Concept in Definition ABC
Miscellanea / / July 04, 2021
By Cecilia Bembibre, on Sep. 2010
The concept of colloquium is used in our language with more than one sense.
Dialogue between two or more people
This is the name given to the dialogue or conversation between two or more individuals.
The distinctive proposal of the colloquium is the meeting of several people in a place with the mission of expressing their opinions about a specific topic.
Literary composition with dialogue format
There is also a reference to the term in the literature where it refers to that composition that presents Format dialogue.
Meeting of several people in which current issues are discussed
Meanwhile, one of the most popular uses attributed to it is to refer to a more or less formal type of meeting or encounter in the which people who meet do so to talk or debate on a specific topic, probably determined in advance, while that group of people is always limited, that is, the call is open and subscribed to a limited and representative group of what will be debated or will discuss.
Exhibition before a jury
The colloquium can also be a exposition from one or more people to a jury or to a specific audience. The prevailing idea in both cases is that the people then gathered have a specific topic, time and objective selected to carry out the debate or exchange communicative.
When we speak of colloquium we are designating different communicative situations that are normal or common in academic or professional fields. Although a debate can take place spontaneously between anyone, the use of the term colloquium is more that nothing related to those moments in which a specific topic is discussed or debated, selected and delimited. These topics generally have to do with academic, scientific, political, economic, or professional issues.
Characteristics of the colloquia
The colloquia are usually announced formally and in advance to the participants and interested parties, especially those that are held annually, for example.
They almost always revolve around current and controversial issues that precisely require the debate and presentation of the various positions on an issue.
Normally there is a communication professional who will be in charge of organizing and mediating the debate so that the presentation of the participants is orderly and organized and also after the presentation of the ideas should take care of organizing the participation of the public, which is usually very active through direct questions to the lecturers.
It is also common for strong "confrontations" to take place between the various positions, which of course enrich the debate, which must always take place within a framework of absolute respect and tolerance.
In the academic context they are very common since they also stand as ideal tools for learning.
Although it is also recurrent that organizations or companies organize them to deal with current issues politics or economy.
For example, the Colloquium of Idea, held annually in the Argentine Republic, is a faithful expression of the latter given that bring together the most important local and international leaders to discuss issues of concern to the entrepreneurship. It has been celebrated for 51 years and it always arouses great journalistic interest due to the definitions that are produced in it.
The colloquium is also a somewhat formal communication space compared to other forms of communication. This is so because its main objective is the exhibition or the debate on something particular and, for therefore, there is not too much room to ramble as the structure of the theme is quite structured.
The colloquia can be spatially armed in different ways: in the form of an exhibition, in which a person faces the public, or in the form of a round table, in which everyone exhibits at the same time and discusses what has been agreed. The colloquia can have different types of durations as well but that is determined by each case. particular, as well as the use of materials, the space to be allocated for questions from the public, etc.
Topics in Colloquium