CONF: The Romance Between Greece and the East

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Programme for workshop 4 in the series:
The Romance Between Greece and the  East

June 23rd, Corpus Christi College, Oxford (seminar room)

10.30-11.00 coffee (in hall)
11.00-12.00 Martin Goodman, ‘The story of Izates (Josephus, AJ 20.17-96)’
12.00-1.00 Simon Goldhill, ‘Genre as Greco-Jewish contact zone’
1.00-2.00 Lunch
2.00-2.30 Discussion, The testament of Joseph (= Testaments of the 12
patriarchs no. 11)
2.30-3.30 Eva Mussio, ‘Commentary in Fiction: Joseph & Aseneth between
Ancient Novel and biblical Exegesis’
3.30-3.45 tea
3.45-4.45 Erich Gruen, ‘Jews and Greeks as philosophers’
4.45-5.15 concluding discussion

To book your place please contact tim.whitmarsh AT ccc.ox.ac.uk

CONF: Communicating With the Dead in the Ancient Mediterranean World

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International Conference Announcement
“Communicating with the Dead in the Ancient Mediterranean World”
Volos, 19-21 June 2009
University of Thessaly
Department of History, Archaeology and Social Anthropology

Programme

Friday, 19/6/2009

18:00-20:00

Reception and coffee

Alexander MAZARAKIS AINIAN:
(University of Thessaly)

Addressing and honouring heroes and distinguished dead in Geometric Greece  

Dimitris PALAIOTHODOROS:
(University of Thessaly)

Images of ghosts in the visual arts of the archaic and classical periods

Yannis TZIFOPOULOS:
(University of Thessaloniki)

Encountering death, before and after: The Bacchic-Orrphic incised lamellae  

Dinner

Saturday, 20/6/2009

10:00-13:30

Nick WYATT:
(University of Edinburgh)

Encounters between the living and the dead in the ancient world: Semitic evidence  

Panagiotis KOUSOULIS:
(University of the Aegean)

The demonic identity of the dead and its ritual manipulation in the Egyptian underworld: The evidence from the New Kingdom and the Third Intermediate Period  

Coffee

Nanno MARINATOS:
(University of Illinois at Chicago)

The Stone in the Soul  

Spyros RANGOS:
(University of Patras)

Rebirth and liberation across philosophy and religious imagery until Plato  

Lunch

17:00-20:30

Vayos LIAPIS:
(University of Montreal)

Neither stone-dead nor stone-deaf  

Eleni PACHOUMI:
(University of Thessaly)

Encounters with the dead in magic: Resurrection of the body?  

Tea

Jan BREMMER:
(University of Groningen)

Necromancy

Dimitris KYRTATAS:
(University of Thessaly)

Communications with the living-dead in Christian Egypt 

Dinner

Sunday, 21/6/2009

10:00-13:00

Suzanne LYE:
(University of California – Los Angeles)

Conversations between the living and the dead in late antiquity, with a focus on the ancient novel

Matthew DICKIE:
(University of Illinois at Chicago)

Eustratius, presbyter Constantinopolitanus, De statu animarum post mortem  

Einar THOMASSEN:
(University of Bergen)

Intercession and the special dead  

Lunch
 

 

CFP: Journal of Hellenic Religion vol. 3

The Journal of Hellenic Religion’s (JfHR) will proceed shortly to produce the third volume of the Journal, which will be forthcoming in the mid 2010.
The JfHR is a peer-reviewed annual periodical. It has as a main theme the original interdisciplinary study of ancient Greek Religion and Theology (i.e. history, philosophy, politics-sociology and archaeology-anthropology).

The theme / subject of the forthcoming Volume 3 will focus on the ancient Greek beliefs of afterlife and death, their mourning, lamentation and funeral practices.

The articles should include full bibliography and endnotes.

The editorial panel may request editions and small alterations and a summary of the peer-reviewed process will be send after the author’s request. The authors hold their article’s copyright. The contributors will be requested to sign the ‘Licence To Publish’ based on the JISC and Surf Foundation guidelines.

Please view (URL: http://www.journalofhellenicreligion.markoulakispublications.org.uk/about/guide) the Contribution Guideline for more information of the word limitation.
Submission of any material must be on electronic form (doc, rtf), accompanied with the legal name and a current email and postal address of the author and emailed it to the Editor (see contact details below)

Thank you in advance of your contributions.

Nikolaos Markoulakis
Nottingham Trent University
Maudslay Building
Burton Street, NG1 4BU
Phone: +44 (0) 115 848 4354
fax: +44 (0) 115 848 4612
Email: n.markoulakis AT markoulakispublications.org.uk
Visit the website at http://www.journalofhellenicreligion.markoulakispublications.org.uk/

CONF: Digital Classicist seminar series

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We have had to make a small change to the Digital Classicist/ICS Work-in-Progress seminar series.  The updated programme is copied here.

