Gabor Forkoli
Informacje
| Imię i nazwisko | Gabor Forkoli |
| Stopnie i tytuły naukowe | dr |
| Filozofia/Socjologia | Filozofia |
| Zakład | —– |
| Zespół badawczy | Centre for the History of Renaissance Knowledge |
| Skrócony biogram | Gábor Förköli (born in 1986) is a postdoctoral researcher in the ERC project ‘KnowStudents’ (From East to West, and Back Again: Student Travel and Transcultural Knowledge Production in Renaissance Europe) at the Polish Academy of Sciences. Under the join supervision (cotutelle) of the Université Paris-Sorbonne (Paris 4) and the Eötvös Loránd University of Budapest, he defended his PhD dissertation on the Central European reception of 17th-century French political thought in 2017. Between 2014 and 2015, he worked as junior researcher in the Humanism in East Central Europe Research Group, which operated in the framework of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences and of the Eötvös Loránd University. His interests include political literature, religious anthropology, history of rhetoric, and the uses of excerpts and common place books in early modern handwritten culture. |
Bibliografia
| Bibliografia | Selected publications “Manuscript Sources and Medial Transfer in the Research of Early Modern Disputations : From Administration to Exchange of Knowledge.” Renaissance and Reformation 47, 3 (2024): 95–148. “Inside Jesuit Classrooms: Students’ Notebooks from the Austrian Province of the Late Sixteenth Century.” Journal of Jesuit Studies 11, 2 (2024): 269–99. “Copia and Historical Note-Taking in an Academic Environment: The Scholarly Manuscripts of the Hungarian Historiographer Péter Révay.” In Knowledge-Shaping: Student Note-Taking Practices in Early Modernity, edited by Valentina Lepri, 29–68. Renaissance Mind 1. Berlin: De Gruyter, 2023. “From Chemical Atomism to Lutheran Orthodoxy: The Journey of Johann Sperling’s Physics from Wittenberg to the Peripheries.” Galilaeana 20, 2 (2023): 115–42. “From Commonplacing to Expressing Confessional Identity: The Sturmian Paroemiology in Strasbourg and the Hungarian Albert Szenci Molnár.” Journal of Latin Cosmopolitanism and European Literatures 9 (2022): 32–68. |





