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Second Call for Papers – Perspectives on Progress

02 Thursday May 2013

Posted by scot mcphee in 18th century history, 19th century history, 20th century history, 21st century history, Academia, Ancient Religion, Anthropology, Art & Art History, Classical history, Economics, History, Humanties, Linguistics, Literature, Personal, Post-classical history, Renaissance history, Social Sciences

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CFP, conference, postgraduate, progress

Along with a small cadre of my fellow research postgraduates at the School of History, Philosophy, Religion and Classics at The University of Queensland, I’m involved in organising a conference, Perspectives on Progress, which will be held in November 2013.

This is our second call for papers. The abstracts are due 31 May 2013. If you can, please consider submitting an abstract. More information about the conference can be seen at our website – http://perspectives2013.org/, but the basic information is reproduced below.

Perspectives on Progress – An interdisciplinary postgraduate and early career researcher conference, at The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia. November 27-29, 2013.

The organising committee is pleased announce that Dr. Alastair Blanshard and Dr. Sarah Pinto have each agreed to deliver Key Note Addresses at Perspectives on Progress, 2013.

Dr. Blanshard is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Classics and Ancient History at the University of Sydney. His most recent monograph is Sex, Vice, and Love from Antiquity to Modernity (Wiley Blackwell, 2010). In addition to his work on ancient sexuality, Dr. Blanshard is also concerned with examining the role that the classical past plays in the history of ideas.

Dr. Mills’s Futures of Reproduction: Bioethics and Biopolitics (Springer, 2011) is a compelling interrogation of the myriad bioethical issues associated with liberal eugenics and selective reproduction. As the recipient of a prestigious Australian Research Council Future Fellowship, Dr. Mills is currently working on a project concerned with exploring the concept of responsibility as it pertains to issues in reproductive and maternal-foetal medicine.

Call for Papers

In 1968, historian Sidney Pollard defined the Victorian ideal of ‘progress’ as, “the assumption that a pattern of change exists in the history of mankind… that it consists of irreversible changes in one direction only, and that this direction is towards improvement.” Despite the increasingly problematic nature of this ideal, the ‘progress myth’ still remains pervasive in the Western cultural tradition.

This postgraduate and early career researcher conference seeks to promote innovative interdisciplinary dialogues interrogating the concept of progress by bringing together scholars from across the humanities and social sciences.

Contributions are invited from disciplines ranging from history, classics, religion and philosophy through literary, media and cultural studies to anthropology, psychology and political science. Conference delegates will be invited to consider how the idea of progress influences their own work, while being given the opportunity to explore how this intersects with scholarship in other disciplines.

The conference committee invites proposals for papers in the form of an abstract of between 250 and 300 words to perspectivesonprogress2013@gmail.com by 31 May 2013. Paper format is a 20 minute paper with a 10 minute period for questions and answers.

ASCS 34 paper

15 Monday Oct 2012

Posted by scot mcphee in Academia, Latin Classics, Personal, Roman history

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conference, Flaminius, Livy, nebula, paper, Trasimene

My offer of a paper for ASCS 34 (Australasian Society for Classical Studies) next year (January 2013, in Sydney) was accepted. They were blind reviewed. Here is the abstract:

The Seen and the Unseen: Perception and Authority in Livy’s Battle Narratives

At the battle of the Trasimene Lake in 217 B.C., the consul C. Flaminius led his army into a fog that arose from the lake, which obscured their vision of Hannibal’s army lying in ambush. This paper will examine a number of aspects in Livy’s representation of Flaminius and the defeat at Trasimene in conjunction with Feldherr’s (Feldherr 1998) ideas surrounding the spectator and the spectacular. Taken as a whole, the episodes explored in this paper will show that Livy did not set out simply to denigrate Flaminius by repeating the opinions of sources hostile to him, but to have him fulfil an important role in a thought-provoking exemplum about the exercise and the visible representation of power. The paper will link Flaminius’ nebulous perception of the natural world around him to his own invisibility in the Roman civil ceremonies that should have marked his investiture as consul and departure to command the army. It will also explore the theme of sound versus sight in the human perception of battle. It will show the connections between the rational mind of ‘autopsy’ and the irrational emotions which only hear the dissonant clamour of the invisible enemy, in the battle of Trasimene, Hannibal’s crossing of the Alps, and the sack of Rome by the Gauls in the 4th century B.C. as it appears in book 5.

There’s also some additional points I’d like to make about the “invisibility” of Flaminius at Trasimene and in Rome, but I’m leaving those as surprises in the paper.

