3, 4, 5 Novembre 2016 / international Conference «Table and Diplomacy from the Middle Ages to the present day », University Sorbonne – Paris FRANCE.

16-17 March 2016/ 8th Geopolitics Festival of Grenoble on the topic of African continent . Mr Hadhri presentation on “ The UN and Africa in a changing world.”
17 March 2016
4-5 May 2017 / 2nd International Conference on Tourism and Cultural Heritage in Mediterranean Faro, PORTUGAL
23 November 2017

3, 4, 5 Novembre 2016 / international Conference «Table and Diplomacy from the Middle Ages to the present day », University Sorbonne – Paris FRANCE.

International Conference



Table and diplomacy from the Middle Ages to the present day


Paris Sorbonne University – 3, 4, 5 November 2016

Summary
The importance of the meal as a mediation tool brings into play the art of the cook and the serving of drinks, sometimes the elegance of the setting and the tableware, and also at times the unlikely simplicity of a makeshift shelter. It plays a part in the creation of table-companionship situations, which are propitious to the negotiations which it prepares, accompanies, or rewards. It establishes reception protocols. It contributes to exchange and to mutual understanding. It is also an important vehicle for the economic promotion and development of national products and food-related expertise, (…)
It will be interesting to understand the way in which European courts from the Middle Ages to the 21th century associated the table and negotiation. In fact, the history of diplomatic ceremonial, which was discredited by actors in diplomacy themselves at the end of the Ancien Régime
Since the 1960s, the opening of a new phase of globalization, combined with the effects of the radical change in social mores and of those, which are very noticeable in the 2000s, of the new revolution in telecommunications, prompts the rethinking of the place held by the time spent at the table within the framework of diplomatic exchanges in the present day.

Subject Areas
Numerous themes can be considered within a very wide-ranging area of potential study, in which no cultural area or continent, from the Middle Ages to the 21st century is to be excluded.
  • The evolution of practices and procedures relating to the organisation of receptions will be examined: venues (palaces, hotels, the village square, a ship at a port of call); type of service and protocol; table decor; association of music and live entertainment; speaking (speeches and toasts); ceremonial and protocol specialists
  • Table-specific behaviour will be given prominence: eating manners (hands; the use of eating implements); food taboos; the checking of food safety etc.
  • The evolution of the presence and participation of women at diplomatic meals will be examined: role and influence of the female rulers of organising countries; role of wives, courtesans, dancers, and singers.
  • The spectacle of the table: the people at the meal, public opinion and publicity. The analysis of the evolution of the staging of the diplomatic meal, The place of the table in economic diplomacy and public diplomacy will be the subject of particular attention: suppliers of kitchen equipment and cookware; the export of food products and drinks; the influence of reception styles