updated 27 December 2001
President Kenneth J. Reckford
Immediate Past President Julia Haig Gaisser
President-Elect Michael Gagarin
Executive Director Adam D. Blistein
Financial Trustees Michael C. J. Putnam
Matthew S. Santirocco
Education Kenneth F. Kitchell, Jr.
Outreach Jennifer T. Roberts
Professional Matters Barbara F. McManus
Program William H. Race
Publications Jeffrey Rusten
Research Deborah Boedeker
Nancy Felson Richard Saller
Mary-Kay Gamel David Sansone
Amy Richlin David Sider
William H. Race (Chair) Mark Griffith
Keith Bradley Sarah Iles Johnston
Susanna Morton Braund
Coordinator, Meetings, Programs, Minna Canton
Duchovnay
and Administration
Coordinator, Membership and Publications Renie Plonski
Officers and Directors 1
Floor Plans of Philadelphia Marriott Hotel 4
General Information 6
Special Events 7
Placement Service 9
The 133rd Annual Meeting of the American Philological Association,
in conjunction with the Archaeological Institute of America, will be
held in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania beginning January 3, 2002. The
Annual Meeting will be hosted by the Philadelphia Marriott Hotel,
1201 Market Street, Philadelphia, PA 19107, Telephone (215) 625-2900.
The Convention Registration Desk, the Exhibit Hall, the Placement
Service, AIA and APA paper sessions, committee meetings, receptions,
and special events will be scheduled in the Philadelphia Marriott
Hotel.
Conference Registration
Registration is required for attendance at all sessions and for
admission into the exhibit area. No one will be admitted into the
exhibit area and meeting rooms without the official AIA/APA Annual
Meeting badge. A convention registration area will be set up in
Franklin Hall on Level 4 of the Marriott and will be open during the
following hours:
The on-site registration fee for attendance at all sessions is
as follows:
Members $130.00
Student Members $50.00
Spouse/Guest $50.00
Student Non-Members $90.00
Non-Members $165.00
One-Day $70.00
The spouse/guest category is for a non-professional or non-student
guest accompanying a paid attendee. Only full-time student
members are eligible for the special student rate. One-day
registration is possible for a single day only; individuals wishing
to attend for more than one day must register at the full rate.
Abstracts
Abstracts for APA papers may be ordered on the pre-registration
form or purchased at the Convention Registration Desk. The price of
Abstracts is $10.00. For those who have pre-paid,
Abstracts will be included with pre-registration
materials.
Exhibits
Exhibits will be also be located in Franklin Hall on the fourth floor
of the Philadelphia Marriott Hotel. The exhibit hours are as
follows:
Thursday, January 3, 3:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.
Friday, January 4, 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Saturday, January 5, 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Sunday, January 6, 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon
Your registration badge will provide you with admission to the
Exhibit Hall.
Child Care
Child care will again be offered by KiddieCorp, a licensed,
full-service provider employing screened, experienced, CPR- and/or
First Aid-trained and certified staff. Children will participate in a
customized schedule of creative, educational, age-appropriate
activities. The center will operate from 8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.,
January 4 through 6 at the Philadelphia Marriott Hotel. Children must
be registered for a minimum of three consecutive hours. Due to
generous contributions received from the Philadelphia Marriott
Hotel and the Philadelphia Convention and Visitors Bureau,
rates for child care have been reduced to $5 per hour, per child.
Opening Night Reception
As is traditional when the joint annual meeting takes place in
Philadelphia, AIA and APA will hold the opening reception at the
University of Pennsylvania's Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology.
The reception will be held in the Museum's Chinese Rotunda and Upper
Egyptian galleries from 6:30 p.m. until 8:30 p.m. The Chinese Rotunda
is the majestic setting of the Museum's Chinese collection. Ninety
feet in diameter and soaring ninety feet high, the rotunda is one of
the largest unsupported masonry domes in the United States, housing
one of the finest collections of monumental Chinese art in the
country. In the Upper Egyptian gallery the Museum's finest examples
of Egyptian sculpture are exhibited. The $30.00 ticket price includes
admission to the museum, bus transportation from the Marriott Hotel,
light hors d'oeuvres and one cocktail.
Breakfast for First-Time Registrants
This new event, a complimentary continental breakfast, will give
APA members attending their first annual meeting an opportunity to
meet APA leaders and learn first-hand about the intellectual and
social opportunities available at the annual meeting. It will take
place from 7:30-8:30 a.m.
APh/DCB Web Site Demonstration
From 3:45 to 4:30 p.m., Eric Rebillard Associate Director of
L'Année Philologique (APh) and Dee Clayman, Director of the
Database of Classical Bibliography Project (DCB), will give a
demonstration of the new web site which will combine data from recent
APh volumes with bibliographical entries from older volumes of APh
that have been put in digital form by the DCB. It is anticipated that
subscriptions to this web site will be available in early 2002.
Presidential Panel
President Kenneth Reckford has assembled an outstanding group of
speakers for a panel entitled "To Honor the Translators:" Zeph
Stewart on the Loeb Classical Library, Mary-Kay Gamel on translating
for performance, Glenn W. Most on theories of translation, and David
Ferry on the practice of translation. Peter Burian will serve as
respondent.
Reading of Scenes from Invention of Love
By special arrangement with Samuel French, Inc., the Committee on
Outreach will present a reading of Tom Stoppard's recent play
Invention of Love followed by a discussion of the play. APA
members will take all the roles in the play. This session will be
open to the public, and the Philadelphia audience that made the
play's run here so successful will be encouraged to attend.
Minority Student Scholarship Fund-raising Raffle and Breakfast
The APA's Committee on Scholarships for Minority Students is
again sponsoring a fund-raising breakfast and raffle from 7:15 a.m.
to 8:30 a.m. in the Philadelphia Marriott Hotel. Tickets to this
event cost $35 and include admission to the breakfast and three
chances to win several prizes of books donated by a variety of
academic publishers as well as complimentary registration to the next
Annual Meeting in New Orleans. Additional chances for the raffle (or
chances in lieu of attending the reception) can also be purchased on
the registration form at a cost of $10 for 1 or $25 for 3. You do not
need to be present at the reception to win the raffle.
Open Meeting of the Placement Committee
The Placement Committee invites all interested members to attend
this discussion of the Placement Service from 7:30-8:30 a.m.
Committee members hope that both candidates and representatives of
hiring institutions will offer suggestions for improvements in this
vital service. Complimentary continental breakfast will be served.
Please note that this event takes place in Independence Room
2; a different room was announced in a preliminary flyer.
Roundtable Discussion Session
The APA Board is very grateful to AIA for inviting our members to
participate in the organization of this session which will take place
at midday. Members of both societies will lead separate discussions
at individual tables. Topics will include issues of intellectual and
practical importance to classicists and archaeologists. Sign-up
sheets will be available in the registration area before the session
so that participation at each table can be limited to number that
will encourage useful dialogues. A cash food service will be
available nearby.
APA Plenary Session/Presidential Address
As usual, the plenary session will feature the presentation of
APA's teaching awards and the Goodwin Award of Merit. Kenneth
Reckford's Presidential Address is entitled, "Pueri Ludentes,
Some Aspects of Play and Seriousness in Horace's Epistles."
The Presidential Reception will immediately follow the Presidential
Address. All APA members are welcome to attend.
APA Presidential Reception
The Board of Directors cordially invites all APA members attending
the 133rd Annual Meeting to a reception honoring President Kenneth
Reckford immediately after the Plenary Session and Presidential
Address. Tickets for the APA Presidential Reception will be included
in the registration materials of all APA members. The reception will
be held in the Crystal Tea Room in the historic John Wanamaker
Building across Market Street from the Marriott Hotel.
The Program Committee has accepted a proposal from Alexander Sens
and Kathryn Gutzwiller to discuss the very recent publication of
P.Mil.Vogl. 309 by G. Bastianini, C. Gallazzi, and C. Austin.
This text consists of about one hundred previously unknown epigrams,
apparently all by Posidippus, forming a carefully arranged poetry
book that can be securely dated to the third century B.C. These 600
new verses, unfiltered by the selective lens of Meleager, have the
potential to improve, if not fundamentally alter, our understanding
of epigram as a genre. During the session, Profs. Sens, Gutzwiller,
Peter Bing, and Alan Cameron will make short, informal presentations
followed by questions and general discussion. The session will run
from 7:30 to 9:00 p.m.
