

Concepts in sociocultural space
The Balkans and the Caucasus in focus
Conference, Vienna, 10-13 May 2023
Human interaction is always imbedded in a number of social and cultural frameworks that function within the sociocultural space ‒ the pendant to the physical world of human interaction and the space where the cognitive content gets its shape in form of conceptions and attitudes. Our interest pertains to both sides of this process: the conceptual content realized in various social and cultural frameworks, and the context-specific instantiation of presumably basic concepts, like belonging, loyalty, reciprocity, etc., in sociocultural patterns and practices.
By (re-)evaluating anthropological, linguistic, but also socioeconomic, historical, and other evidence we seek insights into the ways social constructs, networks, interdependences, and developments ‒contemporary and past ‒ are conceived and conceptualized in the Balkans and the Caucasus.
Both areas provide one of the richest sources of the empirical data on diverse manifestations of human interaction and a promising grass-root input for cognitive analyses. Both show exceptionally entangled linguistic, cultural, ethnic and confessional diversity and exhibit parallels in (1) ecology and topography, hence, in common ways of sustainment, traditional family structures, etc.; (2) in their pan-regional cultural and historical development shaping the collective memory and the image of oneself vs. the others; (3) in multifaceted demographic (ethnic, religious, etc.) composition providing context for sustained intercultural and interlinguistic exchange.
We invite papers from various disciplines (including transdisciplinary approaches) introducing new perspectives, as well as bringing or contrasting conclusive factual evidence to address issues, such as:
- Cultural and religious codes, their cognitive content, and manifestations in space and time
- Patterns and networks of close social interaction and their conceptualization, as well as the interplay of the factual and conceptual changes of these
- Linguistic or other semiotic evidence of conceptual shifts within a given sociocultural framework
- Linguistic (or other semiotic) evidence of the ongoing or former multicultural exchange, such as, e.g., the concepts of continuity and sustainability in contexts of forced cultural contact as realized in legal practices, systems of values and/or reflected in linguistic codes
- Impacts of changing socioeconomic conditions and/or demographic or other challenges on the conceptual processing, e.g., the conceptual content of continuity vs. discontinuity
Keynotes
Nick Enfield (The University of Sydney)
Maria Koptjevskaja-Tamm (Stockholm University)
Kevin Tuite (University of Montreal)
Brian Joseph (Ohio State University)
Victor Friedman (University of Chicago)
Venue
Austrian Academy of Sciences, Vienna (hybrid format)
1010 Vienna, Georg-Coch-Platz 2, 3.Stock Veranstaltungsraum
Dates and Deadlines
Conference dates: 10-13 May 2023 (including talks and cultural program).
Final drafts of accepted papers for the collective volume are expected before 31 August 2023.
Contact the organizers for further information via ciss-2023(at)oeaw.ac.at or look for updates on this website. In view of travel difficulties in many parts of the world the conference will take place in hybrid format allowing online access to all events except for the cultural program.
We look forward to an exciting interdisciplinary event and welcome you in Vienna.
The organizing committee
Katsiaryna Ackermann
Joachim Matzinger
Robert Pichler
Sponsored by



Virtual book stand of our speakers
(A) Alexandra Y. AIKHENVALD
(B) Victor A. FRIEDMAN

Victor A. Friedman/Brian D. Joseph: The Balkan Languages