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

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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

Changes to KYKNOS Lent term seminar programme

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KYKNOS

Swansea and Lampeter Centre for Research on the Narrative Literatures of the Ancient World

[www.kyknos.org.uk]

Below is given the KYKNOS programme for Michaelmas term 2009. For more information about the various activities of the research centre, please visit our website (www.kyknos.org.uk) or contact Professor John Morgan (John.Morgan AT swansea.ac.uk) or Dr Magdalena Öhrman (m.ohrman AT lamp.ac.uk).

All KYKNOS seminars commence at 6 pm.

22 January 2010: Swansea University, Keir Hardie, Room 130.

Liz Dollins (University of Exeter)

"Guilty Pleasure: The Greek novel and the reader’s veiled gaze."

28 January 2010: University of Wales Lampeter, Roderic Bowen Research Centre

Dr Angus Bowie (The Queen’s College, Oxford)

‘The Odyssey looks at the Iliad

5 February 2010: Swansea University, Keir Hardie, Room 130.

Dr Emily Pillinger (University of Bristol)

‘Prophetic voices in myth-historical narratives: making sense of "hindsight as foresight"’

9 February 2010: Swansea University, Keir Hardie, Room 130.

Professor Douglas Cairns (University of Edinburgh)

‘Narrative and Narrator in Bacchylides’

19 March 2010: Swansea University, Keir Hardie, Room 130.

Dr Magdalena Öhrman (University of Wales Lampeter)

‘Italiam non sponte sequor: Narrative Departures in Verg. Aen. 4 and 5’

3 April 2010: University of Wales Lampeter, Roderic Bowen Research Centre

Greta Hawes (University of Bristol)

‘Pausanias and the idea of Crete’

CFP: International Conference on Latin and Greek Syntax

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International conference on Greek and Latin syntax

Paris, November 26-27, 2010

Université Paris-Sorbonne, École Normale Supérieure

The LALG research group (Langues anciennes et linguistique générale) of the Université Paris-Sorbonne (Paris 4) is organizing a two-day international conference on Greek and Latin syntax on the 26th and 27th November 2010, in the Maison de la Recherche de la Sorbonne and the École Normale Supérieure in Paris. This conference has the support of the École doctorale 1 « Mondes anciens et médiévaux », the Équipes d’accueil 1491 « Édition et commentaire des textes grecs et latins » and 4080 « Centre Alfred Ernout : linguistique et lexicographie latines et romanes », the Université Paris-Sorbonne, as well as the Département des Sciences de l’Antiquité of the ENS Paris and the Équipe de recherche « Sciences des textes anciens » of the UMR 8546 « Archéologie d’Orient et d’Occident et textes antiques ».

The purpose of this meeting is to promote syntactic studies in the field of Latin and Ancient Greek languages, in any theoretical framework. Every aspect of syntax can be considered: simple and complex sentence structure (noun phrase, verb phrase, adverbial phrase, negation, and subordination), macro-syntax (information structure, text syntax), the syntax-semantics interface, and the description of syntactic structures in terms of synchronic functions and diachronic changes. We hope the conference will provide an opportunity for scholars from different countries and various theoretical frameworks to meet each other, and will be the basis for a more thorough dialogue between the fields of Latin and Greek languages.

Submission guidelines: Anonymous abstracts about 3500-7000 characters long (including spaces, examples and references) should be sent in .pdf, .doc or .rtf to the following address: abstracts.sgl2010 AT gmail.fr. Abstracts and oral presentations may be in French or in English. Each presentation will be allotted 30 minutes, plus 10 minutes for discussion. The body of your email message should include your name, affiliation and contact information. The following elements should appear in the abstract: an explicit title, the theoretical framework, and the corpus. The deadline for abstract submission is April, 30th 2010. Each abstract will be anonymously reviewed by at least two members of the scientific committee. Notification of acceptance will be given by the end of June 2010. After the meeting, the speakers will have the possibility to submit a complete paper for publication.

Important dates:
Abstract submission: 30 April 2010
Notification of acceptance : 30 June 2010
Meeting dates: 26-27 November 2010

Invited speakers:
Egbert J. Bakker (Yale University)
Colette Bodelot (Université Blaise Pascal de Clermont-Ferrand)

Scientific committee:
Nicolas Bertrand (Université Paris-Sorbonne)
Colette Bodelot (Université Blaise Pascal de Clermont-Ferrand)
Bernard Bortolussi (Université de Paris Ouest Nanterre La Défense)
Richard Faure (Université Paris-Sorbonne)
Frédérique Fleck (École Normale Supérieure)
Frédéric Lambert (Université Michel de Montaigne-Bordeaux 3)
Arthur Ripoll (Université de Paris Ouest Nanterre La Défense)
Liliane Sznajder (Université de Paris Ouest Nanterre La Défense)
Jesús de la Villa (Université autonome de Madrid)

Organizing committee:
Nicolas Bertrand (Université Paris-Sorbonne)
Richard Faure (Université Paris-Sorbonne)
Frédérique Fleck (École Normale Supérieure).