Informal Oral Reading Session
The Society for the Oral Reading of Greek and Latin Literature
will hold its annual informal reading session at the Philadelphia
Marriott on from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. This session is an opportunity for
any annual meeting registrant to read aloud a selection of Greek or
Latin literature (maximum 35 lines) before an interested and
sympathetic audience. The session is not a contest but is rather a
friendly exchange of sounds and ideas among those interested in the
effective oral performance of classical literature. If the reader so
desires, listeners will offer constructive comments after the
reading. All readers are asked to bring 30 photocopies of their texts
for distribution. Auditors are cordially welcome.
APA Business Meeting
The Board of Directors invites all APA members to attend the
society's official business meeting on from 8:00 to 9:00 a.m., to
hear a report on the year's activities. Questions and comments from
members are welcome. Complimentary continental breakfast will be
served.
January 3 10:00 a.m. &endash; 9:00 p.m.
January 4 & 5 7:45 a.m. &endash; 5:00 p.m.
January 6 8:00 a.m. &endash; 10:30 a.m.
The on-site registration fee for candidates is $20.00; for
institutions, $200.00. Candidates and institutions must also register
for the Annual Meeting to use the Placement Service facilities at the
Annual Meeting. The Annual Meeting registration fee is separate from
both societal membership dues and the Placement Service registration
fee. Copies of all recent issues of Positions for Classicists and
Archaeologists will be available in the Placement Office for
review by candidates; copies of the 2001-02 Placement Book, including
a supplement of all CV's received after the printing deadline
of the Placement Book, will be available for review by
institutions.
While many institutions will wish to conduct interviews in suites
they have reserved, the Placement Service also has available a
limited number of meeting rooms for interviews. All requests for
these interview rooms must be made through the Placement Service at
the time appointments are requested. Institutions that have already
advertised positions are encouraged to notify all applicants prior to
the Annual Meeting whether they do or do not intend to interview an
individual in Philadelphia. However, the Placement Service should be
permitted to make the actual schedule of interviews to ensure that
candidates do not encounter conflicts either with other interviews or
with paper sessions.
Upon arrival in Philadelphia, pre-registered and non-registered
candidates and institutional representatives should go directly to
the Placement Office in the Room 305-306 either to register for the
Placement Service or to obtain schedules of prearranged interviews.
When the Placement Service has a message for either a candidate or
institution, staff will post an identifying number on a call board.
Participants in the Placement Service are expected to consult this
call board at least once a day during the meeting although in the
majority of cases participants will be able to obtain their complete
schedules when they first arrive in Philadelphia. The Placement
Service reserves the right to extend the interview hours listed in
the Annual Meeting program.
Although the American Philological Association and the Archaeological
Institute of America are only intermediaries in the recruiting
process and do not engage in the actual placement of members, the
Director of the Placement Office is ready to serve both institutional
representatives and candidates in every way practical during the
course of the Annual Meeting. Communications on Placement Service
matters should be sent to Renie Plonski, Placement Service Director,
American Philological Association, 292 Logan Hall, University of
Pennsylvania, 249 S. 36th Street, Philadelphia, PA.
19104-6304. Telephone: (215) 898-4975; Fax: (215) 573-7874.
9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Conference Suite I Meeting of the APA
Nominating Committee
1:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m. Conference Suite II Meeting of the APA Committee on Finance
3:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m. Room 307 Meeting of the Executive Committee of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens
3:30 p.m. - 6:30 p.m. Room 309-310 Meeting of the APA Board of Directors
5:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m. Independence 1 Alumni Reception for the Intercollegiate Center for Classical Studies
5:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. Room 302 Executive Meeting of the Society for the Oral Reading of Greek and Latin Literature
6:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. Room 411 Annual Meeting of the Board of
Directors of the Vergilian Society
6:30 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. Museum of the University of Pennsylvania
AIA/APA Opening Reception
6:30 p.m. - 10:30 p.m. Room 414 Board Meeting for the Classical
Association for the Midwest and South
7:00 p.m. - 10:00 p.m. Room 415 Meeting of the Steering Committee of the Women's Classical Caucus
10:00 p.m. - 12:00 a.m. Independence 2-3 Opening Night Reception
Sponsored by the APA Committee on the Status of Women and Minority
Groups, the Lambda Classical Caucus, and the Women's Classical
Caucus
7:30 a.m. - 8:30 a.m. Room 307 Breakfast for APA Members Attending
their First Meeting
7:30 a.m. - 9:00 a.m. Room 415 Managing Committee Meeting for the Institute for Aegean Prehistory Study Center for East Crete
7:30 a.m. - 9:00 a.m. Conference Suite I Meeting of the APA
Committee on Ancient History
7:30 a.m. - 8:30 a.m. Conference Suite III Meeting of the APA
Committee on Scholarships for Minority Students
8:00 a.m. - 11:00 Room 401 Meeting of the ASCSA Excavation &
Survey Committee
8:30 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. Section 1 Independence 3
1. John Christopher Geissmann, University of
California at Berkeley
Penelopes
Laugh and the Suitors Gifts (Odyssey
18.158-303) (15 mins.)
2. Deborah Beck, Pennsylvania State University
Odysseus,
Menelaus and Demodocus as Storytellers in the
Odyssey (15 mins.)
3. James R. Marks, University of Texas at Austin
An Aitolian Odyssey? Odyssey 14 and West-Greek Epichoric
Tradition (15 mins.)
4. Jonathan S. Burgess, University of Toronto
Kyprias, Poet
of the Iliaka (15 mins.)
5. Dimitri Nakassis, University of Texas at Austin
Semi-rational
Geography and Eschatological Gemination in
Homer (15 mins.)
6. Sarah E. Harrell, Trinity College
The Nostos of Helen: An Untold Story? (15 mins.)
8:30 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. Section 2 Independence 1
1. Gregory A. Staley, University of
Maryland
Senecan
Tragedy as Monstrum (15 mins.)
2. Christopher Star, University of Chicago
Words into Deeds: Self-Address and Agency in Senecas Tragedies
(15 mins.)
3. Augustin Speyer, University of Tübingen
Sic verba
spernit mea - The Usage of Rupture of Coherence in Senecan
Drama (15 mins.)
4. James Ker, University of California at Berkeley
Timescapes of
Senecas Epistulae morales ad
Lucilium (15 mins.)
5. Brian Warren, Johns Hopkins University
Advising the
Emperor and the Gift of Senecan
Clementia (15 mins.)
8:30 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. Section 3 Salon D
1. Victor Castellani, University of Denver
O Suitably-Attired. . .Head of a Traveler: Significant
Head-Dress in Greek Tragedy (15 mins.)
2. John R. Porter, University of Saskatchewan
Acharnians
1118-21: A Study in Comic Hermeneutics (15
mins.)
3. Hans Peter Obermayer, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität
München
Yes, to nothingness! The Condemnation of Lucullus
- An Opera of Peace by Bertolt Brecht and Paul Dessau (15 mins.)
4. Pantelis Michelakis, University of Oxford
Silent
Dramas: Two Early Film Adaptations of Greek
Tragedy (15 mins.)
5. Ingrid E. Holmberg, University of Victoria
A Dream of
Medea: Euripides Medea in Dassins A Dream of
Passion (15 mins.)
8:30 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. Section 4 Salon K
1. Genevieve S. Gessert, Yale University
Non modo ex memoria, sed etiam ex fastis: The Representation
of Fasti in the Works of Cicero (15 mins.)
2. Kathryn Bosher, University of Michigan
Roman Agricultural Writers View of Theater: from Cato to
Columella (15 mins.)
3. Erika J. Nesholm, University of Washington
The House as
Moral Battefield in Ciceros De Domo
Sua (15 mins.)
4. Alice R. Weeks, University of Cambridge
Fighting for
Space in Augustus City: Reading Contest and Conquest in
Vitruvius De Architectura (15
mins.)
5. Aude Doody, University of Cambridge
Encyclopaedism
and Genre in Plinys Historia
Naturalis (15 mins.)
6. Tobias Reinhardt, University of Oxford
Quintilian on What Rhetoric Is (15 mins.)
