CONF: St Andrews Seminars

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

All seminars take place on Fridays at 4.00 p.m. (note the new time!) in
Swallowgate 11. Papers are followed by discussion. All are very welcome.

Feb 12th Richard Steadman-Jones (Sheffield) ‘Language of Art’: The
Place of Greek in the 18th-Century ‘Origin of Language’ Debate’

Feb 19th Trevor Mahy (St Andrews) ‘A return to republican
politics? Reconstructing the res publica in the wake of Caesar’s
assassination’

Feb 26th Dagmar Hofmann (Cologne) ‘The Place of Refreshment –
Refrigerium in early Christian sources’

March 5th Roy Gibson (Manchester): ‘Latin letter collections as
failed autobiography’

March 12th Colin Adams (Liverpool) ‘Understanding Corruption in Roman
Egypt’

March 19th Calum MacIver (Edinburgh) ‘Quintus Smyrnaeus’
Posthomerica: (M)use-less Singing’

March 26th Gwynaeth McIntyre (St Andrews) ‘Divine Dead Babies: The
deified children of the Roman imperial family’

April 16th Georgia Petridou (St Andrews) ‘Divine Epiphanies and
Hereditary Priesthood in Pisidian Pogla’.

April 23rd Luke Houghton (Glasgow) ‘Latin love elegy in the
Renaissance’

April 30th Rosanna Omitowoju (Cambridge) title tbc

May 7th Shadi Bartsch (Chicago) ‘Metaphor and Senecan Stoicism’

Enquiries should be directed to: Roger Rees, School of Classics,
University of St Andrews, St Andrews KY16 9AL. Tel.: 01334-462685. FAX:
01334-462602. E-mail: rdr1 AT st-andrews.ac.uk

CFP: Sarkophage

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

1. International Symposium
Call for papers

From Oct. 2 – 8, 2010 (with papers to be read Oct. 3 – 7) we are
planning to hold the first symposium of the International Association
"Roman Sarcophagi", to be founded here in Marburg. Papers on
iconography, chronology, style, commerce, meaning of the
representations, afterlife, new finds etc. from the following regions
are welcome:
– Rome and the Provinces in the West
– Athens and the Provinces on the Balkan
– The Provinces in Asia Minor and the Near East
Please inform us by March 31, 2010, if you would like to
– participate with a paper (25-30 min; please give the preliminary title)
or
– participate without paper.
We would be grateful if you would distribute this information to
colleagues who would also be interested in this symposium.
Any suggestions would be very welcome.
The organizers
Prof. Dr. Rita Amedick Prof. Dr. Dr.h.c. Guntram Koch


amedick AT staff.uni-marburg.de
http://www.uni-marburg.de/fb06/archaeologie/forschung/projekte/sarksymp

CFP: What Became of Lily Ross Taylor?

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

*CALL FOR PAPERS

What Became of Lily Ross Taylor?

Women and Ancient History in North America*

organized by Celia E. Schultz and Michele R. Salzman

The APA’s Committee for Ancient History and the Women’s Classical Caucus together invite proposals for a panel session on the status of women in the field of Ancient History to be presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Philological Association at San Antonio in 2011.

As the number of women in the Academy has increased over the last forty years, so has the number of female professional classicists grown. Yet the relative proportion of women scholars has not increased at an equal pace across the various subfields that make up the field of Classics, with ancient history lagging behind. Although some female ancient historians have had long distinguished careers as researchers and teachers, and now larger numbers are coming up through the ranks, the proportion of female ancient historians (approximately 20% of the field, based on Scheidel 1999) is smaller than the proportion of women in Classics more generally.

The purpose of this panel is to provide an opportunity to take stock of the state of the study and teaching of ancient history in North America and to contemplate where the field is going. We are particularly interested in papers that address the following questions: What has changed since the 1970s that has encouraged more women to enter the field? Why has the female presence in ancient history not been as robust as it is in literary studies? What does it mean that the proportion of women in ancient history is in keeping with the representation of women in the wider field of History, but is not in pace with the wider field of Classics? Is there a difference in the circumstances faced by women educated in (and hired by) departments of History, departments of Classics, and independent graduate groups? How can the APA and the WCC assist in attracting more women to this endeavor?