CFP: Historical Evidence and Historical Writing in Republican Rome (British School at Rome, Nov. 2013)

14 Saturday Jul 2012

Posted by scot mcphee in Latin Classics, Roman history

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CFP, conference

From the CLASSICISTS mailing list;

CALL FOR PROPOSALS

omnium annalium monumenta : HISTORICAL EVIDENCE and HISTORICAL WRITING in Republican Rome

Conference at the British School at Rome, 31 October – 1 November 2013

We are very pleased to announce our intention to arrange an international conference on historical evidence and historical writing in the Roman Republic in the autumn of 2013 at the British School at Rome. This will be the follow-up conference to Omnium annalium monumenta. Annals, Epic and Drama in Republican Rome, held at the Institutum Romanum Finlandiae in 2009.

Scholars interested in participating in the conference are invited to submit titles and short abstracts of their prospective talks to kaj.sandberg@abo.fi by 31 October 2012.

For further information, see: http://www.bsr.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/Omnium-annalium-monumenta-II_Call-for-Papers-final.pdf.

Christoper J. Smith and Kaj Sandberg

Amphorae VI (2012)

14 Saturday Jul 2012

Posted by scot mcphee in Academia, Archaeology, Egyptian History, Greek Classics, Greek history, Latin Classics, Reception, Roman history

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conference, postgraduate

I just got back from Amphorae VI which this year was held at Auckland University, three days of excellent postgraduate papers. Big kudos to organisers Lawrence Xu and Nicola Wright and their team of volunteers! As well as hearing some excellent presentations I got good feedback from several people on my own paper Treachery Worse Than Punic: Livy’s Landscape and Hannibal’s Invasion of Italy, which I will use to hopefully improve it further. Also met and hung out with friends new and old, its great to discuss research in informal settings like this. Its maintained a consistently good quality of papers for six years now! Next year Amphorae VII will be at Sydney University.

CFP: International PhD Student Conference Laetae segetes III

19 Thursday Apr 2012

Posted by scot mcphee in Greek Classics, Latin Classics, Medieval history

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call for papers, conference

-----Original Message-----
From: phil.muni.cz [mailto:radova@phil.muni.cz] 
Sent: Tuesday, 17 April 2012 11:11
To: xxxx
Subject: Call for papers: International PhD Student Conference Laetae segetes III

Dear Colleagues,

The Department of Classical Studies, Faculty of Arts, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic would like to formally announce International PhD Student Conference Laetae segetes III, at which beginning researchers can present the fruits of their work. This event is a continuation of similar colloquiums held in 2005 and 2007 ; on these occasions, young scholars from Central European universities submitted their contributions, the majority of which were published in the conference proceedings – an online version of the proceedings is available on the website http://www.phil.muni.cz/wuks/home/publikace

CONFERENCE DATE AND PLACE: November 13–16, 2012, Brno, Czech Republic.

ABSTRACTS

Abstracts of papers to be presented in English, German, Italian, or French are invited for consideration by the Conference Academic Committee. Please submit your abstract (up to 200 words) in the attached submission form until August 31, 2012 via e-mail to the following address: radova@phil.muni.cz or marie.okacova@mail.muni.cz. Acceptance notification will be sent to you till September 13, 2012.

PRESENTATIONS

Individual 15–20-minute paper presentations will be followed by 5 minutes of discussion.2

PROGRAMME

Parallel sessions and panel discussions will be scheduled over four days; papers will be grouped by sessions (Ancient Greek and Latin literature; Classical languages; Latin Middle Ages and Byzantology; Neo-Latin and Modern Greek studies). The conference programme will be available on the website http://www.phil.muni.cz/wuks/

REGISTRATION

Standard registration fee is 45 EUR/1 100 CZK.

Payment should be made by bank transfer until October 13, 2012. Registration can be done via University Shopping Centre, where you get a confirmation of your registration: https://is.muni.cz/obchod/baleni/58520?lang=en

The participation fee includes: conference proceedings, reception meal (as will be specified in the conference programme) and refreshment during coffee breaks.

Participation fee does NOT include: hotel booking and payment, and excursion. The organizing committee will book rooms for the conference participants only at the University Hotel (Garni); single room: ca 33 EUR per night; double room: ca 40 EUR per night (two persons) – the stated prices are valid from 1 January, 2012.

PUBLICATION

All papers will be considered for publication in refereed conference proceedings that will be launched in 2013.