8:30 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. Section 5 Salon L
1. Nino Luraghi, Harvard University
Sparta, Corinth, Corcyra, Samos: Past and Present in Herodotus
(20 mins.)
2. Michael Flower, Franklin & Marshall College
The Council at Samos on the Future of Ionia (20 mins.)
3. Sara Forsdyke, University of Michigan
Herodotus on Periander of Corinth: Panhellenic Myth or Athenian
Democratic Ideology? (20 mins.)
4. Ellen Millender, University of Iowa
Spartan Silence versus Democratic Debate: Athenian Ideology
and Herodotean Narrative Patterning (20 mins.)
Respondent: John Marincola, New York University (15 mins.)
8:00 a.m. - 8:30 a.m. Salon I
8:30 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. Section 6 Salon I
1. Kevin Clinton, Cornell University
Introduction (10 mins.)
2. Ian Rutherford, University of Reading
Pilgrims to Abydos from the 6th Century BCE to the 4th Century CE:
Towards a Comprehensive Catalogue of the Graffiti (Greek, Egyptian,
Aramaic, Phoenecian, Carian) (20 mins.)
3. Eran Lupu, Tel Aviv University
The Punic Marseilles Tariff and Its Greek Counterparts
(20 mins.)
4. Craige Champion, Syracuse University
The Struggle for Apollo: The Aitolian Soteria at Delphi and the
Antigonid Soteria at Delos (15 mins.)
5. Hannah M. Cotton, Hebrew University of Jerusalem and
Jonathan J. Price, Tel Aviv University
Greeks, Romans, Jews, and Others in Judaea/Syria Palaestina: A
Civilization of Epigraphy (30 mins.)
6. Philip Freeman, Washington University in St. Louis
Galatian Inscriptions and Cultural Assimilation in Greco-Roman Asia
Minor (15 mins.)
8:00 a.m. - 8:30 a.m. Business Meeting of the Three-Year Salon
J
Colloquium on Late Antiquity
8:30 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. Section 7 Salon J
1. Byron Nakamura, J. M. Dawson Institute for Church State
Studies, Baylor University
Negotiating with the Dead: Constantines Commemoration of
Diocletian (20 mins.)
2. Dennis Trout, University of Missouri, Columbia
Vivit
et astra tenet: Epitaphs, Elogia, and Astral
Immortality (20 mins.)
3. Eugene Vance, University of Washington
How Do You Bury
and Commemorate Your Early Christian Mother? The Case of
Monica (20 mins.)
4. Ann Marie Yasin, University of Chicago
Reading
Orantes: Gesture and Commemoration in Early Christian Funerary
Art (20 mins.)
8:30 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. Section 8 Independence 2
1. Stephen Colvin, Yale University
The Syntax of the Agora and the Syntax of Parnassus (20 mins.)
2. Eleanor Dickey, Columbia University
Salve, Marce: How Did the Romans Really Use Each Others
Names? (20 mins.)
3. Helma Dik, University of Chicago
The Greek We Teach (Aint What It Used to Be) (20 mins.)
4. Donna Shalev, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Traditional Grammars and the Syntax of Literary Dialogue Texts (20
mins.)
Respondent: Harm Pinkster, University of Amsterdam (10
mins.)
9:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. Room 302
9:30 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. Conference Suite II
11:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. Conference Suite II
11:15 a.m. - 1:15 p.m. Section 9 Independence 3
1. Gavin Weaire, Union College
The Case of the Missing Mauretanian (15 mins.)
2. Rosemary Moore, University of Michigan
The Purpose of Onasanders The General (15 mins.)
3. Jeffrey Beneker, University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill
No Time for
Love: The Chaste Heroes of Plutarchs Alexander-Caesar
(15 mins.)
4. Jonathan Scott Perry, University of Central Florida
Clinopale Wrestling and Erotic Humor in the Roman Empire (15
mins.)
11:15 a.m. - 1:15 p.m. Section 10 Salon K
1. Benjamin Stevens, University of Chicago
mikten ex
amphoin: The Origin of Latin and the Loss of Binary Opposition in
Dionysius of Halicarnassus (15 mins.)
2. Anthony Corbeill, University of Kansas
Grammatical
Constructions We Live by: The Case of (dis)similis
sui (15 mins.)
3. Chris Brunelle, Gustavus Adolphus College
Inclusive
Latin in Non-Legal Contexts (15 mins.)
4. Andrew Fenton, University of Pennsylvania
They Might Be
Spurious: Napster and Pseudepigrapha (15
mins.)
11:15 a.m. - 1:15 p.m. Section 11 Salon D
1. Ross Stuart Kilpatrick, Queens University at
Kingston
Euripides
Alcestis and the Vatican Aldobrandini Wedding
Fresco (15 mins.)
2. David M. Johnson, Southern Illinois University,
Carbondale
Ischomachus
the Model Husband? A Moderately Ironic Reading of Xenophons
Oeconomicus (15 mins.)
3. Phyllis B. Katz, Dartmouth College
Marriage
Catullan Style: Poem 61 (15 mins.)
4. Jeri Blair DeBrohun, Brown University
Lucretius on the Dangers of Married Love: De Rerum Natura
4.1278-87 (15 mins.)
11:15 a.m. - 1:15 p.m. Section 12 Independence 2
1. Susanna M. Braund, Yale University
The Significance of Thebes for Statius (20 mins.)
2. Carole Newlands, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Ovid and Statius: Transforming the Landscape (20 mins.)
3. Karla Pollmann, University of St.
Andrews
The Ambiguity of Values in the Thebaid and Before (20
mins.)
4. Peter Heslin, University of Durham
Dante and the
End of the Thebaid (20 mins.)
Respondent: Elaine Fantham, Princeton University (20
mins.)
11:15 a.m. - 1:15 p.m. Section 13 Salon I
1. Bronwen Wickkiser, University of Texas at
Austin
Plague,
Politics, and the Peloponnesian War: The Arrival of Asklepios in
Athens (25 mins.)
2. Alain Touwaide, University of Oklahoma, Norman
Eastern Drugs in Greek Therapeutical Theory and Practice from the
Corpus Hippocraticum to Late Antiquity (25 mins.)
3. Georgia Machemer, University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill
Pangenesis in Empedocles Zoogony (25 mins.)
4. David C. A. Hillman, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Trachoma in Antiquity: Terminology and Prevalence (25 mins.)
11:15 a.m. - 1:15 p.m. Section 14 Salon J
1. Paul A. Iversen, Case Western Reserve
University
Introduction (10 mins.)
2. Dana Munteanu, University of Cincinnati
The Nothos in the Plays of Euripides and Menander (15
mins.)
3. Wilfred E. Major, Loyola University of New Orleans
Is There a Cook
in the House? The Mageiros as a Barometer of Domestic Tension
in Menander (15 mins.)
4. Susan Lape, University of Texas at Austin
The Poetics of the Oikos: The Komos in Menandrian
Comedy (15 mins.)
5. Timothy J. Moore, University of Texas at Austin
Peeking into
the Oikos: Menander and the Male
Gaze (15 mins.)
Respondent: W. Geoffrey Arnott, University of Leeds (20
mins.)
11:15 a.m. - 1:15 p.m. Section 15 Salon L
1. Stephen A. Nimis, Miami University of
Ohio
Classics and Diversity: A Chairs Perspective (20 mins.)
2. Barbara K. Gold, Hamilton College
From the Administrators Swivelling Chair: What Can Classicists
Contribute to Diversity? (20 mins.)
3. T. Davina McClain, Loyola University of New Orleans
Classics in the Midst of the Rainbow: Teaching to and Learning from a
Diverse Student Body (20 mins.)
Discussion
11:15 a.m. - 1:15 p.m. Section 16 Independence 1
1. Anthony Podlecki, University of British
Columbia
Aiskhylos rhemata hippobamona (15 mins.)
2. C. W. Marshall, Memorial University of Newfoundland
The Voice of Apollo (15 mins.)
3. Mark Griffith, University of California at Berkeley
The Sounds of Satyrs (15 mins.)
4. Elizabeth Scharffenberger, Columbia University
Deinon eribremetas: The Sound and Sense of Aiskhylos
in Aristophanes Frogs (15 mins.)
Discussion
Workshop on Aiskhylean Dochmiacs Conducted by Stephen G. Daitz,
City University of New York (45 mins.)
