inlustre monumentum est

~ An Antipodean View on Classical Greece, Rome & the Mediterranean.

inlustre monumentum est

Category Archives: Reception

How Gaddafi toppled a Roman emperor

29 Tuesday Nov 2011

Posted by scot mcphee in 20th century history, 21st century history, Archaeology, Reception, Roman history

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Libya, Septimius Severus

How Gaddafi toppled a Roman emperor | Culture | guardian.co.uk:

For years, said Walda, an antique bronze statue of the emperor had stood in Green Square, now Martyrs’ Square. “It witnessed all the major events there from the era of the kings, to the Italian period, to the Gaddafi period,” he said. In the late 1970s, as things got tougher under the dictator, the statue started to get used as a way of cloaking and depersonalising subversion. “Septimius Severus became the mouthpiece for opposition,” explained Walda. “People would ask each other, ‘What’s Septimius Severus saying today? So Gaddafi decided to topple him.” The statue was duly removed from Green Square.

(Via The Guardian.)

Counting Down from Marathon

28 Monday Nov 2011

Posted by scot mcphee in 21st century history, Greek history, Reception

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ancient dates, Athens, calendar, marathon

The Life of Antoninus Pius: Counting Down from Marathon:

On November 13, long distance runners from all over the world converged on Athens for the 29th Athens Classic Marathon. This old arithmetically-challenged emperor assumed that it was organized to celebrate the 2,500th anniversary (25th centenary) of the Battle of Marathon, fought in 490 BC. However, the official logo of the Association of International Marathons and Distance Races (pictured here) makes it clear that they considered 2010 to be the centenary. So who’s correct?

(Via The Life of Antoninus Pius.)

Kylie goes Classical

27 Sunday Nov 2011

Posted by scot mcphee in Reception

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popular culture

Kylie Minogue and the Classics:

Have you seen Kylie Minogue’s latest work? It is full of classical allusions.

(Via Love of History.)

CFP: Fakes, Forgeries & Issues of Authenticity in Classical Literature

27 Sunday Nov 2011

Posted by scot mcphee in Archaeology, Greek Classics, Greek history, Latin Classics, Post-classical history, Reception, Roman history

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call for papers, journal

CFP: Fakes, Forgeries & Issues of Authenticity in Classical Literature:

As we are planning a second publication with original contributions dealing with Fakes, Forgeries & Issues of Authenticity in Classical Literature, it would be a pleasure if you could make a contribution on this broad topic. Of particular, but by no means exclusive interest, would be papers in the following areas:

  • Epistolographic Fakes and Forgeries
  • Historiographic Fakes and Forgeries.
  • Authorship and authority.
  • Anonymity and Pseudonymity.
  • Forgery of Literary texts, documents.

The book will attempt to explore the various aspects implied by the subject in the fields of literature, critical theory, aesthetics, history, political science and linguistics. This volume aims to constitute an all-embracing outcome of recent research on these topics, thus reflecting the spirit of coherence and openness that has characterized our Research Group (Madrid and Oviedo) since its original formation.
 
Manuscripts (Word) should be submitted no later than December 31, 2011 via email.

Papers should not exceed 20 type-written double-spaced pages (or 6,000 words); endnotes, tables, figures included, should follow the MLA citation style. Book and journal titles should be italicized.
 
Publication of selected papers is planned for 2012.
For further information please contact us at martinez@uniovi.es
 

Javier Martínez ~ Filología Clásica
(Facultad de Filosofía y Letras)
Teniente Alfonso Martínez, s/n ~  E-33011 Oviedo

Fax: +34-985 104 591~Tlf. +34-985 104 693~ secret.: +34-985 104 590
http://www.unioviedo.es/martinez

(Via American Philological Association)

Bright, unbearable reality: A Review of Alice Oswald, ‘Memorial’

22 Tuesday Nov 2011

Posted by scot mcphee in English Literature, Greek Classics, Reception

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Alice Oswald, epic, Iliad, lyric, poetry

As if it was June
A poppy being hammered by the rain
Sinks its head down
It’s exactly like that
When a man’s neck gives in
And the bronze calyx of his helmet
Sinks his head down

Poor ARCHEPTOLEMOS
Someone was there
And the next moment no one

Like fire with its loose hair flying rushes through the city
The look of unmasked light shocks everything to rubble
And flames howl through the gaps

Alice Oswald, 2011. Memorial. London: Faber and Faber.

This powerful adaption of Homer’s Iliad, subtitled an ‘Excavation of the Iliad’, consists essentially of a haunting list of the named men who die in it, in the order in which they die, each with perhaps some small biographical detail or story of how they die. Protesilaus is first; Hector is last. It is simultaneously a retelling, abridgement, and translation. Interspersed though these deaths are similes, always repeated. The similes Oswald says ‘are translations’, but of a irreverent kind, and that they are ‘openings through which to see what Homer was looking at’. Oswald stated aim is for ‘translucence rather than translation’. Her stated aim was to recover the enargeia of the poem, its ‘bright, unbearable reality’. And enargeia we certainly have in shocking abundance.

