UNDERSTANDING INDIVIDUALITY AND DEPICTING INDIVIDUALS IN NINTH CENTURY BYZANTIUM
Hörsaal des Instituts für
Byzantinistik und Neogräzistik
Universität Wien
Postgasse 7/1/ 3. Stock
1010 Wien
Universität Wien
Postgasse 7/1/ 3. Stock
1010 Wien
This
conference will analyse the Byzantine understanding of individuality and the
practice of describing individuals through a great variety of textual sources –
logical, philosophical, theological, rhetorical and hagiographical – and
through works of art, icons, coins, and manuscripts. This will allow us to
compare theoretical approaches to the question of the practice of depiction and
will help to answer the following questions: What is described or represented
when one identities an individual as this individual – i.e. as distinct
from other members of the species? What constitutes Paul, not only as an
individual, but also as this individual? How can we distinguish Paul
from Peter or Jacob, given the fact that essentially all three are men?
The
sources indicate that an individual was understood as constituted by a set of
properties. Physical properties – size, hair colour, body shape, scars etc. -
are indeed the most obvious candidates, but can we add other characteristics to
the portrait? What about moral qualities, relations (being the son or the
sister of someone, for example), actions or deeds, profession, language, the
possession of distinctive objects? What is the function of a proper name? Is
individuality always an accidental phenomenon – in the sense of being the result
of the combination of only accidental properties and not of essential
properties – or is personal identity grounded in something stronger? Do
essential proper- ties also play a role?