12:00 p.m. - 1:30 p.m. Room 302
12:00 p.m. - 12:50 p.m. Room 414
12:30p.m. - 1:30 p.m. Room 415
1:30 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Section 17 Independence 1
1. Brian W. Breed, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
The Songs in
Eclogue 5: Text, Time, and Dialogue
(15 mins.)
2. Lisa B. Hughes, Loyola College in Maryland
Euripidean Vergil and the Smoke of a Distant Fire (15 mins.)
3. Neil Coffee, University of Chicago
Reconsidering
Vergilian Restraint in the Aeneid
(15 mins.)
4. David Meban, University of Toronto
Nisus and
Euryalus and Their Pals (15 mins.)
5. Douglas Clapp, Samford University
Vergils Fama: Honest But out of Control (15 mins.)
1:30 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Section 18 Salon I
1. Daniel B. McGlathery, University of
Florida
Cave Canem: Cynic Tropes in Petronius (15 mins.)
2. Vicky Rimell, University of Oxford
Losing the
Plot: Narration and Intoxication in Petronius
Satyricon (15 mins.)
3. Karen Gunterman, University of California, Los Angeles
The Robbers Cave: The Significance of an Ecphrasis in
Apuleiuss Metamorphoses (15 mins.)
4. Thomas Ephraim Lytle, Duke University
A
Narratological Argument for the Apuleian Authorship of the Spurcum
Additamentum (Met. X.21) (15
mins.)
5. Edmund P. Cueva, Xavier University
Whos the Woman on the Bull?: Achilles Tatius 1.4.2-3 (15
mins.)
1:30 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Section 19 Salon K
1. Miriam Leonard, University of Cambridge
Psychoanalytic Socrates: Lacan at Platos Symposium (15
mins.)
2. Steven Lowenstam, University of Oregon
Love or
Desire? Eros in Plato (15
mins.)
3. David J. Murphy, The Nightingale-Bamford School
Being and Knowledge in Platos Charmides (15 mins.)
4. Tarik Wareh, University of California at Berkeley
Isocrates Philosophia and His Students (15 mins.)
5. Jose M. Gonzalez, Harvard University
O
basilikos logos: Hesiod and Isokrates on
Tyranny (15 mins.)
6. Robert D. Cromey, Virginia Commonwealth University
Thomas Jefferson and Solons Maxim, or, on Limiting the
Peoples Freedom (15 mins.)
1:30 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Section 20 Independence 3
1. Vincent J. Rosivach, Fairfield University
Hoplites and
Zeugitai: A Military Role to a Political
One? (15 mins.)
2. Matthew R. Christ, Indiana University
Conscription of Hoplites in Classical Athens (15 mins.)
3. Kathryn Simonsen, University of Alberta
Who Wants to Be a Trierarch? Volunteerism and the Athenian Liturgical
System (15 mins.)
4. Joshua D. Sosin, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Harnessing
Markets: Perpetual Endowments in the Greek
Economy (15 mins.)
5. Timothy R. Howe, Pennsylvania State University
Thucydides on Border Wars. A Reconsideration of the Economic
Importance of the Frontier (15 mins.)
1:30 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Section 21 Salon J
1. Thomas D. McCreight, Loyola College in
Maryland
Homer in Hollywood, or a Classicist Watches Ulees Gold
(20 mins.)
2. Maria Kotzamanidou, University of California at
Berkeley
Ulysses Gaze: Viewing the Odyssey (20 mins.)
3. Alison Futrell, University of Arizona
Gladiators
and True History (20
mins.)
4. Arthur J. Pomeroy, Victoria University of Wellington (New
Zealand)
The Vision of
a Fascist Rome in Ridley Scotts
Gladiator (20 mins.)
5. Giles Gilbert, Royal Holloway College
Whats So Epic about Epic Movies?
(20 mins.)
1:30 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Section 22 Independence
2
1. Bruce Frier, University of Michigan
Roman Same-Sex
Weddings from the Legal Perspective (25
mins.)
2. Mark Masterson, University of Chicago
Getting
Away from It All? (Masters and Disciples in the Desert of the
Ascetics) (25 mins.)
3. Bruce M. King, Columbia University
Briseis Speaks:
Akhilleus, Patroklos, and the Impossible Weddings of the Iliad
(25 mins.)
4. Kate Gilhuly, University of Southern California
The
Lesbian Phallus in Lucians Dialogues of the
Courtesans (25 mins.)
5. Richard King, Purdue University
Textual
Encounter and Male Homosocial Readership of Ovids Fasti
(25 mins.)
1:30 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Section 23 Salon L
1. David J. Califf, The Academy of Notre Dame
(Villanova, PA)
The Traditions of Latin Verse Composition (15 mins.)
2. James C. McKeown, University of Wisconsin-Madison
The Practicalities of Teaching Verse Composition (15
mins.)
3. Judith Sebesta, University of South Dakota
Clivo sudamus in imo (15 mins.)
4. William W. Batstone, Ohio State University
Beyond the Rules: Putting the Music back in the Verse (15 mins.)
5. Judith P. Hallett, University of Maryland
Of Any Use in the World? - Integrating Latin Elegiac Verse
Composition (and Roman Women Poets) into the Advanced Placement
Catullus-Ovid Curriculum (15 mins.)
1:30 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. AIA Section 24 Salon H
1. John H. DArms, American Council of
Learned Societies/Columbia University
Introduction (15 mins.)
2. Matthew B. Roller, Johns Hopkins University
Horizontal
Women: Sex and the Ideology of Convivial Posture at
Rome (20 mins.)
3. John F. Donahue, College of William and Mary
Eating and Political Image Making: The Banquets of the Emperor
Domitian (15 mins.)
4. Katherine M. D. Dunbabin, McMaster University (20
mins.)
The Waiting Servant in Later Roman Art
5. Jeremy Rossiter, University of Alberta
Dining with Nature: Roman Villas and the Architectural Setting of the
Cena
(20 mins.)
6. Susan E. Alcock, University of Michigan
Teaching Eating (20 mins.)
Discussion
2:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Conference Suite II
3:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Salon D
Eric Rebillard, Associate Director of
L'Année Philologique (APh)
Dee L. Clayman, Graduate Center, City University of New
York
Dr. Rebillard and Professor Clayman will demonstrate a new web site,
www.annee-philologique.com, which will make available thirty years of
classical bibliography, combining data from recent APh volumes
with bibliographical entries from older volumes of APh that
have been put in digital form by the DCB.
4:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. Room 410
4:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m. Conference Suite I
4:15 p.m. - 5:15 p.m. Room 408-409
4:30 p.m.-6:30 p.m. Presidential Panel Liberty A
1. Zeph Stewart, Harvard University
The Loeb Classical Library (20 mins.)
2. Mary-Kay Gamel, University of California, Santa
Cruz
Translating Performance: Patching or
Poiesis (20 mins.)
3. Glenn W. Most, Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa/University of
Chicago
Violets in Crucibles: Translating, Traducing, Transmuting (20
mins.)
4. David Ferry, Wellesley College
Perspectives of a Practicing Translator (20
mins.)
Respondent: Peter Burian, Duke University (15
mins.)
Discussion (25 mins.)
4:30 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. Independence 1, Annual Meeting of the Advisory
Council to the American Academy in Rome
4:30 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. Room 414-415, Business Meeting of the Women's Classical Caucus
4:30 p.m. - 6:30 p.m. Room 411-412 Reception for the Friends of Ancient History
5:00 p.m. - 6:15 p.m. Independence 1 Annual Meeting of the Classical Society of the American Academy in Rome
6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. Salon D Meeting of the Managing Committee of The American School of Classical Studies at Athens
6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. Room 302, Reception for College Year in Athens
6:00 p.m. - 7:45 p.m. Room 307 Reception for the Friends of Numismatics
6:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m. Salon I Women's Classical Caucus Networking
Reception
8:00 p.m. - 10:00 p.m. Special Performance Salon G
By special arrangement with Samuel French,
Inc.
Producer: Judith P. Hallett, University of Maryland,
College Park
Director: Mary-Kay Gamel, University of California,
Santa Cruz
AEH
Douglass S. Parker,
University of Texas, Austin
Charon
..
