MikeHawkes
@michaelhawkes.bsky.social
61 followers
240 following
30 posts
Writer, publisher, and dad, amateur historian and Bible scholar. An infinitely-inquisitive progressive Christian. Moderator of www.reddit.com/r/OpenChristian, and www.reddit.com/r/AcademicBiblical
Posts
Media
Videos
Starter Packs
Reposted by MikeHawkes
Reposted by MikeHawkes
MikeHawkes
@michaelhawkes.bsky.social
· Jun 22
Today we invite you to explore Wisdom as a someone, not a commodified thing we acquire; engage Catholic thinkers on how we meet and encounter wisdom; and embody wisdom with silence. buff.ly/jNkdgCV
Solemnity of the Trinity
Commentary by Shalom Kristanugraha
futurechurch.org
MikeHawkes
@michaelhawkes.bsky.social
· Jun 22
The real heart of the Scriptures for today comes from Paul's first letter to the Corinthians. Paul had just denounced what he probably would have named the "so-called Christian" community in Corinth. The Corinthians were diverse in social class, finances and, of course, experience.
buff.ly/5Kkcs6x
buff.ly/5Kkcs6x
MikeHawkes
@michaelhawkes.bsky.social
· Jun 22
MikeHawkes
@michaelhawkes.bsky.social
· Apr 20
Pesach in Egypt ⇄ Pesach in Jerusalem - TheTorah.com
Exodus instructs each family in Egypt to slaughter a paschal lamb and eat it at home, while Deuteronomy commands a community ritual, to take place at the central worship location, i.e., the Jerusalem ...
www.thetorah.com
Reposted by MikeHawkes
Steven Van Impe
@svanimpe.bsky.social
· Apr 20
Usable Temporalities. Time and Writing in Early Modern Almanacs and Calendars #infoclioevent
Usable Temporalities. Time and Writing in Early Modern Almanacs and Calendars
Usable Temporalities. Time and Writing in Early Modern Almanacs and Calendars
1
16. April 2025
This workshop delves into the intersections of time and writing in early modern almanacs and calendars. It aims to analyze not only how these popular and ephemeral texts and chronographic media propagated particular temporal orders but also how they were used. Almanacs and calendars were not merely tools for projecting or tracking (feast) days and celestial events; they were dynamic media in which ‘scientific’ knowledge, practical advice, and cultural (self-)narratives converged. The event brings together interdisciplinary scholars to explore how visualizing and writing practices in these sources framed notions of temporality, and how they mediated personal and collective experiences of time.
Moreover, a central question will be how early modern people adapted and appropriated almanacs, calendars, and similar chronographic media for personal use. In the case of annotated almanacs and (writing-)calendars (Schreibkalender), special attention will be paid to the intertextuality between the printed temporal design and the handwritten notes. Examining this use together with the materiality, circulation, and (inter-)textuality or pictography of almanacs and calendars helps to assess their impact on writing routines and human engagements with time.
By situating these sources within broader early modern practices of timekeeping, record-keeping, and everyday writing, the workshop aims to foster new understandings of the variety of applications of almanacs and calendars as well as their interplay with personal notions of time and (life-)writing.
Organisiert von
Ord. Prof. Vitus Huber
Sprachen der Veranstaltung
Englisch
Website der Veranstaltung
https://www.unifr.ch/hist/fr/actualites-et-evenements/actualites/32809/?utm_sou…
University of Fribourg
Av. de l'Europe 20
1700
Fribourg
Fribourg
[email protected]
dlvr.it
MikeHawkes
@michaelhawkes.bsky.social
· Apr 20
Reposted by MikeHawkes
Reposted by MikeHawkes
Reposted by MikeHawkes
Reposted by MikeHawkes