On behalf of the conference organizing committee, with kind regards, Irena Radová and Marie Okáčová Conference Coordinators

Department of Classical Studies
Faculty of Arts, Masaryk University
Arna Nováka 1
602 00 Brno
Czech Republic
Tel.: 00420 549 49 3850
Fax : 00420 549 49 37 41
website: http://www.phil.muni.cz/wuks/

CFP: Greek Myths on the Map (Bristol July 2013)

18 Wednesday Apr 2012

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

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call for papers, conference, myth

Greek Myths on the Map
The Sixth Bristol Myth Conference
31st July – 2nd August, 2013

Greek myths were inextricably connected to the physical
environments in which they were set. This connection is
strikingly evident in the use of myths to explain and
communicate the significance of physical and human geography.
Polybius boldly asserts that “in the present day, now that all
places have become accessible by land or sea, it is no longer
appropriate to use poets and writers of myth as witnesses of the
unknown” (4.40.2). Yet mythology was never entirely banished:
myths were incorporated into geographical descriptions
throughout antiquity and across a broad spectrum of genres,
even as activities such as exploration, conquest and scientific
endeavour altered how the world was understood and perceived.
This conference will examine the various practical and
conceptual roles Greek mythology played in attempts to
describe, represent and explain the physical and human
geography of the ancient world.

We invite proposals for papers on topics related to this theme.
Questions that papers might address include: What motivates
writers to incorporate mythical narratives into geographical
descriptions? What can myths communicate about the
environment that purely geographical description cannot? Do
diverse and changing perceptions of the physical world affect the
ways in which stories about the mythological past are told? How
do mythical geographies relate to physical and conceptual
geographies? In what ways do political, religious or social forces
impact on the interplay between mythical and geographical
thought?

Please send abstracts (c. 250 words) for proposed 25-minute
papers to clasmyth-conference@bristol.ac.uk by Monday, 17th
September, 2012. Informal enquiries may be addressed to the
conference organizers, Jessica Priestley and Greta Hawes, at the same
address.

Landscape and Treachery: Hannibal and Romans and Literary Representations of Italian Landscape. Or, on Abstracts.

13 Friday Apr 2012

Posted by scot mcphee in Latin Classics, Personal, Roman history

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abstracts, Camillus, conference, Epode 16, Flaminius, Hannibal, Horace, Italy, Lake Trasimene, landscape, Latin historiography, Livy, Rome, Second Punic War, triumph

My current research can be summarised by the conference paper abstract, that I’ve submitted for AMPHORAE 2012, the annual Australian/NZ Classics postgraduate conference (The ‘Annual Meeting of Postgraduates in Hellenic Or Roman Antiquities and Egyptology’ to expand the acronym, which was originally started by postgrads here at my own institution, and now travels the Antipodean world of Classics.).

Landscape and Treachery: Hannibal and Romans and Literary Representations of Italian Landscape.

This paper deals with the interesting ways in which Latin writers have sought to represent the landscape of Italy during the course of Hannibal’s campaign of 218-6 B.C. in Italy. The battle of Lake Trasimene was a key battle in a dreadful series of Roman defeats by the Carthaginian invader, leading up to the complete rout of the Romans and the absolute devastation of their army at Cannae. This paper examines literary representations of the landscape during the war in Italy, particularly the battle of Trasimene with its rich tapestry of omens, prodigies, weather, landscape, and even a devastating earthquake mid-battle. First it seeks to understand the processes by which these representations could mediate Roman and Italian identity. Second, the paper seeks to determine in what manner these representations remained constant or underwent change in the period since the Second Punic War and the periods in which the literatary artefacts were constructed. Third and finally, it asks in what way these representations of landscape were connected to representations of the personality of Hannibal, who after all, had to first conquer the high mountains of the Alps long before he could defeat the armies of the Romans.

Last year’s conference paper, that I gave at AMPHORAE 2011, was on a link I found between Horace Epode 16 and Livy 5.51-4. It’s about the rhetorical and physical connections between literature and city (a not entirely original topic, I must admit). This abstract is for a slightly later and better version of the paper, which I hope (as all postgraduates do) to turn into paper for a journal submission shortly:

Horace, Livy and the Ruin of Rome: Epode 16 and Ab Urbe Condita 5.51-4.

At the end of book 5 of Livy’s Ab Urbe Condita, the Roman assembly argued over whether they should leave their destroyed city and found a new one. To counter this sentiment, the historian put an eloquent speech into the mouth of the scrupulous hero Camillus defending the sacred site of Rome from abandonment. In complete contrast, the poet Horace in Epode 16 writes of a Rome destroying itself. He urges, as if in an address to a species of political assembly, that the citizen body ought to do the manly thing and leave Rome, deserting it for a mythical island utopia with solemn oaths that forever prevent return. Clearly in the first century B.C. the city is a contested site, not just in political and military terms, but as a rhetorical space as well.