*Digital Classicist/ICS Work in Progress Seminar, Summer 2009*

Fridays at 16:30 in STB3/6 (Stewart House), Senate House, Malet Street, London, WC1E 7HU

(NB: July 17th seminar in British Library, 96 Euston Rd, NW1 2DW)

*June 5:* Bart Van Beek (Leuven)
‘Onomastics and Name-extraction in Graeco-Egyptian Papyri’

*June 12:* Philip Murgatroyd (Birmingham)
‘Starting out on the Journey to Manzikert: Agent-based modelling and
Mediaeval warfare logistics’

*June 19:* Mark Hedges & Tobias Blanke (King’s College London)
‘Linking and Querying Ancient Texts: A multi-database case study with epigraphic corpora”

*June 26:* Marco Büchler & Annette Loos (Leipzig)
‘Textual Re-use of Ancient Greek Texts: A case study on Plato’s works’

*July 3:* Roger Boyle & Nia Ng (Leeds)
‘Extracting the Hidden: Paper Watermark Location and Identification’

*July 10:* Cristina Vertan (Hamburg)
‘Teuchos: An Online Knowledge-based Platform for Classical Philology’

*July 17:* Christine Pappelau (Berlin) **NB: in British Library**
‘Roman Spolia in 3D: High Resolution Leica 3D Laser-scanner meets
ancient building structures’

*July 24:* Elton Barker (Oxford)
‘Herodotos Encoded Space-Text-Imaging Archive’

*July 31:* Leif Isaksen (Southampton)
‘Linking Archaeological Data’

*August 7:* Alexandra Trachsel (Hamburg)
‘An Online Edition of the Fragments of Demetrios of Skepsis’

*ALL WELCOME*

We are inviting both students and established researchers involved in the application of the digital humanities to the study of the ancient world to come and introduce their work. The focus of this seminar series is the interdisciplinary and collaborative work that results at the interface of expertise in Classics or Archaeology and computer Science.

The seminars will be followed by wine and refreshments.

For more information please contact any of the following:
Gabriel.Bodard AT kcl.ac.uk
Stuart.Dunn AT kcl.ac.uk
Juan.Garce AT bl.uk
Simon.Mahony AT kcl.ac.uk
or see the seminar website at
http://www.digitalclassicist.org/wip/wip2009.html

CONF: The Erotics of Narrative

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The Erotics of Narrative’

An international KYKNOS conference

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

 

15-17 July, Gregynog Hall

 

For booking information see: www.kyknos.org.uk

 

Conference organisers: John.Morgan AT swansea.ac.uk

m.plantinga AT lamp.ac.uk; I.Repath AT swansea.ac.uk

 

 

Theme

Desire, anticipation, pleasure, and satisfaction are all concepts which apply to hearing, reading, and giving narratives, as well as to love and sex. In some cases, horror, boredom, pain, and frustration are involved instead, or even as well. When a narrative concerns love and/or sex, then there is the possibility of dynamic interplay between the contents of the narrative and its narration, and between the provocations and reactions of narrators and their narratees.

This conference aims to explore the ways in which ideas and theories surrounding ancient narratives and erotic subject matter interrelate and affect each other, considering such aspects as: pleasure and pain, erotic impetus and delay, frustration and satisfaction, and disappointment and fulfilment, and generally how the processes and rhythms of reading/listening relate to sexual desire, pleasure, and so on.

 

Programme

 

Wednesday 15 July                 

3.00 – 3.15        Introduction      

3.15 – 4.15        Dimos Spatharas ‘Kinky stories from the rostrum’

4.15 – 4.45        Tea      

4.45 – 5.45        Andrea Capra    ‘Erotic scenes, erratic narratives, ironic distances: Plato and Xenophon’s Antithetic Symposia’

5.45 – 6.45        Liz Pender         ‘From seduction meadow to marriage bed: reading Plato’s Phaedrus’                    

DINNER

                       

Thursday 16 July                     

9.00 – 10.00      Glenn Lacki       ‘Sex and sea: the temptations of narration (Ov. Her. 18-19)

10.00 – 11.00    Alison Sharrock ‘The erotics of delay in Ovidian narrative’

11.00 – 11.30    Coffee  

11.30 – 12.30    Anne Cotton      ‘Reading, learning and desire: narrative, frustration, and philosophical progress in Plato’s Phaedrus’

12.30 – 2.00      Lunch  

2.00 – 3.00        Tim Whitmarsh  ‘The erotics of disappointment: Chariton’s Dionysiaka’

3.00 – 4.00        Kathryn Chew    ‘Erotikoi logoi and sophrosune: [self-] control in Achilles Tatius, Longus, and Heliodorus’

4.00 – 4.30        Tea      

4.30 – 5.30        Steve Nimis       ‘Eros the novelist’

5.30 – 6.30        Froma Zeitlin     ‘The Circulation of Erotic Energy in Achilles Tatius: Narrative Strategies of Deflection, Projection, and Sublimation’                       

DINNER

                       

Friday 17 July             

9.00 – 9.30        Daniel King        ‘A survivor’s story: narrating painful experiences in a pleasing way’

9.30 – 10.00      Emilio Capettini ‘Ethiopian Andromache: philandria and eros’

10.00 – 11.00    Stelios Panayotakis       ‘Desire and Storytelling in Apollonius of Tyre’

11.00 – 11.30    Coffee  

11.30 – 12.30    Ruth Webb        ‘Adultery, mime, and the novel: performance and metafiction in Apuleius and Achilles Tatius’

12.30 – 2.00      Lunch  

2.00 – 3.00        Jane McLarty     ‘Misplaced jealousy and the privileged reader: a Christian reading of a romantic motif’