Contact:
nicobertrand AT free.frfaurerichard5044 AT neuf.fr
frederique.fleck AT ens.fr

CONF: Gods, Emotions and Free Will in Roman Epic Poetry during the 1st century AD

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Congress, 24 – 27 February 2010
Gods, Emotions and Free Will in Roman Epic Poetry during the 1st century AD

organised by
Prof. Dr. Thomas Baier
Institut für Klassische Philologie
Universität Würzburg, supported by DFG and Josef-Martin Foundation

PROGRAMME
Wednesday, 24 February 2010
(Toscanasaal, Würzburger Residenz)

18.00

Evening lecture (Josef-Martin-Vorlesung)
followed by a reception in the library of the Institut für Klassische
Philologie

Frederick Ahl (Ithaca/New York)
Vatic Wit: The use of humour in Virgil, Lucan and Silius Italicus

Thursday, 25 February 2010
(Library of the Institut für Klassische Philologie)

8.30-10.00

Christiane Reitz (Rostock)
Entscheidungsfindung und epische Konvention in der flavischen Epik

Ulrich Eigler (Zürich)
Fatum, Fortuna, Fama: Innere und äußere Motivation in der epischen
Erzählung

Discussion

10.00-10.30

Break

10.30-12.30

Luigi Castagna (Mailand)
Quo numine laeso: fenomenologia dell’ ira divina nell’ epica latina
postvirgiliana

Paolo Asso (Ann Arbor/Michigan)
Emotions and the Rhetoric of Fate in Civil War

Eckard Lefèvre (Freiburg)
Fata, Emotionen und Willensfreiheit in Valerius Flaccus’ Argonautica

Discussion

12.30-14.30

Lunch break

14.30-16.00

Gauthier Liberman (Paris)
L’anti-héroïsme chez Valerius Flaccus

Thomas Baier (Würzburg)
Zum Umgang mit göttlichen Äußerungen bei Valerius Flaccus

Discussion

16.00-16.30

Break

16.30-18.00

William Dominik (Dunedin, Neuseeland)
The Gods and Free Will in Statius’ Thebaid

Sylvie Franchet d’ Espèrey (Paris)
Médiations dans la Thébaïde de Stace

Discussion

Friday, 26 February 2010

8.30-10.00

Christine Walde (Mainz)
Konzeptionen des Fatum bei Lucan

Gianna Petrone (Palermo)
I fata prospera di Pompeo in Lucano

Discussion

10.00-10.30

Break

10.30-12.00

Michael Erler (Würzburg)
Der unwissende Erzähler und seine Götter
Erzählperspektive und Theologie bei Lukan und in Vergils Aeneis

Martin Dinter (London)
World without Gods – Staffing the control level in Lucan’s Bellum Civile

Discussion

12.00-14.00

Lunch break

14.00-16.00

Guided tour of the Martin-von-Wagner-Museum led by Prof. Dr. Ulrich Sinn
(Director of the Institute of Classical Archeology)

16.00-16.30

Break

16.30-18.00

Paolo Esposito (Neapel)
Su alcuni miti tragici in Lucano e nell’ epica flavia

Alfredo Casamento (Palermo)
Quando gli oracoli passano di moda. Lucano e la crisi del sistema oracolare

Discussion

Saturday, 27 February 2010

8.30-10.00

Shadi Bartsch (Chicago)
The Dialogic Self in Lucan

Nicola Hömke (Rostock)
Erzähltechniken zur Erzeugung von Grauen in Lucans Bellum civile

Discussion

10.00-10.30

Break

10.30-12.30

Jochen Schultheiß (Würzburg)
Scipio am Scheideweg: philosophische Vorstellungen über den menschlichen
Willen und die Figurenzeichnung in den Punica des Silius Italicus

Ferdinand Stürner (Würzburg)
Ein literarischer Unglücksfall?
Juno und der Götterapparat in Silius Italicus’ Punica

Marco Fucecchi (Udine)
Epica, filosofia e legittimazione del potere imperiale nei Punica di Silio
Italico

Discussion