These two remarkable passages are at first glance diametrically opposed: the historian who writes of Rome as an idealised sacred space, which needs continuation, versus the poet who wants to relinquish the city for an idealised sacred island paradise. But are these two passages so hopelessly in opposition that there is no possibility of reading them together in combination? Or are there concordances, even by way of contrast, that can be discerned between them? What, if anything, can these two passages tell us about Roman conceptions of the city in this time of transition from republic to empire? This paper will examine these respective representations of the Roman city, its growing imperial power, and the idealised body of citizens that each claims to represent.

When I look at that, what I don’t see is my key point, that being the way that Horace frames his poem as an address to a species of Roman assembly (see Fraenkel 1957 who is still the best account of this). Although it’s not a real, identifiable, form of actual assembly, it none-the-less distinguishes that in at least some respect Horace was framing his ‘poetic’ proposal as a form of utopian political discourse. And through that, the connection to Livy’s version of Camillus’ speech.

In 2010, I gave a paper about Livy 5.36-49, which then became a chapter in my Master’s dissertation. This abstract at least gives a better sense of what’s in the paper:

The Reversal of Triumph and the Space of Spectacular Representation in Livy 5.36-49

The sack of Rome by the Gauls in 390 B.C. was one of the lowest of low points in Roman history. The boundaries were reversed; Romans acted as though they were Gauls, and Gauls become conquerors of Romans. The Romans are seen here to be brought to this disaster by their greed over the disposition of the spoils of Veii which leads them to impietas and military defeat. Building on Luce’s ideas about the ‘reversals’ in this section of Livy’s text (Luce 1971), this paper seeks to read the sack of Rome as a reversal (or inversion) of the Roman triumph. In doing so it examines the ways in which Livy writes the city as a stage for a spectacle which unfolds before the eyes of the Roman spectators barricaded in that most sanctified of Roman places, the Capitol. Drawing on recent work on the triumph (e.g Beard 2007), it inspects the simulacra of the ex-consuls in their triumphal finery confronting the awestruck Gauls, just as a first century Roman might be awestruck with the strange sight of a captured barbarian being forced to act out his capture on a float in the triumph.

Looking back on these two older abstracts and comparing it to my current one I can see a definite improvement in my ability to write them!

CFP: AMPHORAE 2012 ‘Continuity and Change: Identity in the Ancient World’

30 Friday Mar 2012

Posted by scot mcphee in Ancient Religion, Greek Classics, Greek history, Latin Classics, Roman history

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AMPHORAE, call for papers, conference

AMPHORAE 2012
‘Continuity and Change: Identity in the Ancient World’

Wednesday, 11 July-Friday, 13 July, 2012
University of Auckland New Zealand

Abstract submissions are invited for the second Annual Meeting of Postgraduates in Hellenic Or Roman Antiquities and Egyptology (AMPHORAE), to be held at the University of Auckland, New Zealand, from Wednesday, 11 July until Friday, 13 July, 2012. This conference has run successfully for the last five years as AMPHORA I, II, III, IV; and in 2011 as AMPHORAE V. AMPHORAE is a conference designed for Postgraduate and Honours students from Australia and New Zealand to interact and share their current work among peers in a friendly and stimulating environment. We also invite graduate students worldwide to submit an abstract.

The theme of this year’s conference, “Continuity and Change: Identity in the Ancient World”, is intended to accommodate research from (but not limited to) all of the fields of Classical Philology, Classical Art and Literature, Ancient History, Archaeology, Late Antique Studies, and all other areas of Ancient World Studies. Abstracts addressing any interpretation of the topic are welcome.

Abstract submissions of 200-300 words for papers of 20 minutes duration are requested. Please send your submissions and a brief biography by Friday, 1 June to amphoraevi@gmail.com. If you would like to attend the conference, but will not be presenting a paper, please inform us of your attendance, as well as any dietary requirements, by Monday, June 11.

Conference registration is free but there will be a fee to attend the conference dinner on the Friday evening. If you are interested in attending the dinner, more details will be available shortly on our website. Small bursaries will also be available (upon application) for students who will be travelling from Australia.

For more information contact AMPHORAE VI at amphoraevi@gmail.com

Brought to you by the Australasian Society for Classical Studies (http://www.ascs.org.au/) and the Department of Classical Studies and Ancient History, University of Auckland, New Zealand.