.Adam D. Blistein,
American Philological Association
Housman
....Christopher W. Marshall,
Memorial University of Newfoundland
Moses Jackson
...Stephen J. Harrison, University of
Oxford
Pollard
Mark L. Damen, Utah
State University
Jowett
.Frederick M. Ahl,
Cornell University
Chamberlain
.}
Chairman, Committee
.} Robert C. Ketterer,
University of Iowa
Ellis
}
Postgate
..Kenneth J. Reckford,
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Oscar Wilde
...Charles R. Beye, City
University of New York
The Invention of Love (1997) is a critically acclaimed play
about A.E. Housman (1859-1936), classical scholar and poet. In the
play Housman revisits important moments and people in his life,
including his younger self.
The reading will be followed by a discussion led by the producer,
with director, actors, and audience members, as well as Carlin
Romano, Literary Critic, The Philadelphia Inquirer;
Critic-at-Large, The Chronicle of Higher Education, and
Associate Professor of Philosophy, Temple University; and
Paul Naiditch, Classics Bibliographer, Library of the
University of California, Los Angeles; and Author of A. E. Housman
at University College London and Problems in the Life of A. E.
Housman.
8:00 p.m. - 10:00 p.m. Room 410
7:00 a.m. - 8:30 a.m. JW's Restaurant
7:30 a.m. - 9:30 a.m. Room 411-412
7:30 a.m. - 8:30 a.m. Independence 2
7:30 a.m. - 8:30 a.m. Room 302
7:30 a.m. - 9:00 a.m. Room 307
8:00 a.m. - 9:30 a.m. Room 415
8:30 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. Section 25 Independence 3
1. Timothy B. Allison, University of
Michigan
Stylistic
Variation in Aeschylus: The Case of an Ignored Linguistic
Variable (15 mins.)
2. Melissa Mueller, University of California at Berkeley
Word and
Object in Euripides Ion: The Silent Truth of Family
Heirlooms (15 mins.)
3. David Roselli, University of Toronto
The Poor
Other: Expressing Class through Female Characters in Greek
Drama (15 mins.)
4. Mary Ebbott, College of the Holy Cross
Teucer in the Helen: Shame, Redemption, Legitimacy (15
mins.)
5. Gary Mathews, North Carolina School of the Arts
Euripidean
Allegory and the Need for Meaning - The Case of Helen
(15 mins.)
6. E. P. Moloney, University of Cambridge
Macedonian
Choregoi - Greek Tragedy in the Fourth Century,
B.C. (15 mins.)
8:30 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. Section 26 Salon D
8:30 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. Section 27 Independence 1
8:00 a.m. - 8:30 a.m. Salon I Business Meeting of the American
Society of Papyrologists
8:30 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. Section 28 Salon I
8:30 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. Section 29 Salon L
Wendy Closterman and Greta L. Ham, Organizers
Greta L. Ham, Presider
8:30 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. Section 30 Salon J
1. Fritz Graf, Princeton University
Difficult Choices: A Ritual in Cos and Its Ramifications (20
mins.)
2. Radcliffe Edmonds, Bryn Mawr College
Pure from the
Pure and the Sheep from the Goats: Orphism,
Magic, and the (Re)constructions of Ancient Greek
Religion (20 mins.)
3. Petra Pakkanen, Royal Holloway College
Reflections on Models of Greek Religion: The Role of Analogies in
Understanding Variation and Change (20 mins.)
4. Henk Versnel, University of Leiden
Split Personalities: On the Desperate Over-Contextuality of Greek
Gods (20 mins.)
5. Irene Polinskaya, Bowdoin College
System, Location, Mesocosm: On the Social Nature of Greek Religion
(20 mins.)
Respondents: Christopher Faraone, University of Chicago (10
mins.)
Gunnel Ekroth, Stockholm University
(10 mins.)
8:30 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. Section 31 Salon K
1. Kenneth F. Kitchell, Jr., University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
Introduction (10 mins.)
2. Robert W. Cape, Austin College
APA Survey Results: Classics MA and PhD
Candidates_Teachers at the Helm or Teachers Adrift? (25 mins.)
3. Miriam R. Pelikan Pittenger, University of Illinois,
Urbana-Champaign
Navigating
the Shoals at Home: Establishing a TA Training
Course (25 mins.)
4. Kenneth F. Kitchell, Jr., University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
Quis
Docebit Doctores? Proposed Models for
Change (25 mins.)
5. George W. Houston, University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill
The Ideal of Teacher Training within the Reality of the PhD Program
(20 mins.)
6. Respondents (20 mins.)
7. Open Discussion (25 mins.)
Meeting of the APA Committee on Placement
9:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. Room 414
11:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. Conference Suite I
11:15 a.m. - 1:15 p.m. Section 32 Salon I
1. Sellers C. Lawrence, University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill
Renting from
the Gods: The Athenian Use of the Temple Resources on Delos in the
Second Century B.C. (15 mins.)
2. Jonathan David, Pennsylvania State University
The Rape of Theseus: Peisistratid Propagation of a New Athenian
Mythology (15 mins.)
3. Ian S. Moyer, University of Chicago
Miniaturization
and the Opening of the Mouth in a Greek Magical Text (PGM
XII.270-350) (15 mins.)
4. Andrew Scholtz, Binghamton University, SUNY
Whats
in a Name? Pandemic Koinonia and Aphrodita Pandamos on Hellenistic
Cos (15 mins.)
5. Julia C. Kindt, University of Cambridge
Re-reading
Delphic Oracles: The Significance of Textual Representations of
Oracle Consultations (15 mins.)
11:15 a.m. - 1:15 p.m. Section 33 Salon L
1. Joseph M. Pucci, Brown University
Ausonius Ephemeris and the Hermeneumata Tradition (15
mins.)
2. Preston Edwards, Brown University
I Will
Speak to Those Who Understand: Gregory of Naziansus
Carmina Arcana 1.1-24 (15
mins.)
3. Raffaella Cribiore, Columbia University
Writing and Sending Letters in Antiquity: The Epistolary of Libanius
(15 mins.)
4. Matthew Kraus, Williams College
Jerome as an
Ethnographer of the Jews (15 mins.)
5. Catherine Conybeare, University of Manchester
Augustine on Cicero, Mater, and a uerba faciendi locus (15
mins.)
11:15 a.m. - 1:15 p.m. Section 34 Independence 1
1. Edward D. Clark, Independent Scholar
Aristodemus, the Not So Effeminate Tyrant of Cumae (15 mins.)
2. Greg Anderson, University of Illinois at Chicago
The Phye Episode and Political Culture in Mid-Sixth-Century Athens
(15 mins.)
3. Sarah Bolmarcich, University of Virginia
Thucydides
1.44.1 and the Terminology of Athenian Diplomacy
(15 mins.)
4. Adriaan Lanni, University of Michigan
Writing and Its Competitors in the Athenian Courts (15 mins.)
5. Andrew Gallia, University of Pennsylvania
The Republication of Drakons Law of Homicide (15 mins.)
11:15 a.m. - 1:15 p.m. Section 35 Salon K
1. Ann N. Michelini, University of
Cincinnati
Introduction
2. Hayden Ausland, University of Montana
The Deuteros Plous in Platonic Literature and Thought (25
mins.)
3. Ruby Blondell, University of Washington
Shifting Perspectives (25 mins.)
4. Scott Carson, Ohio University
The Proof Is in the Paradox: Socratic Midwifery in Platos
Theaetetus (25 mins.)
Respondents: Kathryn A. Morgan, University of California, Los
Angeles (15 mins.)
William Johnson, University of Cincinnati (15 mins.)
11:15 a.m. - 1:15 p.m. Section 36 Salon J
1. Lee Ann Riccardi, College of New
Jersey
Heads as Well as Tails: What the Obverses Reveal about Roman Control
over the Provincial Coins of Asia in the Third Century (20 mins.)
2. Betsey A. Robinson, University of Pennsylvania
The Scylla
of Corinth (20 mins.)
3. Sebastian Heath, American Numismatic Society
The Temple Coinage of Zeugma and Civic Identity in the Roman East (20
mins.)
4. Susan E. Wood, Oakland University
The Wives of Nero: Public Images on Provincial Coins (20 mins.)
Respondents: Carmen Arnold-Biucchi, Metropolitan Museum of Art
(10 mins.)
