VISCOM is a collaboration between the University of Vienna(UniVie) and the Austrian Academy of Sciences (ÖAW). The institutes participating in the project are the Institute for Medieval Research (IMAFO), where the project coordination is located, the Institute for Social Anthropology (ISA) and the Institute for the Cultural and Intellectual History of Asia (IKGA) for the ÖAW, and the Department for History (IfG), the Institute for Eastern European History (IOG) and the Austrian Institute for Historical Research (IÖG) for the University. The project is funded by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF).
In the second phase of the FWF Special Research Programme VISCOM (start of second phase: 1.3.2015), research has continued under the direction of project speaker Walter Pohl for another four years. In the SFB (Spezialforschungsbereich) the teams of social anthropologists and Tibetologists (Institute for Social Anthropology – Andre Gingrich, Institute for the Cultural and Intellectual History of Asia – Birgit Kellner, both Austrian Academy of Sciences), historians of Austria and Eastern Europe (Christina Lutter and Oliver Schmitt, both University of Vienna) are conducting comparative studies on the correlation between religious and political ‘visions of community’ in the course of the medieval period based on Christian, Islamic and Buddhist examples.
VISCOM explores interactions between universal religions on the one hand and the different forms of communities on the other – be they local, civic, regional, ethnic or imperial. As universal, proselytizing religions emerged to replace the culturally adaptable and mostly community-oriented traditional religions, relationships between cult and community, religious and political identity became much more complex. What was previously based in civic cults or the idea that kin groups and peoples could boast divine origins gradually came to transcend other forms of community as membership was defined by conversion rather than circumstance. Nevertheless, these new religions often did attach themselves to all sorts of defined political realms, legitimating them and helping them integrate into a larger social whole. This created a dynamic and sometimes paradoxical relationship between religious identity and particular communities – a relationship that led to different results in the case of each of the religions within VISCOM.
In order to study these differences, medieval historians of European and Asian societies are working together with philologists and social anthropologists in a comparative research programme. They are thus bridging the gaps between history and social anthropology, between European and Asian studies, between religious and political history, and between discourse analysis and the study of social practice(s). VISCOM works on several levels. Case studies serve as a basis for comparison of larger questions, and in the process comparative methodology within and between the disciplines is being developed. The main goal here is mid-range comparison: rather than constructing typologies, the project defines a number of areas of comparison and criteria that are viable in each case. To avoid the pitfalls of following too closely a (eurocentric) master narrative, VISCOM attempts to arrive at a level of complexity that can incorporate the internal variety of each political culture and the similarities and differences between them.
Subproject
The studies within the subproject located at the IMAFO intend to achieve a ‘histoire croisée’ of religion and ethnicity in post-Roman Europe by looking at the ways ethnic identifications and Christian visions of community shaped the political landscape of the early medieval West. It attempts to place the conjunction of ethnic, imperial, historical and religious identifications into a cognitive and narrative matrix. Thus, it addresses the intersections between ethnic identifications and Christian ideologies that have shaped political identities at all levels of society. From the development of kinship metaphors in barbarian histories to the establishment of the Carolingian Empire, this project part also seeks to understand the teleological charge of modern nationalism, and the European way of conceiving of the world as a community of nation states.
Project leader
Walter Pohl
Deputy
Andre Gingrich
Project Coordination
Sophie Gruber
Ingrid Hartl
Team Christian Discourse and Political Identities in Early Medieval Europe
Project Leader
Principal Investigator
Cinzia Grifoni • IfG, UniVie
Rutger Kramer • IfG, UniVie
Salvatore Liccardo • IfG, UniVie
Maria Nezbeda • IfG, UniVie
Associated
Francesco Borri • ÖAW (FWF)
Albrecht Diem • Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, Syracuse University, NY
Gerda Heydemann • FU Berlin/IMaFo, ÖAW
Irene van Renswoude • KNAW The Hague/Utrecht University
Giorgia Vocino • Cambridge University
Graeme Ward • University of Oxford/IMaFo, ÖAW
Jelle Wassenaar • ÖAW (UNUP)
Veronika Wieser • IMaFo, ÖAW
South Arabia between Late Antiquity and Early Modernity: International Connections and the Entanglement of Histories
Principal Investigator: Andre GINGRICH * ISA, ÖAW
Early Tibet: The Tibetan Empire and the Formation of Buddhist Civilisation in the Highlands
Principal Investigator: Birgit KELLNER * IKGA, ÖAW
Social and Cultural Communities in Late Medieval Europe
Principal Investigator: Christina LUTTER * IfG/IÖG, UniVie
Society, Statehood and Religion in Late Medieval Dalmatia
Principal Investigator: Oliver SCHMITT * IOG, UniVie
The SFB is affiliated with the University of Vienna and with the Austrian Academy of Sciences
For more information please visit the project homepage.