CFP: Olympic Athletes: Ancient and Modern

08 Thursday Mar 2012

Posted by scot mcphee in 20th century history, 21st century history, Ancient Religion, Greek Classics, Greek history, Post-classical history, Reception

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call for papers, conference, olympics, sport

School of History, Philosophy, Religion and Classics
University of Queensland, Australia

A Conference on Olympic Athletes: Ancient and Modern
Date: (Friday-Sunday) 6-8 July 2012
Place: University of Queensland, St. Lucia, QLD. Australia. 4072.

Call for Papers

Papers are invited for a conference on ‘Olympic Athletes: Ancient and Modern’, which will be held at the University of Queensland, St. Lucia, Brisbane, Australia, from 6-8 July 2012.

The theme can be interpreted fairly broadly, but there is a particular desire to assemble papers which analyse the Olympic experience of athletes from the ancient and the modern games. What was / is special about Olympic competition and Olympic athletes? Who were / are the great Olympic athletes? Why?

All speaking slots will be 30 minutes in duration (20 for paper, 10 for questions). Please send offers of papers, plus a 100-word abstract, to the organizers by Friday 1 June 2012.

Further details will be available soon at http://www.uq.edu.au/hprc. In the meantime, anyone who would like to offer a paper or attend the conference should contact Tom Stevenson (t.stevenson@uq.edu.au) for the organizers.

CFP: Modelling Space and Time in the Humanities

08 Thursday Mar 2012

Posted by scot mcphee in Archaeology, Classical history, Digital Classics, History, Humanties, Literature, Medieval history, Post-classical history, Renaissance history, Science & Tech, Software & Tools

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call for papers, conference, digital humanities, myth, space, time

From the both the Digital Humanities and the Digital Classicists mailing lists;

1st Call for Papers

Second Workshop of the NeDiMAH Space and Time Working Group:
Here and There, Then and Now – Modelling Space and Time in the Humanities

A Satellite Workshop of Digital Humanities 2012, Hamburg, Germany.
Tuesday 17th July

Spatio-temporal concepts are so ubiquitous that it is easy for us to
forget that they are essential to everything we do. All cultural
expressions are related to the dimensions of space and time in the
manner of their production and consumption, the nature of their medium
and the way in which they express these concepts themselves. This
workshop seeks to identify innovative practices among the Digital
Humanities community that explore, critique and re-present these
spatial and temporal aspects.

Although space and time are closely related, there are significant
differences between them which may be exploited when theorizing and
researching the Humanities. Among these are the different natures of
their dimensionality (three dimensions vs. one), the seemingly static
nature of space but enforced ‘flow’ of time, and the different methods
we use to make the communicative leap across spatial and temporal
distance. Every medium, whether textual, tactile, illustrative or
audible (or some combination of them), exploits space and time
differently in order to convey its message. The changes required to
express the same concepts in different media (between written and
performed music, for example), are often driven by different
spatio-temporal requirements. Last of all, the impossibility (and
perhaps undesirability) of fully representing a four-dimensional
reality (whether real or fictional) mean that authors and artists must
decide how to collapse this reality into the spatio-temporal
limitations of a chosen medium. The nature of those choices can be as
interesting as the expression itself.

We invite those working with digital tools and techniques that manage,
analyse and exploit spatial and temporal concepts in the Humanities to
present a position paper at this workshop. Position papers should
discuss a generalized theme related to use of spatio-temporal methods
in the Digital Humanities with specific reference to one or more
concrete applications or examples. Position papers will be separated
into multiple panel sessions according to emergent themes. Those not
wishing to present a paper are warmly encouraged to attend the
workshop and take part in the extended discussion which will follow
the presentations. This workshop is part of the ESF-funded NEDIMAH
Network and organised by its Working Group on Space and Time (STWG).

Papers are invited on any topic that furthers these objectives. Topics
could be, but are not limited to:

  • Spatial History
  • Temporal analysis of ephemera
  • Online contextualization of resources with data from related eras or regions
  • Augmented reality applications
  • Non-linear representations of space and time
  • Digital analyses of fictional or mythical spaces or eras
  • Modelling cultural dynamics and diffusion
  • Comparisons between narrative, observer and ‘real’ times

Papers that are accepted will have their workshop fees covered.
Separate NeDiMAH STWG workshops cover GIS, Webmapping and ontological
approaches to representing space and time and the Humanities. While
these may naturally be an aspect of accepted submissions they should
therefore not form the main focus of the paper. Papers should be
submitted before 21st March 2012. We will endeavour to decide on the
final workshop programme by the end of March.

Please address submissions and queries to: l.isaksen@soton.ac.uk

STWG WG Committee are:
Daniel Alves,
Jens Andresen,
Shawn Day,
Øyvind Eide,
Leif Isaksen,
Eetu Mäkelä,
Eero Hyvönen.

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