Jane D. Evans, Temple University
Kenneth Harl, Tulane University
11:15 a.m. - 1:15 p.m. Section 37 Salon D
1. James Arieti and Shirley Kagan, Hampden-Sydney
College
The Philoctetes at Hampden-Sydney College (20 mins.)
2. George W. M. Harrison, Xavier University/Insitute for the
History of Ancient Civilizations
Taking Parts Is Taking Sides: The Pedagogy of Senecas Plays (20
mins.)
3. Lisa Maurizio, Bates College
Puppets and Pedagogy: Teaching and Staging Aeschylus
Prometheus Bound (20 mins.)
4. Leslie Cahoon, Gettysburg College
Everything to Do with Dionysus: The Transforming Power of Performance
in the Classical Studies Classroom (20 mins.)
5. Mark Damen, Utah State University
Prompter (of Audience Interaction and Participation in a Performance
of a Classical Text) (40 mins.)
11:15 a.m. - 1:15 p.m. Section 38 Independence
3
1. Cindy Benton and John Gruber-Miller, Cornell
College
Through
Others Eyes: A Model for Making Greek Textbooks More Inclusive
(15 mins.)
2. Jerise Fogel, Columbia University
Feminism,
Anti-Racism, and Wheelocks Moral Vision: A Request for
Dialogue (15 mins.)
3. Donna Tuttle, The Bryn Mawr School
Including Women and Minorities in Latin Class (15 mins.)
4. Kristina Chew, University of St. Thomas
Reflections on
Teaching Classics and Multiculturalism: The Case of Theresa Hak Kyung
Chas Dictée (15
mins.)
Respondents: Bella Vivante, University of Arizona (10
mins.)
Eileen Mooney Strange, Miss Porters School (10
mins.)
Discussion (40 mins.)
12:00 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. Franklin Hall
Members of both AIA and APA will lead separate discussions of
the topics listed below at individual tables. Topics include issues
of intellectual and practical importance to classicists and
archaeologists. Sign-up sheets will be available in advance of the
session so that participation at each table can be limited to number
that will encourage useful dialogues. A cash food service will be
available nearby. This list is accurate as of November 15, 2001;
additional topics may be added.
AIA Tours: Why Travel with AIA?
Facilitator: Todd Nielson, AIA
Archaeology and Fiction
Facilitator: Christine Finn, University of Oxford
Disciplinary Histories and Classical Studies
Facilitator: Giovanna Ceserani, Princeton University
Getting a Job: Career Strategies for Archaeology Grad
Students
Facilitator: Tom Tartaron, Yale University
Making the Merger a Success: Celebrating Diversity, Fostering
Collaboration, Maintaining Identity
Facilitator: Sophia Papaioannou, University of Akron
Myth and Methodology
Facilitators: Sandra Blakely and Sarolta Takács, Emory
University
Professional Priorities for the 21st Century AIA
Facilitator: Ricardo Elia, Boston University
Protection of Cultural Sites in Armed Conflict
Facilitator: Ellen Herscher
Post-Tenure Review: Threat or Opportunity?
Facilitator: Karl Galinsky, University of Texas
The Role of Food and Wine in Ancient History
Facilitator: Al Leonard, The University of Arizona
Teaching the Oral Performance of Greek and Latin Poetry
Facilitator: Stephen G. Daitz, City University of New York
Writing Archaeology for Popular Journals
Facilitator: Peter Young, Archaeology Magazine
12:00 p.m. - 1:30 p.m. Room 302
12:00 p.m. - 2:00 p.m. Room 412
12:00 p.m. - 1:30 p.m. Room 414
12:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m. Conference Suite II
12:30 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. Conference Suite III
1:30 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Section 39 Salon L
1. Karen Rosenbecker, University of
Pittsburgh
Soup to
Nuts: Euripidean Tragedy as Food in Aristophanes
Frogs (15 mins.)
2. John P. Given III, University of Michigan
The Intellectuals Paradox in Cratinuss Wine Flask
(15 mins.)
3. George Fredric Franko, Hollins University
Mockery and
Reintegration: The Endings of Menanders Dyskolos and
Homers Odyssey (15 mins.)
4. Leslie Kurke, University of California at Berkeley
Aesop and the Contestation of Delphic Authority (15 mins.)
5. Laura McClure, University of Wisconsin-Madison
The Laughter
That Subverts: The Witty Sayings of Courtesans in
Athenaeus Deipnosophistai (15
mins.)
1:30 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Section 40 Independence 1
1. Jon D. Berry, University of Chicago
Gazing in the
Mist: Vision and Narrative in Apollonius
Argonautica (15 mins.)
2. Anatole Mori, University of Missouri-Columbia
Error and Reconciliation in Apollonius (Arg. 1.332-43) (15
mins.)
3. Alexandra Pappas, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Solving the Riddles: An Examination of Hellenistic
Technopaegnia (15 mins.)
4. Keyne A. Cheshire, Carleton College
Kicking Envy: Apollos Defense of the Cyrenean Chorus
(Callimachus, Hymns 2.105-113) (15 mins.)
5. Thomas D. Kohn, Millsaps College
The Tragedy of Ezekiel (15 mins.)
6. J. Andrew Foster, University of Chicago
Arsinoe in
Egypt and Helen in Sparta: Theocritus, Idyll 15,
Odyssey 4, and the Poetics of
Imperialism (15 mins.)
1:30 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Section 41 Independence 3
1. Scott McGill, Rice University
Vergilius Alter: Rewriting Virgil in the Codex
Salmasianus (15 mins.)
2. Mischa Hooker, University of Memphis and University of
Cincinnati
Fits and Starts: Early Christians on the 4th Eclogue and
Vergils Inspiration (15 mins.)
3. Jennifer Ebbeler, University of Pennsylvania
Augustine,
Vergil, and the Foundation of a Christian
Empire (15 mins.)
4. Kathryn Chew, Princeton University
Theorizing the
Ancient Novel (15 mins.)
5. Rebecca M. Edwards, Indiana University
Two Horns,
Three Religions: How Alexander the Great Ended up in the Koran
(15 mins.)
6. René S. Bloch, Trinity College
Shadow-Boxing with Tacitus: Jewish Responses to Ancient Polemics in
Pre-Modern Europe (15 mins.)
1:30 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Section 42 Salon I
1. John W. I. Lee, University of California,
Santa Barbara
Pollai gar esan hetairai en to strateumati: Women in
Xenophons Anabasis (20 mins.)
2. Noreen Humble, University College, Cork
Women and War in Xenophon (20 mins.)
3. Elizabeth D. Carney, Clemson University
Macedonian Women and Military Leadership (20 mins.)
4. Geoffrey S. Sumi, Mt. Holyoke College
Civil War, Women, and Spectacle in the Triumviral Period (20
mins.)
5. Sara Phang, University of Southern California
Intimate Conquests: Roman Soldiers Slave Women and Freedwomen
(20 mins.)
Discussion (20 mins.)
1:30 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Section 43 Salon J
1. Edward M. Harris, City University of New
York
Introduction (20 mins.)
2. John Lewis, Ashland University
Justice and Necessity in Solonian Athens (20 mins.)
3. Rachel Hall Sternberg, College of Wooster
The Role of the Bystander in Ancient Athens (15 mins.)
4. Sarah T. Cohen, University of Chicago
Tradition and Innovation in the Use of Exile as a Penalty (20
mins.)
5. Marsha B. McCoy, Fairfield University
Public Order in Rome: The Use of Evidentiary Presumptions in Roman
Law (20 mins.)
1:30 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Section 44 Salon
D
1. Donald Lateiner, Ohio Wesleyan University
Introduction (10 mins.)
2. Elizabeth S. Greene, Princeton University
Leaving Words Behind: Recreating the Archaic Departure Scene through
Nonverbal Elements (20 mins.)
3. Dianna R. Kardulias, College of Wooster
A Temple of Her Own: Gendered Proxemics in the Homeric Hymn to
Demeter (15 mins.)
4. Timothy J. McNiven, Ohio State University
Gesture, Character, and Narrative: Nonverbal Portrayal and the
Success of Athenian Imagery (20 mins.)
5. Daniel Levine, University of Arkansas
The Bare Feet Speak: Nonverbal Messages of Barefootedness (20
mins.)
6. Costas Panayotakis, University of Glasgow
Nonverbal Behavior on the Roman Comic Stage (15 mins.)
