CFP: Night and Nocturnal Activities

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CALL FOR PAPERS

Nox erat: Night and Nocturnal Activities in the Ancient World

17th Annual Classics Graduate Student Colloquium

University of Virginia

March 23, 2012

From lovers’ trysts to covens of witches, from all-night parties to midnight raids, from dreams to insomnia, night in the ancient world is far from an empty darkness that merely marks the interval between sunset and sunrise. This colloquium aims to consider the characteristics and depictions of night both as mythological figure and temporal experience, while also exploring the social and cultural aspects of nighttime events. Professor Catherine Keane of Washington University in St. Louis will deliver the keynote address. We welcome submissions from diverse fields and disciplines. Possible areas of investigation include, but are not limited to:

– Night as a deity or personification depicted in literature and/or art

– Night as a social construction, e.g. as holy or unholy, as a time for transgressive

activities; the way that night affects conceptions of time

– Dreams, whether true or false, and inspiration that comes at night; poets,

philosophers, storytellers, and others who work through the night

– Religious aspects of night: for example, rites which only happen at night, incubation

– Nighttime activities such as symposia and paraclausithyra

– Practical advantages and disadvantages of night: night raids, banditry, intrigue

– Means of illuminating the night both natural and artificial: streetlamps,

constellations, the moon

– Night in similes and metaphors

– Transitions into and out of night at dusk and dawn; the false night which occurs

during eclipses and storms

Papers should be 15-20 minutes in length. Please send abstracts of no more than 300 words to Jennifer LaFleur (jll4x AT virginia.edu) by January 15, 2013.

CONF: Filosofia e Arte Nella Tarda Antichita

FILOSOFIA E ARTE NELLA TARDA ANTICHITÀ
International Seminar

Catania, 8-9 November 2012
Department of Humanities
Monastero dei Benedettini
Coro di notte

Thursday November 8th 2012
h. 9:30 – session 1

Introduction

Chairperson: Francesco Romano

Aldo Brancacci (Università di Roma TorVergata), Musica e filosofia nel De musica di Aristide Quintiliano

Tea and coffee

Sebastian F. Moro Tornese (Royal Holloway, University of London), Musical aesthetics and the transformation of the soul in Neoplatonism

h. 12:15 Guided tour of the Monastery by Officine Culturali

h. 13:30 Lunch

h. 15:00 – session 2

Chairperson: Aldo Brancacci

Anne Sheppard (Royal Holloway, University of London), “To see a world in a grain of sand”: Proclus’ literary theory and aesthetics

Pierre Destrée (Université catholique de Louvain), Philodemus and the late Neoplatonists on Aristotle’s Katharsis

Tea and coffee

Alessandro Stavru (Berlin, Freie Universität), Ekphrasis e verosimiglianza nelle EIKONEΣ di Filostrato il vecchio

h. 18:30 Excursions (via dei Crociferi, Piazza del Duomo)

h. 20:00 Dinner

Friday November 9th 2012
h. 9:15 – session 3

chaiperson: Maria Barbanti

Daniele Iozzia (Università di Catania), «Come mai l’oro è bello?»: Plotino, Enn. I 6 (1) 1, 34 e i Cappadoci

Tea and coffee

Concetto Martello (Università di Catania), “Pulchrum” e “pulchritudo” in Giovanni Eriugena

h. 13:30 Lunch

Participants: R. Loredana Cardullo, Giovanna R. Giardina, Giovanni Lombardo, Chiara Militello, Andrea Vella, Valentina Aruta, Daniele Granata, Gianfranco Iannizzotto, Ivan Licciardi, Giuseppe Muscolino.

For enquiries or further information please contact Dr Daniele Iozzia: iozziad AT unict.it

CFP: Death, the Cultural Meaning of the End of Life

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Second Call for Papers: LUCAS Graduate Conference Death, the Cultural
Meaning of the End of Life

Leiden University Centre for the Arts in Society – 24–25 January, 2013

The theme of the second international Graduate Conference is Death, the
Cultural meaning of the End of Life, and aims to explore how death has been
represented and conceptualized, from classical antiquity to the modern age,
and the extent to which our perceptions and understandings of death have
changed (or remained the same) over time. The wide scope of this theme
reflects the historical range of LUCAS’s (previously called LUICD) three
research programs (Classics and Classical Civilization, Medieval and Early
Modern Studies and Modern and Contemporary Studies), as well as the
intercontinental and interdisciplinary focus of many of the institute’s
research projects.

Proposals:
The LUCAS Graduate Conference welcomes papers from graduate students from
all disciplines within the humanities. The topic of your proposal may
address the concept of death from a cultural, historical, classical,
artistic, literary, cinematic, political, economic, or social viewpoint.

Keynote Speakers:
Professor Joanna Woodall, Courtauld Institute of Art, United Kingdom
Professor Rosi Braidotti, University of Utrecht, Netherlands

Deadline for abstract submissions: 15 November 2012.

Papers can be submitted to the general theme or you can (co-)organize your
own panel. Please send your proposal (max. 300 words) to present a 20-
minute paper to lucasconference2013 AT gmail.com.
You will be notified whether or not your paper has been selected by 1
December, 2012.

Registration fee: €45

Organization: Leiden University Centre for the Arts in Society (LUCAS),
Leiden University.

For more information:
http://www.hum.leiden.edu/lucas/news-events/luicd-graduate-conference-
2013.html

CONF: Lampeter Classics and Ancient History Research Seminars

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University of Wales, Trinity Saint David (Lampeter)

School of Classics

Research Seminars, 2012-13

Please find below the details of our research seminars for the coming year. Seminars begin at 6 pm, and take place in the Founders’ Library. They’re usually followed with drinks and a trip to a local restaurant.

18/10/12

Dr Kyle Erickson (TSD), Playing with the Gods: Antiochus IV and the Seleucid Pantheon

22/11/12

Dr Simon Mahony (UCL), Digitising Scholarly Resources for Classics

29/11/12

Professor Richard Seaford (Exeter), TBA

13/12/12

Dr Matthew Cobb (TSD), The Wild, Wild, East: Romans on the Frontier of Egypt

7/2/13

Professor Catherine Steel (Glasgow), The Roman Senate

14/3/13

Dr Guy Bradley (Cardiff), Questions in the Demography and Economy of Early Rome

21 or 28/3/13 (date to be confirmed)

Professor Andrew Lintott (Oxford), The Forum and Comitium as Legal Spaces

Please note that Professor Lintott’s paper is the second City of Rome Project Annual Lecture. For more information about the project, please visit www.city-of-rome.org

If you’d like to come, and need accommodation, please do get in touch (j.richardson AT tsd.ac.uk)