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DTSTART:20260329T040000
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UID:MEC-46771d1f432b42343f56f791422a4991@aristotleforum.auth.gr
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Athens:20260521T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Athens:20260523T220000
DTSTAMP:20260312T101823Z
CREATED:20260312
LAST-MODIFIED:20260312
PRIORITY:5
SEQUENCE:3
TRANSP:OPAQUE
SUMMARY:Mapping the History of Greek Literary History
DESCRIPTION:The conference explores the (early) history of literary histories of Classical Greek\nliterature, across different periods and geographical locations.\nIrene de Jong starts the conference off by reflecting on the importance of (Greek)\nliterary history as an object of scholarly research. The rest of Panel 1 focuses on\nGreek literary history in antiquity itself: James Porter on the Cynics as a beginning\nwithout a known beginning and Stavros Tsitsiridis on the absence of such literary\nhistory in ancient Greece; Roberto Nicolai on the ancient Greek versus Roman\nliterary historical contribution.\nFollowing a loose chronological order, in Panel 2 Casper de Jonge explores how\nDionysius of Halicarnassus produced Greek literary history for an Augustan Roman\naudience, while Carlotta Santini presents on its evolution through Friedrich Nietzche.\nAlso along the lines of German reception, in Panel 3 Margalit Finkelberg and\nConstanze Güthenke consider 19 th -century Germany’s literary-historical output\nthrough the lens of a historical metanarrative and the first German literary histories\nrespectively.\nSubsequent panels enter more contemporary territory and are geographically\nstructured. In Panel 4, Richard Hunter looks back on the forty-year-old Cambridge\nHistory of Classical Literature, while Ioanna Karamanou and Ioannis Konstantakos\nconcentrate on modern Greek outputs, the former on the agenda of the first literary\nhistories produced in the modern Greek state and the latter on their 20 th -century\ncounterparts.\nPanel 5 divides its interest between Italy and France: Greek literary histories issued\nin Italy are studied by Carlo Franco (with an emphasis on the 19 th century) and\nMaurizio Sonnino (construing Gennaro Perrotta’s work as a balance of opposites);\ntheir French-produced equivalents are the object of Laurent Pernot’s talk.\nTwo ethnic traditions as producers of Greek literary histories dominate Panel 6 as\nwell: the beginnings of Russian outputs are traced by Judith Kalb and 19 th -century\nHispanic textbooks (from Braulio Foz to Otfried Müller) by Francisco García-Jurado.\nLastly, Panel 7 is situated in the Slavic world. Poland is the object of Gościwit\nMalinowski (specifically the earliest such work conducted in the country) and Maciej\nJunkiert (relevant monographs by Groddeck, Węclewski, Sinko). Olesia Lazer-Pankiv\nand Oleksandr Levko end the conference with a presentation on the trends of Greek\nliterary histories issued in 19 th – and 20 th -century Ukr\n
URL:https://aristotleforum.auth.gr/events/mapping-the-history-of-greek-literary-history/
ORGANIZER;CN=Department of Classics, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki:MAILTO:info@lit.auth.gr
CATEGORIES:Events
LOCATION:September 3rd Avenue, University Campus, Thessaloniki 546 36
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