Boston Area Classics Calendar
January 17, 2011
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Friday of the following week.
PLEASE NOTE:
* = new entry
** = alteration or addition to a former entry
*Thurs., Feb. 3
4:30 p.m. – 6 p.m.
AMHERST COLLEGE, Fayerweather 115 (Pruyne Lecture Hall), Amherst, MA 01002
Barbara A. Barletta (University of Florida)
“The Temple of Athena at Sounion”
Archaeological Institute of America Lecture
http://www.umass.edu/aia/lectures.html
Sponsored by the AIA and the Department of Classics; free and open to the public
For directions see
https://www.amherst.edu/map/camp_map-1-1.html
Thurs., Feb. 17
4 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
HARVARD UNIVERSITY, Barker 133, 12 Quincy Street, Cambridge, MA 02138
Constanze Güthenke (Princeton University)
"The Language of Classical Scholarship: Philology, Empathy, and
Wilamowitz' Plato"
Presented by The Classical Traditions Seminar
*Sat., Feb. 26
8:30 a.m. – 5 p.m.
BROWN UNIVERSITY, Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient
World, 60 George Street Providence, RI 02912
Brown University symposium
BIG: Monumentality and Meaning in the Ancient World--A
Cross-Disciplinary Symposium
Not everything big is a monument, and not all monuments are big. This
cross-disciplinary symposium seeks to address monumentality and
meaning in the ancient world, with notable scholars in the fields of
anthropology, archaeology, classics, and art history. We hope to
explore the balance between cross-cultural monumentality and
historically particular memory, and the relation between size and
commemoration in past monumental thinking. See the program here:
http://proteus.brown.edu/big2011/8475
Mon., Mar. 7
5 p.m. – 7 p.m.
Harvard University, Barker Center, Rm. 133, 12 Quincy St., Cambridge, MA
Jonas Grethlein (Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg)
Title: TBA
*Thurs. and Fri., March 18 and 19
BROWN UNIVERSITY, The Joukowksy Institute for Archaeology and the
Ancient World, 60 George Street, Providence RI 02912
Brown University conference
The Archaeology of Italy: the State of the Field 2011
Corinna Riva (University College London)
This conference will begin on Friday evening with a keynote address,
and continue through Saturday with panel discussions of the current
state of Italianate archaeology.
contact: Jeffrey Becker (Jeffrey_Becker(a)Brown.edu); 401-863-2008
Sat., Mar. 26
9 a.m. – 4 p.m.
BOSTON UNIVERSITY, Barristers Hall (School of Law, 765 Commonwealth
Avenue), Boston, MA 02215
Boston Univ. Grad. Conference
Keynote speaker: Ellen Greene (University of Oklahoma)
3rd Annual Boston University Department of Classics Graduate Conference
"Quis spectatores spectabit?: Voyeurism and Spectatorship in Antiquity"
Funded by the Department of Classical Studies and the Boston
University Humanities Foundation. The deadline for submission of
abstracts will be December 21, 2010. Time subjected to change. For
more information, please email bugradconference(a)gmail.com.
Mon., Tues., Thurs., and Fri., April 11, 12, 14, and 15 at 5 p.m.
HARVARD UNIVERSITY, Cambridge, MA 02138
Jackson Lectures
Brad Inwood (University of Toronto)
Titles and location TBA
*Fri., Apr. 29
4 p.m. – 7 p.m.
BOSTON UNIVERSITY, Faculty Dining Room, 775 Commonwealth Ave., 5th floor 02215
Boston University Roman Studies Conference: Presenting the Past
Presentations:
Andrew Feldherr (Princeton University)
"Vergil's Salian Fugue: Excavating Roman Epic in Evander's Rome"
Ann Vasaly (Boston University)
"The 'Archaeology' of Early Rome: Livy and his Predecessors"
Lisa Mignone, Brown University
"Land Confiscations in 456 BCE? Rethinking the Lex Icilia,"
Dinner will follow the conference.
Registration: Stacy Fox, sfox(a)bu.edu
Information: Tel.: 617-353-2426
Friday, April 29, 6 p.m.
and
Sat., Apr. 30, 8:30 a.m. – 6:30 p.m.
HARVARD UNIVERSITY, Harvard Art Museums, 32 Quincy Street, Cambridge, MA 02138
Ilse and Leo Mildenberg Memorial Symposium
Sculpture and Coins: Margarete Bieber as Scholar and Collector
In 2005 the Harvard Art Museums acquired the coin collection of the
German archaeologist and art historian Margarete Bieber (1879-1978).
Her work on Hellenistic and Roman sculpture and on the Roman Theater
remains fundamental. This symposium around her coin collection will
bring together art historians, historians and numismatists of
different backgrounds and interests from the US and from Europe. It
will focus on the interrelation of coins and sculpture with an
emphasis on the development of Greek portraits and portraits of the
Roman empresses, as well as on designs personifications. Organized by
Carmen Arnold-Biucchi, Damarete Curator of Ancient Coins in the Asian
and Mediterranean Division.
Speakers include Annetta Alexandridis (Cornell University), Carmen
Arnold-Biucchi (Harvard Art Museums), Martin Beckman (University of
Western Ontario), Larissa Bonfante (Emerita, New York University),
Barbara Borg (University of Exeter), Karsten Dahmen (Staatliche Museen
zu Berlin), Peter F. Mittag (University of Cologne), Matthias Recke
(Justus-Liebig-Universität Giessen), and William E. Metcalf (Yale
University).
*Mon., May 2
4:15 p.m. – 5:45 p.m.
HARVARD UNIVERSITY, Barker Center Room 133, Cambridge, MA 02138
Michael McCormick (Harvard University, Francis Goelet Professor of
Medieval History)
“Digital Atlas”
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