Postgraduate Interdisciplinary Workshop “Into new frames. De-contextualisation and Transmediality in
The workshop aims at exploring the phenomenon of de- and re-contextualisation of Ancient Greek works into new literary, cultural and social contexts. Especially in the archaic and classical period the genres of Ancient Greek literature were attached to one specific occasion and cultural context, but later re-framing and re-performance into new contexts were not rare. Particularly interesting is also the translation of contents into different media and new spatial settings, from text to image, or vice versa.
FECHA/ DATE/DATA: 28-29/09/2016
LUGAR/LOCATION/LUOGO: Exzellenzcluster Topoi, Berlin, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin (Berlin, Germany)
ORGANIZADOR/ORGANIZER/ORGANIZZATORE: Nina Ogrowsky
INFO: ninaogrowsky@googlemail.com
INSCRIPCIÓN/REGISTRATION/REGISTRAZIONE:
PROGRAMA/PROGRAM/PROGRAMMA:
29.9.2016 14:30 - 15:00 Registration 15:00 - 15:15 Introduction 15:15 - 16:30 Keynote (title tba) Peter Bing – Department of Classics, Emory University, USA 16:30 - 16:55 Mosaics of Quotations? The Poetics of Multiple Intertextualities in Imperial Doxographical Texts Marco Blumhofer – Institut für Klassische Philologie, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin 16:55 - 17:20 Homeric Quotations in Herodotus: The Case of Helen's Logos Fabrizio Gaetano – Dipartimento di Scienze Storiche, Geografiche e dell'Antichità, Università di Padova, Italy 17:20 - 17:45 coffee break 17:45 - 18:10 Quotations as Authorising Speech: Poetry and Oracles in Athenian Oratory Rebecca Van Hove – Department of Classics, King's College London, United Kingdom 18:10 - 18:35 Pedantry and Program. Montaigne’s Quotations of Plutarch Simon Godart – Friedrich-Schlegel-Graduiertenschule, Freie Universität Berlin 18:35 - 19:30 round table discussion 20:00 - 21:30 dinner 30.9.2016 09:00 - 09:25 Pausanias 5.17-19.10 and Palatine Anthology Book 3: Literary Accounts of Inscriptional Epigrams and Deictic Strategies of De- and Re-Contextualisation Federica Scicolone – Department of Classics, King's College London, United Kingdom 09:25 - 09:50 Disembodied voices: communication in Greek dedicatory epigrams Flavia Licciardello – Institut für Klassische Philologie, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin 09:50 - 10:20 coffee break 10:20 - 10:45 The Re-contextualisation of Lament in the Sepulchral Epigrams Ascribed to Erinna Barnaby Chesterton – Department of Classics and Ancient History, Durham University, United Kingdom 10:45 - 11:10 Re-contextualisation of Medeas Monologue in Early Christian literature Geeske Brinkmann – Seminar für Neues Testament, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin 11:10 - 12:10 round table discussion 12:10 - 13:00 lunch 13:00 - 13:25 Intermedial Narrative: Ergänzungsspiel Redoubled in Simias’ Egg Valeria Pace – Faculty of Classics, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom 13:25 - 13:50 What is comedy? Transformations of texts and images in comedy-related vase-paintings from the 4th century BC Elisabeth Günther – Institut für Klassische Archäologie, Freie Universität Berlin 13:50 - 14:20 coffee break 14:25 - 14:50 World – vision – word? The ‚transferential’ understanding of ‚ekphrasis’, its limits, and a narratological alternative Jakob Lenz – Seminar für Klassische Philologie, Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg 14:50 - 15:50 round table discussion / final discussion