CONF: Imperial Greek Epic Day, 16 June

Seen on the Classicists list:

Imperial Greek Epic day

Please join us on 16 June 2012 in the Seminar Room, Corpus Christi College (Oxford), for a day devoted to the wonderful world of imperial Greek epic.

The event is designed to be an exploratory workshop rather than a formal
conference. There will be three short papers of a general nature (what is
imperial Greek epic? Does it make sense as a unity? How do we read it? How
do we place it, culturally and historically?) There will also be 5 text
sessions (marked with an asterisk below), devoted to working through
passages that will be circulated to those who signal their interest in advance.

Cost: £10, or £15 with lunch included. If you are interested, please write
to tim.whitmarsh AT ccc.ox.ac.uk

Emily Kneebone
Tim Whitmarsh

URL: http://www.ccc.ox.ac.uk/Forthcoming-Events/

9:45 – 10:30 Tim Whitmarsh (Oxford), ‘The genres of imperial Greek epic’
10:30 – 11.15 *Amin Benaissa (Oxford), ‘Dionysius, Bassarica’
11.15 – 11.45 BREAK

11.45-12:30 *Calum Maciver (Leeds), ‘Quintus of Smyrna, Posthomerica’
12:30-1:15 *Laura Miguélez Cavero (Salamanca/Oxford), ‘On poets, critics and
ivory towers; or the temptations of reading epic in isolation’

1:15 – 2:00 LUNCH

2:00 – 2:45 *Anna Lefteratou (Göttingen), ‘Nonnus, Paraphrase’
2:45 – 3:30 *Rob Shorrock (Eton College), ‘Nonnus, Dionysiaca’

3:30 – 4:00 BREAK

4:00 – 4:45 Emily Kneebone (Cambridge) ‘Epic encounters: literary
strategies in imperial Greek epic’
4:45 – 5.30 Closing discussion

Bryn Mawr Reviews

… I seem to have fallen behind:

  • 2012.03.50:  Heinz Heinen, Handwörterbuch der antiken Sklaverei (HAS). Lieferung I-III (2010). Forschungen zur antiken Sklaverei, Beiheft 5.
  • 2012.03.49:  Myrto Hatzimichali, Potamo of Alexandria and the Emergence of Eclecticism in Late Hellenistic Philosophy.
  • 2012.03.48:  Livio Rossetti, Le dialogue socratique. Encre Marine.
  • 2012.03.47:  Luca Bruzzese, Studi su Filemone comico. Prosopa, 3.
  • 2012.03.46:  Gregory Nagy, Homer the Classic. Hellenic Studies 36.
  • 2012.03.45:  Anne-Marie Guimier-Sorbets, Yvette Morizot, L’enfant et la mort dans l’Antiquité I: nouvelles recherches dans les nécropoles grecques; le signalement des tombes d’enfants. Travaux de la Maison René-Ginouvès, 12.
  • 2012.03.44:  Margalit Finkelberg, Homer Encyclopedia (3 vols.).
  • 2012.03.43:  Joe Sachs, Plato. Republic. Focus Philosophical Library.
  • 2012.03.42:  Stefano Grazzini, Scholia in Iuvenalem recentiora: secundum recensiones φ et χ tomus I (satt. 1-6), Testi e commenti, 11.
  • 2012.03.41:  Gerard Passannante, The Lucretian Renaissance: Philology and the Afterlife of Tradition.
  • 2012.03.40:  Timothy M. O’Sullivan, Walking in Roman Culture.
  • 2012.03.39:  Andrea Carandini, Rome: Day One (first published in Italian 2007).
  • 2012.03.38:  M. E. Stone, Ancient Judaism: New Visions and Views.
  • 2012.03.37:  Renate Bol, Marmorskulpturen der römischen Kaiserzeit aus Milet. Milet, Bd 5: Funde aus Milet, Teil 2.
  • 2012.03.36:  Florence Bertholet, Anne Bielman Sanchez, Regula Frei-Stolba, Egypte, Grèce, Rome: les différents visages des femmes antiques: travaux et colloques du séminaire d’épigraphie grecque et latine de l’IASA 2002-2006.
  • 2012.03.35:  Girolamo F. De Simone, Roger T. MacFarlane, Apolline Project Vol. 1. Studies on Vesuvius’ North Slope and the Bay of Naples, Quaderni della ricerca scientifica: serie beni culturali 14.
  • 2012.03.34:  Gemma C. M. Jansen, Ann Olga Koloski-Ostrow, Eric M. Moormann, Roman Toilets: their Archaeology and Cultural History. Babesch. Supplement, 19.
  • 2012.03.33:  Henry Cullen, Michael Dormandy, John Taylor, Latin Stories: A GCSE Reader.
  • 2012.03.32:  Matthias Haake, Michael Jung, Griechische Heiligtümer als Erinnerungsorte: von der Archaik bis in den Hellenismus. Erträge einer internationalen Tagung in Münster, 20.-21. Januar 2006. Alte Geschichte.
  • 2012.03.31:  Craig A. Gibson, Libanius’s Progymnasmata: Model Exercises in Greek Prose Composition and Rhetoric. Writings from the Greco-Roman world 27.

This Day in Ancient History: ante diem v kalendas apriles

ante diem v kalendas apriles

  • 37 A.D. — arrival of Gaius (Caligula) in Rome
  • 193 A.D. — murder of the emperor Pertinax; recognition of Didius Julianus as Augustus
  • 364 A.D. — elevation of Valens to the rank of Augustus
  • … in the early Church, this was one of the days claimed as the day of Jesus’ birth