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Fragments, Holes, and Wholes: Reconstructing the Ancient World in Theory and Practice

Warsaw, Poland, 1214 June 2014

PROGRAMME

Day 1 (Thursday, 12 June)


8:45-9:00 9:00-9:30 Opening ceremony OPENING LECTURE Joshua Katz (Princeton University): Reconstructing the pre-ancient world in theory and practice KEYNOTE LECTURE Annette Harder (University of Groningen): From pieces to pictures Session 1: Christophe Cusset (ENS Lyon), Antje Kolde (Universit de Genve): Hellenistic Fragments dun discours amoureux feminin: incoherence du discours, world in pieces coherence du texte? A propos du Fragmentum Grenfellianum (P. Dryton 50) Marquis Berrey (University of Iowa): Reconstructing Andreas of Carystus surgical machine tea and coffee Costas Panayotakis (University of Glasgow): Editing fragments of Roman Republican drama transmitted indirectly RESPONDENT: Maria Jennifer Falcone (Universit Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Session 2: Milano) Romes Martin Stckinger (Universitt Heidelberg): fragmentary Fragments, wholes, and (missing) ends: the Carmina Einsidlensia and the tales question of bucolic closure David Petrain (Vanderbilt University): Sighting Stesichorus on the Tabulae Iliacae lunch KEYNOTE LECTURE Wolfgang Kaiser (Albert-Ludwigs-Universitt Freiburg): Reconstructing the whole: Latin and Greek in Justinians compilation Paulina wicicka (Jagiellonian University): Session 3: Lacunae in Roman law: a reconstruction of understanding of the concept of Reconstructing gaps in the law in relation to practical discourse of Roman jurists on the law basis of the juridical and extra-juridical sources Jennifer Hilder (University of Glasgow): Making wholes: using exemplary fragments in the Rhetorica ad Herennium tea and coffee Han Baltussen (University of Adelaide): Slim pickings and Russian dolls? Presocratic fragments in Peripatetic sources after Aristotle Dorota Dutsch (University of California Santa Barbara): Session 4: Fragments as parts: Aristotle, the Pythagorean table, and reception theory Pieces of RESPONDENT: Mateusz Stryski (Adam Mickiewicz University in Pozna) philosophy Joanna Komorowska (Cardinal Stefan Wyszyski University in Warsaw): Shattered mirror: mutilation, fragmentation, and indirect transmission in the investigation of ancient philosophical thought

9:30-10:00

10:00-11:00

11:30-13:00

14:00-14:30

14:30-15:30

16:00-17:30

Day 2 (Friday, 13 June)


9:30-10:00 KEYNOTE LECTURE Paul Zanker (Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa): TBA Athanasia Kyriakou (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki): Session 1: Fragmented material evidence contributing to a possibility of the whole: the Material case study of a funerary monument in 4th c. BC Macedonia fragments Victor M. Martnez (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill): Rethinking the fragmentary (w)hole in archaeology: a microscopic paradigm for understanding macroscopic problems POSTER EXHIBITION: Paulina Szulist (University of Warsaw): tea and coffee The textiles in ancient architecture a study of traces Stefan Schorn (Katholieke Universiteit Leuven): Die Fragmente der Griechischen Historiker IV: Stand der Dinge, Probleme, Session 2: Perspektiven Collaborative Henriette van der Blom (University of Glasgow): projects Fragments of oratory approaching Katherine McDonald (University of Cambridge): fragments Reconstructing language contact from a fragmentary corpus: case studies from Southern Italy lunch KEYNOTE LECTURE Hans-Joachim Gehrke (Albert-Ludwigs-Universitt Freiburg): Fragmentary evidence and the whole of history Session 3: Ilaria Andolfi (Universit di Roma La Sapienza): In the Fragments and holes in Hecataeus Genealogiae footsteps of Mller and Marcin Kurpios (University of Wrocaw): Jacoby 1 Polybius account of Phylarchus Historiae and the idea of so-called tragic history: the practice of reconstructing a fragmentary historian RESPONDENT: Brian Sheridan (National University of Ireland, Maynooth) POSTER EXHIBITION: Veronica Bucciantini (Universit degli Studi di Firenze / Albert-Ludwigs-Universitt Freiburg): Felix Jacoby und Friedrich Gisinger: die Debatte ber tea and coffee die Struktur der fnfte Teil der Fragmente der griechischen Historiker in den unverffentlichten Briefen in Nachla Gisinger der Bayerischen Staatsbibliothek in Mnchen Johannes Engels (Universitt zu Kln): The problematic Anhnge in F. Jacobys Die Fragmente der griechischen Historiker Egidia Occhipinti (independent scholar): Session 4: Theopompus Philippica and Plutarchs Lives of Agesilaus and Lyander: In the moralism and characterisation footsteps of RESPONDENT: Matteo Zaccarini (Universit di Bologna) Mller and Jacoby 2 Gociwit Malinowski (University of Wrocaw): Agatharchides of Cnidus, an eminent historian and a victim of Mllers FHG and Jacobys FGrH RESPONDENT: Brian Sheridan (National University of Ireland, Maynooth)

