Secrecy and Openness in the Middle Ages and Renaissance

The medieval and Renaissance world was replete with secrets. Among them were mysteries of faith, the arcana of the state, the closely guarded trade secrets of guilds, the occult qualities of the natural world, or the so-called “secrets of women.” These and other forms of arcane knowledge were a source of both fascination and fear. Indeed, the desire for revelation and discovery was accompanied—and held in check—by warnings against curiosity and divulgation. State and Church went to great lengths to define and guard forbidden knowledge; practitioners of secret sciences often considered secrecy an ethical duty or even a ‘gift of god.’ Shrouded in a rhetoric of concealment and sometimes ‘written between the lines,’ the secrets of former times can be difficult for scholars to unlock. But at the same time this body of arcane knowledge from the past opens up rich opportunities to reflect on the dialectic of secrecy and openness—and how the notion of good knowledge as secret knowledge has been challenged and transformed over time.

This interdisciplinary conference invites scholars from all disciplines in Medieval and Renaissance Studies to explore the role and function of secret knowledge as well as the mechanisms of its transmission, revelation, and reception. Possible disciplinary perspectives include (but are not limited to): Art History, Literary Studies, History, History of Science, Religious Studies, and Philosophy.

Event Speakers:

Making and Knowing Project Postdoctoral Scholar Clément Godbarge will chair the first panel. For a full list of speakers, please view the conference schedule.











When: Thu., Apr. 4, 2019 - Fri., Apr. 5, 2019 at 6:00 pm - 7:00 pm
Where: Columbia University
116th St. & Broadway
212-854-1754
Price: Free
Buy tickets/get more info now
See other events in these categories:

The medieval and Renaissance world was replete with secrets. Among them were mysteries of faith, the arcana of the state, the closely guarded trade secrets of guilds, the occult qualities of the natural world, or the so-called “secrets of women.” These and other forms of arcane knowledge were a source of both fascination and fear. Indeed, the desire for revelation and discovery was accompanied—and held in check—by warnings against curiosity and divulgation. State and Church went to great lengths to define and guard forbidden knowledge; practitioners of secret sciences often considered secrecy an ethical duty or even a ‘gift of god.’ Shrouded in a rhetoric of concealment and sometimes ‘written between the lines,’ the secrets of former times can be difficult for scholars to unlock. But at the same time this body of arcane knowledge from the past opens up rich opportunities to reflect on the dialectic of secrecy and openness—and how the notion of good knowledge as secret knowledge has been challenged and transformed over time.

This interdisciplinary conference invites scholars from all disciplines in Medieval and Renaissance Studies to explore the role and function of secret knowledge as well as the mechanisms of its transmission, revelation, and reception. Possible disciplinary perspectives include (but are not limited to): Art History, Literary Studies, History, History of Science, Religious Studies, and Philosophy.

Event Speakers:

Making and Knowing Project Postdoctoral Scholar Clément Godbarge will chair the first panel. For a full list of speakers, please view the conference schedule.

Buy tickets/get more info now