And PEDAEUS the unwanted one
The mistake of his father’s mistress
Felt the hot shock in his neck of Mege’s spear
Unswallowable sore throat of metal in his mouth
Right through his teeth
He died biting down on the spearhead

Like suddenly it thunders
And a stormwind rushes down
And roars into the sea’s ears
And the curves of many white-parched waves
Run this way and that

This poem is beautiful in its austere remembrance of the dead heroes of Homer’s epic, and beautiful in its sorrow. The severity in stripping away from Homer the background of the war, the feuds of Zeus and Hera, Athena and Ares and the other gods, the speeches, reviews, catalogues and endless epithets and leaving just the short and powerful stories of the men who are killed, the manner of their deaths, and a brief lyrical eulogy to their memory, is to my opinion a stroke of genius. Some men are sons, brothers, and husbands, some men die the brave death of a hero, clashing bronze that smashes through flesh, others just die, yet others have only their names recorded.

And ENIOPEUS with high hopes
Drove Hector into battle
Into the terrifying anti-world of the wounded
The wheels kept slewing over bodies
But he held tight he was good with horses
Until a spear shocked him in the nipple
He vanished backwards and hit the ground under their hooves
Clang his soul burst into the open

It is a wondrous thing to read. Oswald’s use of language is ascetic and sparing; yet the poem still mediates Homer’s intense beauty. Whether you’re a hardened Classical Historian, a passionate lover of Greek Epic or a confused neophyte daunted by the many lengthy and cumbersome English translations of the Iliad, I would heartily recommend that you read this short and stunningly beautiful poem.

I will leave you with one last sample;

Like the hawk of the hills the perfect killer
Easily outflies the clattering dove
She dips away but he follows he ripples
He hangs his black hooks over her
And snares her with a thin cry
In praise of her softness

There was a blue pool who loved her loneliness
Lay on her stones clear-eyed staring at trees
Her name was Abarbarea
A young man found her in the hills
He took one look at her shivering freshness
And stripped off his clothes
In the middle of his astonished sheep
He jumped off a rock right into her arms
And from that quick fling there were two children
PEDASUS and AESEPUS
They died at Troy on the same day

Here is its entry in Amazon UK’s catalogue. Here is a review in The Guardian, and another review in the (UK) Telegraph. This is a link to a half-hour long Guardian books podcast in part of which you can hear a snippet of Alice reading her poem (recommended to listen – it was hearing this podcast which prompted my purchase!). This is a link to the book on the publisher’s site.

(this review is based on a much simpler version I wrote on Amazon)

CFP: Swords, Sorcery, Sandals and Space: The Fantastika and the Classical World. (Liverpool, Jun-Jul 2013)

16 Wednesday Nov 2011

Posted by scot mcphee in English Literature, Greek Classics, Latin Classics, Literature, Reception

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call for papers, conference, fantastika, science fiction, sf

Oh, my two favourite interests: Classics and SF! At the bottom, I’ve embedded the Classics Confidential video interview with the chair of the conference, Tony Keen. He gives an excellent overview and at the end makes perceptive observations about creating disciplinary bridges between Classical Receptionists, SF scholars, and English Literature scholars.

Memorabilia Antonina: Swords, Sorcery, Sandals and Space: The Fantastika and the Classical World. A Science Fiction Foundation Conference in 2013:

Swords, Sorcery, Sandals and Space: The Fantastika and the Classical World. A Science Fiction Foundation Conference

At The Foresight Centre, University of Liverpool, Jun-Jul 2013.

Guests of Honour/Plenary Speakers: Edith Hall, Nick Lowe, and Catherynne M. Valente

Website: http://www.sf-foundation.org/conference

Call for papers

The culture of the Classical world continues to shape that of the modern West. Those studying the Fantastika (science fiction, fantasy and horror) know that it has many of its roots in the literature of the Graeco-Roman world (Homer’s Odyssey, Lucian’s True History). At the same time, scholars of Classical Reception are increasingly investigating all aspects of popular culture, and have begun looking at science fiction. However, scholars of the one are not often enough in contact with scholars of the other. This conference aims to bridge the divide, and provide a forum in which SF and Classical Reception scholars can meet and exchange ideas.

We invite proposals for papers (20 minutes plus discussion) or themed panels of three or four papers from a wide range of disciplines (including Science Fiction, Classical Reception and Literature), from academics, students, fans, and anyone else interested, on any aspect of the interaction between the Classical world of Greece and Rome and science fiction, fantasy and horror. We are looking for papers on Classical elements in modern (post-1800) examples of the Fantastika, and on science fictional or fantastic elements in Classical literature. We are particularly interested in papers addressing literary science fiction or fantasy, where we feel investigations of the interaction with the ancient world are relatively rare. But we also welcome papers on film, television, radio, comics, games, or fan culture.

Please send proposals to conferences@sf-foundation.org, to arrive by 30 September 2012. Paper proposals should be no more than 300 words. Themed panels should also include an introduction to the panel, of no more than 300 words. Please include the name of the author/panel convener, and contact details.