7. Jasmin W. Cyril, University of Minnesota
Gesture and Identity: Depictions of Roman Freedwomen in Funerary
Context (20 mins.)
1:30 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Section 45 Salon K
1. Philip A. Stadter, University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill
Modeling Virtue in Plutarchs Lives (15 mins.)
2. Geert Roskam, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
From Stick to Reasoning: Plutarch on the Communication between
Teacher and Pupil (15 mins.)
3. Luc Van der Stockt, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
Odysseus in Rome: On Plutarchs Introduction to De cohibenda
ira (15 mins.)
4. Rebecca R. Benefiel, Harvard University
Plutarchs Use of Aetiology in De mulierum
virtutibus (15 mins.)
5. Margaret DeMaria Smith, University of California,
Irvine
Enkrateia: Plutarch on Self-Control and the Politics of
Excess (15 mins.)
6. Michele Valerie Ronnick, Wayne State University
A Lesson in Paideia: Teaching Plutarchs Parallel
Lives in Translation (15 mins.)
Respondent: Hubert M. Martin, Jr., University of Kentucky (20
mins.)
1:30 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Section 46 Liberty A
1. Andrew Feldherr, Princeton University
Vergilian Ecphrasis and the Politics of Viewing in Augustan Rome (20
mins.)
2. C. Brian Rose, University of Cincinnati
Rome and Troy: The Problem of the East in the West (20 mins.)
3. Holt N. Parker, University of Cincinnati
The Recreation
of Time and Space in the Augustan Secular
Games (20 mins.)
4. Eleanor Winsor Leach, Indiana University
Talking for the Heads: Ciceros Re-Presentation of Statuary (20
mins.)
5. Barbara Kellum, Smith College
On the Auction Block: Slaves and their Histories (20 mins.)
6. Harriet Flower, Franklin and Marshall College
The Praetorian Guard in Roman Art (20 mins.)
Respondent: John Bodel, Rutgers University (20 mins.)
1:30 p.m. - 3:00 p.m. Room 415
2:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Conference Suite I
2:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Room 307
4:00 p.m. - 5:30 p.m. Room 302
4:30 p.m.-6:00 p.m. APA Plenary Session Salon H
Presentation of the Awards for Excellence in the Teaching of the
Classics
Presentation of the Goodwin Award of Merit
Presidential Address
Kenneth J. Reckford
Pueri Ludentes: Some Aspects of Play and Seriousness in
Horace's Epistles
6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. Room 411-412
6:30 p.m. - 7:30 p.m. Crystal Tea Room
7:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. Salon F
7:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. Room 408
7:30 p.m.-9:00 p.m. Special Presentation Salon D
This fall will see the publication of about one hundred
previously unknown epigrams, apparently all by Posidippus
(P.Mil.Vogl. 309 by G. Bastianini, C. Gallazzi,
and C. Austin) and all securely dated to the third century B.C. It
provides the most significant papyrological evidence for ancient
epigram collections ever to emerge, and will likely transform our
understanding of the transmission of early epigrams and of the
formation of Hellenistic poetry books. The addition of some 600 new
verses, unfiltered by the selective lens of Meleager, has the
potential to improve, if not fundamentally alter, our understanding
of epigram as a genre.
Four presenters who are already engaged in research on epigram will
give brief presentations on the new collection from the perspectives
of their individual work. We anticipate a half-hour of presentations
and an hour of discussion with the audience.
1. Kathryn Gutzwiller, University of
Cincinnati
2. Alan Cameron, Columbia University
3. Alex Sens, Georgetown University
4. Peter Bing, Emory
University
7:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m. Room 410 Informal Reading Session of the Society for the Oral Reading of Greek and Latin Literature
8:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. Room 307 Meeting of the Corpus of Etruscan Mirrors, U. S. Section
9:00 p.m. - 10:00 p.m. Room 409 Meeting of the AAR Publication Committee, Antiquities Collection
9:00 p.m. - 10:00 p.m. Room 401-402 Reception for Bryn Mawr
College Alumnae/i
8:00 a.m.-9:00 a.m. Business Meeting of the Independence 2
American Philological Association
Being the One Hundred Thirty-Third Meeting of the Association
9:00 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. Section 47 Independence 1
1. Gordon P. Kelly, Bryn Mawr College
The Narrative
Function of Battlefield Supplication Scenes in the
Iliad (15 mins.)
2. Alexander Stevens, University of Cambridge
Reading Divine Power and Presence: The Epiphanic Implications of
Zeuss Long Arm (15 mins.)
3. Michael Johnson, University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill
Idomeneus and Meriones in the Iliad (15 mins.)
4. Barbara Graziosi, University of Durham
Homeric Masculinity: ênoreê and
agênoriê (15 mins.)
5. Adrian Kelly, University of Oxford
Iliad
23.82 and Homeric Textual Criticism (15
mins.)
6. Steve Reece, Saint Olaf College
The Linguistic History of the Mycenaean Bath (15 mins.)
9:00 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. Section 48 Independence 3
1. Ilaria Marchesi, Rutgers University
In Memory
of Simonides: Rhetoric, Poetry, and Good Manners chez
Nasidienus (15 mins.)
2. Luke Roman, University of Victoria
Augury, Authority, and Augustus: Horace C.1.1.2 and Propertius
4.6 (15 mins.)
3. Paul Allen Miller, University of South Carolina
Palimpsest:
Intertextuality and Amores 1.2 (15
mins.)
4. Jacqueline D. Murray, University of Washington
Ovids
Erysichthon, Callimachus, and Apollonius
Rhodius (15 mins.)
5. Carl A. Shaw, University of Pennsylvania
Venus and Genre
in Ovids Fasti (15 mins.)
9:00 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. Section 49 Salon D
1. Sarah Mace, Union College
The Strasbourg Empedokles and the Boundaries of Daimonology in the
Physics (15 mins.)
2. Stefan Alexandru, University of Oxford
New Manuscript Evidence regarding Aristotles Metaphysics
Lambda (15 mins.)
3. Malcolm Wilson, University of Oregon
What Is Aristotle Talking about? The Philosophical Superfluity of the
Subject Genus (15 mins.)
4. Timothy David Hill, Royal Holloway College
Aesthetics and
Oikeiosis: Cicero De Finibus 3.16-31;
62-4 (15 mins.)
5. Kathy L. Gaca, Vanderbilt University
Chrysippean Arguments on the Human Psyche and Emotions in
Tertullians De Anima (15 mins.)
9:00 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. Section 50 Salon I
1. Jonathan Edmondson, York University
Writing Latin, Becoming Roman in Roman Lusitania (15 mins.)
2. James L. Woolard, Jr., Princeton University
Geography and Identity: Caravans and the Control of Territory in
Palmyra under the Roman Empire (15 mins.)
3. Matthew Dillon, Loyola Marymount University
Juliosebaste: A Greco-Roman-Luwian City in Rough Cilicia (15
mins.)
4. Jeannine Diddle Uzzi, Whitman College
Non-Roman Children and the Roman Nation-Thing (15
mins.)
5. C. A. Grey, University of Cambridge
CTh XIV.18.1: Urban Beggars, Rural Tenants and the Problem of
colonatus perpetuus (15 mins.)
9:00 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. Section 51 Salon K
1. Mary Beard and John Henderson, University of Cambridge
Stopping Christ at Tivoli: Classics and Classicism at Hadrians
Villa (20 mins.)
2. Donald Preziosi, University of California, Los Angeles
Statuesque Fictions: Artifice and Decorum in John Soanes
Classicism (20 mins.)
3. James I. Porter, University of Michigan
Uncertain Marble: Anselm Feuerbachs Der vaticanische
Apollo and Winckelmanns (and Our) Classical Aesthetic
(20 mins.)
4. Simon Goldhill, University of Cambridge
Who Killed Plutarch? (20 mins.)
5. Yopie Prins, University of Michigan
Ladies Greek (20 mins.)
6. Alice Radin, Phillips Exeter Academy
Sunlight on a
Broken Column: (Re)Visions of Classical
Antiquity (15 mins.)
9:00 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. Section 52 Salon J
1. Sarah Culpepper Stroup, University of
Washington
Introduction (15 mins.)
2. Nigel Nicholson, Reed College
Bride of
Quietness: Copenhagen 109 and the Commemoration of Chariot
Victories (15 mins.)