10:00-11:00

11:30-13:00

14:00-14:30

14:30-15:30

16:00-17:30

Day 3 (Saturday, 14 June)


9:30-11:00 Renate Schlesier (Freie Universitt Berlin): How to make fragments: Maximus Tyrius Sappho Ettore Cingano (Universit Ca Foscari Venezia): Further thoughts on the placing and nature of (some) Greek epic and lyric fragments RESPONDENT: Maria G. Xanthou (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki / Open University of Cyprus) Lech Trzcionkowski (independent scholar): Collecting dismembered poet: the interplay between the whole and fragments in the reconstruction of Orphism tea and coffee Gertjan Verhasselt (Katholieke Universiteit Leuven): The fragments of the Peripatetic Dicaearchus: problems of reconstruction Eran Almagor (Ben Gurion University of the Negev): Facts, fragments and fiction: Plutarchs Life of Solon RESPONDENT: Alexandra Trachsel (Universitt Hamburg) Ulrike Kenens (Katholieke Universiteit Leuven): The degenerative transmission of subliterary writings: the case of Apollodorus Library RESPONDENT: Alexandra Trachsel (Universitt Hamburg) lunch KEYNOTE LECTURE Dirk Obbink (University of Oxford): Sailing to Naukratis: Sappho on her brothers Enrico Emanuele Prodi (University of Oxford): Commenting fragments: P.Oxy. 2636 RESPONDENT: Marco Perale (University of Liverpool / University of Oxford) Giuseppe Ucciardello (Universit degli Studi di Messina): Reconstructing Greek lyric poetry from papyrus fragments: the case of P.Oxy. 2624 (Simonides? Pindar?) RESPONDENT: Marco Perale (University of Liverpool / University of Oxford) tea and coffee Francesco Paolo Bianchi (Albert-Ludwigs-Universitt Freiburg): The hypothesis to Cratinus Dionysalexandros after 110 years RESPONDENT: Chiara Meccariello (Universitt Wien) Anna Novokhatko (Albert-Ludwigs-Universitt Freiburg): The comedy Proagon (Lenaea, 422 BC) RESPONDENT: Elisabetta Miccolis (Albert-Ludwigs-Universitt Freiburg) S. Douglas Olson (Heidelberger Akademie der Wissenschaften / AlbertLudwigs-Universitt Freiburg / University of Minnesota): 50 short fragments of the comic poet Eupolis Closing remarks by Jerzy Danielewicz Fragments, Holes, and Wholes: Reconstructing the Ancient World in Theory and Practice
Conference organized by the Polish Academy of Sciences Commitee on Ancient Culture, the Institute of Classical Studies of the University of Warsaw, the Institute of Archaeology of the University of Warsaw, and the Institute of Classical Studies of Adam Mickiewicz University in Pozna

Session 1: Greek literature in pieces 1

11:30-13:00

Session 2: Greek literature in pieces 2

14:00-14:30

14:30-15:30

Session 3: Papyrus fragments

16:00-17:30

Session 4: Commenting on Kassel and Austin

17:30-17:45

http://www.knoka.pan.pl/index.php/konferencje

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