Swords, Sorcery, Sandals and Space is organised by the Science Fiction Foundation, with the co- operation of the School of Archaeology, Classics and Egyptology at the University of Liverpool.

Tony Keen
Chair, 2013 Science Fiction Foundation Conference

(Via Memorabilia Antonina via Classics Confidential.)

And here’s the Classics Confidential interview with Tony Keen, definitely worth watching:

New Approaches to Greek and Roman Myth (Camden, Jan 21)

16 Wednesday Nov 2011

Posted by scot mcphee in Ancient Religion, Greek Classics, Latin Classics, Reception

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Tags

conference, digital resources, myth, theatre, tragedy

From the CLASSICISTS mailing list:

Conference: New Approaches to Greek and Roman Myth

The Department of Classical Studies at The Open University warmly invites you to a one-day conference on “New Approaches to Greek and Roman Myth”. The event will be held at The Open University Regional Centre in London (Camden) on Saturday 21st January, 10am-4.30pm. Details of speakers and paper titles appear below. There will be £7 charge to cover the cost of lunch and refreshments. Booking forms and further details are available from Jessica Hughes (jessica.hughes@open.ac.uk).

Colleagues may also be interested in a new myth-related resource that the OU has recently produced – a collection of video animations and audio discussions on Greek Heroes and their representation in popular culture from ancient times to the modern day.
http://www8.open.ac.uk/platform/news-and-features/new-itunes-u-addition-looks-greek-heroes-in-popular-culture

all best wishes,
Jessica Hughes

  • Anastasia Bakogianni (OU) – Electra Ancient and Modern: The Reception of the Myth in Greek Tragedy and in the Modern World
  • Joanna Paul (OU) – The Half-Blood Hero: Percy Jackson and Mythmaking in the 21st Century
  • Annie Ravenshill-Johnson – The Metamorphoses of Hephaistos/Vulcan
  • Frances Eley (OU) – Staging Sacred Drama: Reception in Process
  • Sam Newington (OU) – Greece and the Near East: Creation Myths
  • Tori McKee (OU) – Reconstructing the Hippolytus myth: Euripidean Echoes in Modern Adaptations of Racine’s Phedre
  • Susan Deacy (Roehampton) – How to Write a Classical Mythology Textbook

A map showing the location of The Open University London Regional Centre can be found here: http://www3.open.ac.uk/contact/maps.aspx?contactid=1

-----------------------------------------------------------
Jessica Hughes
Lecturer in Classical Studies
The Open University
Walton Hall
Milton Keynes MK7 6AA
Website www.classicsconfidential.co.uk

CFP: Envisioning Landscapes: Adaptation & Renewal. (Liverpool, June 2012)

15 Tuesday Nov 2011

Posted by scot mcphee in Archaeology, Classical history, Post-classical history, Reception

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call for papers, conference

From the CLASSICISTS mailing list:

Call for Papers

Envisioning Landscapes: Adaptation & Renewal

22 June 2012

University of Liverpool

Landscape features prominently in perceptions and interpretations of the
past. Whether depicting a specific location in its own right, or providing
a backdrop for historical action, the physical environment pervades modern
reconstructions of past places, peoples and events. Thus, just as rural
and urban landscapes are active in the construction of memory in the lived
environment, historical landscapes play a crucial role in shaping present-
day conceptions of the past. It is the purpose of this colloquium to
investigate how newly envisioned landscapes shape our understandings of the
past, and how these understandings impact upon and transform physical
landscapes in turn.

We welcome contributions that address – but are not limited to – one or
more of the following questions:

  • How are past landscapes visualised in modern re-imaginings of historical
    events, peoples and places?
  • What ideas about the past are conveyed through representations of urban and
    rural environments?
  • How do specific features of the historical landscape – e.g. buildings,
    monuments, natural phenomena – continue or change as they move between
    media and across time?
  • How and why do particular historical landscapes lend themselves to
    conversations about contemporary society, politics and culture through
    their representation?

Please submit 200 word abstracts for 25 minute papers by e-mail to Dr Fiona
Hobden (f.hobden@liv.ac.uk) and Dr Damien Kempf (kempf@liv.ac.uk) by the
deadline of 15th February 2012.

We have funds available to cover local accommodation and conference costs.

This interdisciplinary colloquium is supported by the Faculty of Humanities
and Social Sciences, University of Liverpool.

Just spotted on BBC World News

09 Wednesday Nov 2011

Tags

Caesar

Julia Caesar Reporting

Ignore Berlusconi, look at the reporter’s name!

Update: Unfortunately the text of this report did NOT begin “When news of these events reached Caesar …” but I have to say, if I were Julia Caesar, all of Caesar’s reports, would, in fact, begin that way.

Posted by scot mcphee | Filed under 21st century history, News Items, Reception

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Top Five Ancient Vampires

07 Monday Nov 2011

Posted by scot mcphee in Reception

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Tags

popular culture, silly, vampires

Top Five Ancient Vampires — a bit of fun from Pop Classics.

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