Forms of Forgetting in Antiquity - 14/07/2018, Munich (Germany)
FECHA/DATE/DATA: 14/07/2018
LUGAR/LOCATION/LUOGO: LMU Munich (Munich, Germany)
ORGANIZADOR/ORGANIZER/ORGANIZZATORE: Verena Schulz
INFO: Verena.Schulz@klassphil.uni-muenchen.de
INSCRIPCIÓN/REGISTRATION/REGISTRAZIONE:
PROGRAMA/PROGRAM/PROGRAMMA:
9.00 Introduction Session 1: Concepts of Forgetting (Chair: Verena Schulz) 9.15: Verena Schulz (Classical Philology, Munich): “Towards a Typology of Forms of Forgetting” 9.35: Statements: Martin Hose (Greek Philology, Munich), Dennis Pausch (Latin Philology, Dresden), Dietmar Till (General Rhetoric, Tübingen) 10.05: Discussion 10.25: Oliver Dimbath (Sociology, Koblenz): “Vergesslichkeit – Vergessenwollen – Vergessenmachen. Überlegungen zu einem Konzept sozialen Vergessens” 11.00-11.30: Coffee break Session 2: Strategies of Forgetting (Chair: Martin Hose) 11.30: Stefan Schorn (Ancient History, Leuven): “Strategies of Forgetting, or Remembering the Wrong Things, in Greek Historiography: the Example of ‘Die Fragmente der Griechischen Historiker’” 12.05: Lene Rubinstein (Classics, London: Royal Holloway): “Renaming Trauma. The Art of Forgetting in the Classical and Hellenistic Greek World” 12.40-13.45: Lunch break Session 3: Contexts of Forgetting (Chair: Dennis Pausch) 13.45: Sebastian Eicher (Sinology, Munich): “Forgotten Controversies: Some Thoughts on the Influence of Dynastic Historiography” 14.20: Anna Anguissola (Classical Archaeology, Pisa): “The Materiality of Forgetting. Pliny the Elder on Restoration” 14.55: Ralph Birk (Egyptology, Munich): “Buried and Forgotten? Statues in Cachette(s) in Ptolemaic Thebes” 15.30-16.00: Coffee break Session 4: Forgetting and the Negotiation of Memory (Chair: Dietmar Till) 16.00: Mary Frazer (Ancient Near Eastern History, Munich): “Making the Cut: Copying Earlier Royal Correspondence in the Neo-Assyrian Empire (c. 900-600 BCE)” 16.35: Trine Arlund Hass (Classical Philology, Aarhus): “Dealing with the Memory of Caesar: 16th Century Neo-Latin Receptions of Virgil’s Eclogue 5” 17.10: Concluding remarks