice into that of consent. During the institutional formation of the religious orders in the 12th and 13th centuries, the structure and understanding of monastic authority was even more redefined. The most important influence in that process was the Cistercian model of shared responsibility and the transpersonal form of governance and normation. Besides, the highly personalised systems of authority demonstrate also that apart from the “passive” communal consent to follow the leader’s example, the necessity to balance the charisma and impersonal structures based on the active will was significant part of the community’s quotidian. Within that context, the consent in religious communities (i.e. in communities that strive to follow the Christ’s example of perfect obedience) becomes an interesting historical phenomenon. How consent could be performed and validated ; what were its symbolical manifestations ; how it generally influenced the spiritual, organizational, normative, and daily aspects of the vita religiosa? We believe that by grasping into the research of these (initial) and various other questions related to the issue of consent, our views and understandings of medieval monasticism can be additionally enriched or reconceptualised. Within that context, the research project “Monasteries in the High Middle Ages“ of the Heidelberg Academy of Sciences and the Saxon Academy of Sciences (Leipzig) in cooperation with the FOVOG (University of Dresden) have included the topic of “authority and consent” into its broader structural research of the formation of religious communities and institutionalised orders. The first workshop took part on 25-26 July 2019 at the FOVOG, Dresden. Now we would like to continue the discussion on the topic in cooperation with the University of Zagreb. For that reason we organise this workshop on 28-29 October 2021 at the Faculty of Croatian Studies, in Zagreb, Croatia. We intend to discuss various manifestations and forms of consent in religious communities. Concerning early medieval times, the questions about the interpretation, perception and manifestations of the superior’s authority arise. We can ask ourselves how the relations between the superiors and community functioned in theory and practise, and in which aspects of the monastic life the consent was required. Also, which implications did the invocation of the common will had on the identity and a sense of unanimity within the community? By analysing the performance of authority and consensus within the institutionalised orders we can understand better how the impersonal “rule of law” was invented, understood, and sustained. The research of the constitutional aspects of the consent provides us, furthermore, with the insights into the strategies and institutional mechanisms of the normation and validation of the novel conceptualisations of authority, as well as with the understanding of the reforming efforts aiming at preserving stability, cohesion, and transpersonal character of the legal ordo. How consent functioned in the communities where the cohesion depended on the charismatic authority? How to relate the sacralised authority of the leader’s word, the efforts to provide the community with the written rules, and the desire to remain loyal to the initial propositum? Can the model of the “routinization of charisma” explain adequately the active form of consent (the creation of the mechanisms of stability overcoming the charismatic authority) which aimed at preserving the passive form of consent (the subordination to the authentic regula vitae provided by the leader)? Finally, we would like to connect – where possible – the religious orders and lay or ecclesiastical structures, and to open the discussion on their mutual impacts in the sphere of decision-making and the exercise of power. We hope to provide the conceptual frameworks for better understanding of the intriguing dynamics of the process in which the human will and transcendental desire collided and coalesced. Mirko Breitenstein (Dresden) Daniela Bianca Hoffmann (Bochum) Marko Jerković (Zagreb) Gert Melville (Dresden) Jörg Sonntag (Dresden)
Izvorni jezik
Engleski
Znanstvena područja
Povijest