CFP:Greek memories: theory and practice

Seen on Classicists (please send any responses to the folks mentioned in the quoted text, not to rogueclassicism!):

Greek memories: theory and practice

Durham, 27-28 September 2010

The Conference will conclude the annual research project on ancient memory
at the Department of Classics & Ancient History, Durham University

Call for papers:

The concepts of memory, recollecting and forgetting are central in all
cultures, not least in the ancient Greek world. Mnemosyne, the goddess
Memory, was the mother of the Muses, and as such constituted the mythic
patron of all human endeavours in the arts and sciences. This conference
aims to explore two interrelated aspects of memory in ancient Greece: (i)
discursive reflections on memory, recollecting, and forgetting as divine and
human experiences; and (ii) the role of these reflections in shaping, more
fundamentally, practices of thought, communication, and writing. Papers on
the Œtheory and practice¹ of memory, recollection, and forgetting across the
range of literary genres (epic and lyric poetry, tragedy, comedy,
historiography, philosophy and scientific prose treatises) are invited, as
well as more wide-ranging investigations on how certain fundamental
approaches to memory bridged generic and chronological boundaries (or failed
to do so).

Papers should last no longer than 40 minutes and will be followed by
discussion.

Abstracts should not exceed 500 words in length; they should include your
name, paper title, affiliation, and contact addresses, and should be sent as
e-mail attachments to luca.castagnoli AT durham.ac.uk.

Deadline for abstract submission: Sunday, 7 February 2010.

The Conference Organisers
Dr Luca Castagnoli & Dr Paola Ceccarelli

CONF: Durham University Classics Department Seminars This Term

Seen on Classicists (please send any responses to the folks mentioned in the quoted text, not to rogueclassicism!):

We have two regular seminars at Durham: a Work In Progress Seminar and an evening Research Seminar. Please see below for details of the speakers and their papers.

1) Work In Progress Seminar: Wednesdays 1.00-2.00

Seminar Room

Department of Classics and Ancient History

38 North Bailey

Durham

United Kingdom

Wednesday 20 January

Janika Päll (Tarttu University)

Memory in Demosthenes’ Philippics

Wednesday 27 January

Valentina di Lascio (Durham)

The Theoretical Rationale Behind Aristotle’s Classification of the Linguistic Fallacies in the Sophistical Refutations.

Wednesday 3 February

Penelope Wilson (Durham)

The debate over Classics in Eighteenth Century Education

Wednesday 10 February

Craig Hannaway (Durham)

‘I do not want to be a person’: Anne Carson, Sappho, and the Sublime.

Wednesday 17 February

Justine Wolfenden (Durham)

Troia (nefas!): Troy as a negative locus in Lucretius and Catullus

Wednesday 24 February

Jennifer Ingleheart (Durham)

Parallel lives: Ovidian poetic ‘autobiography’ in Tristia 2

Wednesday 3 March

Rik van Wijlick (Durham)

The Herodian advancement: political interaction between Rome and the Jewish State between 44 and 42 BC

Wednesday 10 March

Lauren Knifton (Durham)

Pining for the Fjords and the Last Spix’s Macaw: Parrots, Personae and Immortality in Amores 2.6.

Wednesday 17 March

Kathryn Stevens (Cambridge)

In search of a Hellenistic world: intellectual horizons in Greece and Babylonia

2) Research Seminar: Wednesdays 5.30pm

Ritson Room

Department of Classics and Ancient History (as above!)

Wednesday 20th January

Martin Steinrück (Freiburg, Switzerland)

Dialogic Memory

Wednesday 27 January

TBA

Wednesday 3 February

Edmund Richardson (Princeton)

In search of an Empire of Memory

Wednesday 10 February

Georg Danek (Vienna)

Name-Dropping in Bosnian Epics and the Genealogy of Agamemnon’s Sceptre

Wednesday 17 February

Riccardo Chiaradonna (Università Roma Tre)

Plotinus on Memory, Recollection and Discursive Thought.

