This workshop explores conceptions, representations, and practices of gender from antiquity to the contemporary era of artificial intelligence. Taking a long historical and theoretical view, the workshop invites participants to reflect on how ancient frameworks of gender have been constructed, transmitted, challenged, and reconfigured across time—and how they continue to inform, explicitly or implicitly, modern philosophical, social, legal, and technological discourses.
By bringing together Classical Philology, Ancient to Modern History, Philosophy, and the Social Sciences (including Anthropology, Psychology, and Constitutional Law), the workshop aims to foster interdisciplinary dialogue on gender as a category of analysis, experience, and power. Particular attention will be given to questions of continuity and rupture: what survives from ancient thought, what is transformed, and what is radically new in the age of algorithmic reasoning and AI-mediated social structures.
We welcome papers that engage with gender from antiquity to the present, including—but not limited to—the following themes:
- Gender in ancient literary, philosophical, historical, and legal texts
- Ancient theories of sex, body, and difference
- Gender, normativity, and social order in antiquity
- Reception of ancient gender concepts in later philosophical, political, or legal thought
- Gender, authority, and expertise from classical traditions to modern institutions
- Feminist, queer, or intersectional readings of ancient sources
- Gender in constitutional, psychological, sociological, or anthropological perspectives
- Gender, agency, and representation in digital culture and AI
- Continuities and discontinuities between ancient epistemologies and AI-driven models of the human
The workshop is designed as an intensive, discussion-oriented event and will take place as a satellite session of the conference Aristotle Innovation Forum: From Aristotle to AI.
See more: AIF Gender Symposium Agenda
Symposium Poster