Abstracts of 500 to 800 words, suitable for a 15-20 minute presentation, should be sent as an email attachment (Word doc or pdf) to Celia Schultz at celia.schultz AT yale.edu, or to her by regular mail at the Department of Classics, Yale University, P.O. Box. 208266, New Haven CT 06520-8266. Since all abstracts will be judged anonymously, please do not identify yourself in any way on the abstract itself. All proposals must be received by February 1, 2010.

CONF: APA 2011 Panel on Greek Prosody

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

A New Look at Greek Prosody

Organized by David Goldstein (University of California, Berkeley) and Dieter
Gunkel (University of California, Los Angeles)

With the 1994 publication of The Prosody of Greek Speech, Devine and
Stephens achieved insights into Greek that many would have hardly thought
possible. The study of prosody, that is, the study of phenomena such as
syllable structure, accentual rhythm, pitch, and intonational phrasing, is
an extremely delicate and difficult endeavor when it comes to a corpus
language. Devine and Stephens combined detailed philological investigation
of texts (literary, grammatical, and musical) with linguistic theory, a
broad range of cross-linguistic typological comparisons, and evidence from
experimental linguistics and psychology, to offer the most extensive and
detailed portrait of Greek prosody to date.

Despite these impressive results, the pervasive role that prosody plays in
Greek language and literature has generally not been appreciated. Simply
put, prosody pervades practically every aspect of language, including
syntax, semantics, pragmatics, word formation, and accentual patterns, not
to mention other facets such as performance, gesture, and metrics. As
prosodic studies have been given only marginal treatment, the opportunities
for new discovery in this area are abundant.

The time has come for two things. The first is to look afresh at Greek
prosody from both an empirical and a theoretical standpoint. More is known
now than was in 1994, and the panel should showcase recent advances as well as identify and explore new frontiers. Second, the forum aims to bring
prosodic studies and their implications into the purview of a wider range of
classical scholars.

We are interested in questions of prosody at every level, from the syllable
to the rhetorical period, and particularly welcome presentations that
demonstrate the implications of prosodic studies for Hellenic scholarship at
large. Questions that papers may address include the following:

1. What is the relationship between everyday colloquial speech rhythms and the dossier of Greek meters? What do metrical phenomena reveal about the prosody of the colloquial language?

2. How does prosody affect the formation of words (e.g., compounds,
hypocoristics) at the various stages of Greek?

3. How are we to understand the prosodic patterns found in prose texts, such as the clausulae of the Greek orators? What basis underlies these patterns, how do we account for their distribution, and what functional roles did they play in the sentence or the performance?

This panel will be held at the 2011 meeting of the American Philological
Association, which will run from 6-9 January in San Antonio, Texas.

A one-page abstract (suitable for a 15-20 minute presentation) must be
received by the APA office by 1 FEBRUARY 2010. Please send an anonymous abstract as a PDF attachment to apameetings AT sas.upenn.edu, and be sure to provide complete contact information and any AV requests in the body of your email. Submissions will be reviewed anonymously.

Further information can be found on the APA web page at the following
address: http://apaclassics.org/AnnualMeeting/2011_CFPs.html. Please contact David Goldstein at dmgold AT berkeley.edu or Dieter Gunkel at
dcgunkel AT gmail.com with any questions.

CFP: Ancient Demography, Annual Meeting Social Science and History Association, Chicago, November 18-21, 2010

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

This fall, the 35th Annual Meeting of the American Social Science and
History Association will take place from 18-21 November in Chicago. This
year’s theme is "Power and Politics".

The Annual Meeting of the Social Science and History Association is the
American counterpart of the two-yearly European Social Science and History
Conference, and is organized by an interdisciplinary group of scholars
that shares interests in social life and theory; historiography, and
historical and social-scientific methodologies.

This year, the "Family Demography" network of the SSHA aims to organize a
session entitled "Demography and Power Dynamics in the Ancient
Mediterranean (ca. 500 BCE – 500 CE)". As the organizer of this session, I
would like to give you an informal notice that paper proposals are now
being accepted, and that you are kindly invited to submit a title and
abstract for review. The submission deadline is February 15, 2010. Please
see the SSHA website at http://www.ssha.org/annual-conference for further
information.