Wednesday 24 February

Penelope Murray

Muses, Memory and Myth in the Decline of Callipolis: Plato Republic 545d-e

Wednesday 3 March

Luigi Battezzato (Università degli Studi del Piemonte Orientale)

Euripides the Antiquarian

Wednesday 10 March

Richard King (University of Glasgow)

Individuals, soul and memory in Plato’s Philebus.

Wednesday 17 March

Ugo Zilioli (IRCHSS Postdoctoral Fellow at Trinity College Dublin)

The Subtler Philosophers at Theaetetus 156a: their identity and doctrine.

CFP: 2010 EAA Mtg Session: Tattoos and Body Modification in Antiquity

Seen on rome-arch (please send any responses to the folks mentioned in the quoted text, not to rogueclassicism!):

CFP: 2010 European Association of Archaeologists
Meeting in the Hague, September 1-5, 2010,
http://www.eaa2010.nl/

Session Title: Aspects of Embodiment: Tattoos
and Body Modification in Antiquity

From Oetzi the Iceman to today’s full-sleeved and
pierced urbanite, it seems that body modification
has always formed an integral part of the human
animal’s relationship to its body. Some
adornments are temporary or purely situational,
such as particular body paints, jewelry or hair
treatments, while others are quite permanent and,
when we are very lucky, preserved in the
archaeological record.
The archaeologist’s arsenal in studying preserved
tattoos and other body modifications has expanded
in recent years. At the same time,
anthropological interest in "the body" and
embodiment has greatly increased theoretical
interest in practices that "inscribe" upon the
body. Few still see tattooing simply as a display
of art; they look instead for distinctions of
status, rank, age or gender, for medicinal uses,
for punitive or laudatory uses, for manifestos or
other propagandistic uses, as marks of belonging
or exclusion, as marks of transition or
transformation … As the body arts of, e.g.,
Oceania and Asia, are better understood, the
ideas have cross-pollenated with European
archaeology. In fact, the serious and scientific
attention accorded to body modification today
contrasts starkly with earlier dismissal by
Europeans of tattooed "barbarians." We feel
that, in the current atmosphere of acceptance, it
is time for a multidisciplinary session on the
archaeology of body modification.

We invite papers from all relevant disciplines,
but particularly welcome bioarchaeologists who
work with the detection and analysis of ancient
tattoos; archaeologists who work with preserved
tattoos and/or modifications; and all those whose
reconsiderations of ancient tattooing practices
promise to expand our field and contribute to
richer understanding of the ancient body and mind.

Please send abstracts as soon as possible in the following format to :

prof. dr. philippe della casa
universität zürich, abt. ur- und frühgeschichte
karl-schmid-str. 4, CH – 8006 zürich
tel. +41 (0)44 6343831, fax (0)44 6344992
<>http://www.prehist.uzh.ch

Session Papers
All fields below marked with a * must be completed

Name of presenter*:

Name(s) of co author(s):

Title*:

Content*: (with a maximum of 300 words)

Thank you very much!
Constanze Witt, co-organizer

ED: Greek and Latin Summer School Bologna 2010

(please send any responses to the folks mentioned in the quoted text, not to rogueclassicism!):

Bologna University Greek and Latin Summer School (28th June – 16th July 2010)

The Department of Classics (http://www.classics.unibo.it ) of Bologna
University welcomes applications to its Greek and Latin Summer School.

The teaching will be focused both on language and on literature; further
classes will touch on moments of classical history and history of art,
supplemented by visits to museums and archaeological sites (in Bologna and
Rome).

The course will be held in Bologna from 28th June to 16th July 2010 for a
total of 60 hours.

The Greek course will be for beginners only, whereas classes of different
levels (at least beginners and intermediate) are scheduled for Latin.

Participants must be aged 18 or over.
All tuition will be in English.

For further information and to enrol, please visit:

http://www.unibo.it/summerschool/latin
E-mail: diri_school.latin AT unibo.it

Correction (02/12/10):

http://www.lettere.unibo.it/Lettere/Didattica/Summer+e+winter+school/Summer_School_in_Latin_Language_and_Classical_Studies.htm

The email address is:
diri_school.latin@unibo.it