CONF: ‘Classics in extremis’

Seen on the Classicists list:

‘Classics in extremis’
Durham University, July 6th-7th 2014

This conference aims to examine some of the most unexpected, most
hard-fought, and (potentially) most revealing acts of classical reception:
it will ask how the reception of the ancient world changes – and what the
classical looks like – when it is under strain. Current debates in classical
reception studies are increasingly focused on less assured and comfortable
engagements with the past. Bringing together scholars with a variety of
interests, this conference aims to move the debate beyond the specific case
studies emerging in the field and to encourage the broader development of
fresh methodologies and perspectives in thinking about the ‘classical’ as a
troubled space – a space in which fraught and remarkable claims have been
made upon the ancient world.

For registration information, please contact Edmund Richardson
(edmund.richardson AT durham.ac.uk).

Sunday July 6th

1.00pm–1.30pm Registration

1.30pm–1.40pm Welcome

1.40pm–3.30pm Panel 1
Jennifer Ingleheart (Durham), ‘High culture in low company? The reception of
ancient ‘homosexuality’ in the pornographic The Sins of the Cities of the
Plain.’

Edith Hall & Henry Stead (King’s College London), ‘Classics down the
mineshaft’ (paper delivered by Henry Stead).

3.30pm–3.50pm Coffee

3.50pm–5.40pm Panel 2
Barbara Goff (Reading), ‘Greek Art on Brick Row: coming to the Classics via
the WEA.’

Stefani Dixon (Berkeley) & Djesika Ilèn Watson, ‘Per Tot Discrimina Rerum:
Classical Pedagogy by/for Urban Students Experiencing Crisis and Poverty.’

5.40pm–6.00pm Coffee

6.00pm–7.00pm Keynote
Constanze Güthenke (Princeton), ‘“The Blossoming of Doctor Dryasdust”: Basil Gildersleeve in Germany.’

8.30pm Conference Dinner

Monday July 7th

9.00am–10.50am Panel 3
Thomas E. Jenkins (Trinity), ‘Extreme metaphor: American Receptions of the
Ancient World after 9/11.’

Luke Richardson (University College London), ‘“And over our heads the hollow seas closed up”: Primo Levi and Reading the Odyssey after Auschwitz.’

10.50am–11.10am Coffee

11.10am–1.00pm Panel 4
Jennifer Wallace (Cambridge), ‘Picturing the Greeks: Photography, Performance and Julia Margaret Cameron.’

Amanda Klause (Princeton), ‘Daphnis Transformed: Virgilian Pastoral,
Lucretian Materialism, and Aphra Behn’s Politics of Translation.’

1.00pm–1.50pm Lunch

1.50pm–3.40pm Panel 5
Davina Benstead-Cross (St Andrews), ‘Voyaging into the past: Pacific
Exploration and Classical Reception in the late eighteenth century.’

Rosa Andújar (University College London), ‘Tragedy and Revolucíon: Adapting Greek drama in Fidel’s Cuba.’

3.40pm–4.00pm Coffee

4.00pm–5.30pm Keynote & Plenary. Chair: Barbara Graziosi (Durham).
Simon Goldhill (Cambridge), ‘How to Bring Down the Church? Or: on coming to Durham, these days.’

APA Blog | Call for Papers in Collected Volume on Color in Ancient Global History (3000 B.C.- 600 A.D.)

@APA Blog

Call for Papers in Collected Volume on Color in Ancient Global History (3000 B.C.- 600 A.D.)
http://ift.tt/ORS6ao

CONF: Revolutions and Continuity in Greek Mathematics

Seen on the Classicists list:

This is the final reminder for the international conference on Ancient Greek
Mathematics: ‘Revolutions and Continuity in Greek Mathematics’, hosted by
Birkbeck College, University of London.

For more information, see:

http://ift.tt/1oTXBCC
greek-mathematics

CONF: Metaphysis/New Antiquities

Seen on the Classicists list:

Two upcoming conferences:

METAPHYSIS
Ritual, Myth and Symbolism in the Aegean Bronze Age
15th International Aegean Conference

http://ift.tt/1jlF17m

New Antiquities: Transformations of the Past in the New Age and Beyond

http://ift.tt/1oT4Sm6

March 24, 2014 at 02:09AM

CFP: Psychology and the Classics

Seen on the Classicists list:

International conference: Leuven (Belgium), 24-27 March 2015
Final Call for Papers – Deadline expires next Monday

Psychology and the Classics: A Dialogue of Disciplines

Key-note speakers: Rachel Bowlby, Christopher Gill, and Jennifer Radden.

This conference aims to bring together scholars from the fields of classics
and psychology in order to determine what they have to offer to each other
in terms of hermeneutic approaches, research questions, and methodological
legitimation. Both the field of classics and that of psychology are here to
be conceived in the widest sense possible, comprising, in case of the
former, ancient philosophy, history, rhetoric, and literature, and, in case
of the latter, psychoanalysis, social psychology, theories of emotion, and
neuroscience. A more extensive overview of the research questions that all
of these fields can raise in relation to each other can be found on our website:
http://ift.tt/1oT4Uug.
We welcome innovative contributions from a wide array of scholars.
Preference will be given to papers which have the potential to provoke
fruitful interdisciplinary discussions in an open and convivial atmosphere.
Abstracts for individual contributions (500 words), panels (1000 words), or
alternative formats, along with a short CV of 3 or 4 lines, should reach us
before 31 March 2014 on psychologyandtheclassics AT arts.kuleuven.be. All
proposals and contributions are expected to be in English. Early career
researchers are especially encouraged to send in an abstract.

Organizing committee: Pieter Adriaens (KU Leuven), Koen De Temmerman
(University of Ghent), Jeroen Lauwers (KU Leuven), Anneleen Masschelein (KU
Leuven), Jan Opsomer (KU Leuven), Hedwig Schwall (KU Leuven), Toon Van Houdt
(KU Leuven), Demmy Verbeke (KU Leuven).

Messages to the list are archived at http://ift.tt/qTg9HY
March 24, 2014 at 04:34AM