3. Sara Myers, University of Virginia
Docta otia: Garden Ownership and Configurations of Leisure in
Statius and Pliny the Younger (15 mins.)
4. Sheila Dillon, Duke University
Portraits as Performance: The Image of the Intellectual in the
4th c. BCE (15 min.)
5. David Fredrick, University of Arkansas
Grasping the Pangolin: Sensual Ambiguity in Roman Dining (20
min.)
Respondent: Ann Kuttner, University of Pennsylvania (15
mins.)
9:00 a.m.-11:45 a.m. Section 53 Salon L
1. Gerald Sandy, University of British
Columbia
Jacques Amyot
and the Epopée Héroique in Prose: The
Sçavant Translateur (20
mins.)
2. Federica Ciccolella de Luigi, Columbia University
When Dialogue Becomes Idyll: A 17th Century Translation of
Lucians Dialogues of the Sea Gods (20 mins.)
3. Tom Jenkins, Trinity University (San Antonio)
An American
Classic: Hillman and Cullens Dialogues of the
Courtesans (20 mins.)
4. Deborah Roberts, Haverford College
Petronius and the Vulgar Tongue: Colloquialism, Obscenity,
Translation (20 mins.)
5. Douglass Parker, University of Texas at Austin
Translating Senecas Apocolocyntosis as a Play for Voices
(20 mins.)
Respondent: Elizabeth Vandiver, University of Maryland (20
mins.)
9:00 a.m. - 10:00 a.m. Conference Suite II
9:00 a.m. - 10:00 a.m. Conference Suite I
9:00 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. Conference Suite III
11:45 a.m. - 1:45 p.m. Section 54 Salon J
1. Max Nelson, University of British Columbia
Beer and
Elephants: On Some Unnoticed Fragments from a Lost
Indica (15 mins.)
2. Mustafa Nakeeb, Bilkent University
Polybius Platonic Philosophy of History (15 mins.)
3. Holly Haynes, New York University
Vocabulum: Tacitus Dangerous Word (15 mins.)
4. P. Andrew Montgomery, University of Iowa
The Nobility of Metellus (15 mins.)
5. Eleni Manolaraki, Cornell University
You Did This for Me! A Loyal Mutiny in 69 A.D. (15
mins.)
11:45 a.m. - 1:45 p.m. Section 55 Independence 1
1. Norbert F. Lain, University of
Pennsylvania
Catullus 67.23 (15 mins.)
2. Michael S. Cummings, Queens University at
Kingston
Flaccus Exclusus (15 mins.)
3. Sharon L. James, University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill
Her Turn to Cry: The Politics of Weeping in Roman Love Elegy (15
mins.)
4. Holly M. Sypniewski, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Servitium Amoris in Ovids Amores (15 mins.)
11:45 a.m. - 1:45 p.m. Section 56 Salon D
1. Robert C. Ketterer, University of Iowa
Why (Early) Opera is Roman and Not Greek (20 mins.)
2. Jeffrey L. Buller, Mary Baldwin College
The Oedipe of Georges Enesco: Human Will and the Victory Over
Fate (20 mins.)
3. M. D. Usher, University of Vermont with John Peel,
Willamette University, and Janice Johnson, Soloist
Creating
Vergilian Voices: The Composition of Voces Vergilianae (1999),
an Opera-Oratorio in Four Scenes
(20 mins.)
Respondent: Marianne McDonald, University of California, San
Diego (15 mins.)
11:45 a.m. - 1:45 p.m. Section 57 Independence 3
1. R. M. Van Den Berg, Trinity College,
Dublin
Becoming
Like God According to Proclus Interpretations of the
Timaeus, the Eleusinian Mysteries, and the Chaldaean
Oracles (20 mins.)
2. Serge Cazelais, Université Laval
Soul and
Body: The Two Images of the Androgynous Logos in Marius Victorinus,
Adversus Arium (20 mins.)
3. Sarah Klitenic, Trinity College, Dublin
Cosmogonic Activity in Pseudo-Dionysian Theurgy (20 mins.)
Respondent: John F. Finamore, University of Iowa (15
mins.)
11:45 a.m. - 1:45 p.m. Section 58 Salon I
1. Eleanor Winsor Leach, Indiana
University
Otium as luxuria in the Status Economy of
Plinys Letters (15 mins.)
2. Andrew Riggsby, University of Texas at Austin
Pliny in Space (15 mins.)
3. Ruth Morello, University of Manchester
Pliny and the Art of Saying Nothing (15 mins.)
4. Rhiannon Ash, University College, London
Aliud est enim epistulam, aliud historiam
scribere
(6.16.22). Pliny the Historian? (15 mins.)
5. Roy Gibson, University of Manchester
Pliny and the Art of Inoffensive Self-Praise (15 mins.)
11:45 a.m. - 1:45 p.m. Section 59 Salon K
1. Elli Mylonas, Brown University
XML: A Mature Form of Markup (15 mins.)
2. Deborah W. Anderson, University of California at
Berkeley
Getting Ancient Greek to Appear Correctly in Electronic Documents:
The Unicode Solution (15 mins.)
3. Jeffrey A. Rydberg-Cox, University of Missouri, Kansas
City
Computational Lexicography and Ancient Greek (15 mins.)
4. Kenneth Haynes, Boston University
Physical Form and Digital Texts (15 mins.)
5. John W. Thomas, Iowa State University
Introducing MERLOT: Peer Review and Collaboration for Online Learning
and Teaching (15 mins.)
11:45 - 1:45 p.m. Section 60 Salon L
1. Craig W. Kallendorf, Texas A&M
University
Aeneas in the New World: Stellas Columbeis
and Vergilian Pessimism (15 mins.)
2. Geoffrey Eatough, University of Wales, Lampeter
The Mexican Challenge (15 mins.)
3. Albert R. Baca, California State University, Northridge
The Angelopolis of Francisco Cabrera (15 mins.)
4. Nancy E. Llewellyn, University of California, Los
Angeles
Cabreras Tenochtitlan (15 mins.)
Respondent: Edward V. George, Texas Tech University (10
mins.)
12:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Room 309-310
2:00 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Section 61 Salon D
1. Hugh J. Mason, University of Toronto
Sapphos
Apples (15 mins.)
2. Bob Rust, Cornell University
The Language of
Complaint in Archilochus 13 West (15
mins.)
3. David Fearn, University of Oxford
An Incredulous
Scholiast and Some Issues of Genre and Performance in
Bacchylides Dithyrambs (15
mins.)
4. Thomas K. Hubbard, University of Texas at Austin
The
Dissemination of Epinician Lyric: Pan-Hellenism, Reperformance,
Written Texts (15 mins.)
5. Alexander Inglis, St. Anselm College
An Uneventful Journey: Correction of Homer in Pindar O. 7 (15
mins.)
2:00 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Section 62 Independence 1
1. Eric A. Parks, Boston University
Barbarian Women
at War in the Works of Tacitus (15
mins.)
2. David Wray, University of Chicago
Manly Matrons in
Seneca the Younger and Valerius Maximus
(15 mins.)
3. Antonios Augoustakis, Baylor University
Fashioning
Barbarian Women: The Female as Other in Silius Italicus
Punica (15 mins.)
4. Jill Connelly, Texas Tech University
Contemptor Ferri: The Impenetrable Man in Ovids
Metamorphoses 12 (15 mins.)
5. Trevor Fear, University of California, Los Angeles
The
tirocinium adulescentiae and the Carnival of Roman
Elegy (15 mins.)
2:00 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Section 63 Salon J
1. C. M. Fauber, University of Chicago
The Men-Repulsed-by-Slings and the Historiography of the
Archaic Period (15 mins.)
2. Alex Purves, University of Pennsylvania
Map and
Narrative in Herodotus
Histories (15 mins.)
3. Philip Kaplan, University of North Florida
Herodotus and the Measurement of Distance (15 mins.)
4. Mark Munn, Pennsylvania State University
The Speeches in
Thucydides (15 mins.)
5. John Carlevale, Berea College
Thucydides Political Theory of Youth (15 mins.)
2:00 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Section 64 Salon L
1. Alex Nice, University of the Witwatersrand
Conceptualising
Divination: Roman Attitudes and Approaches in the Second Century,
B.C. (15 mins.)
2. Katharina Volk, Bucknell University
Manilius
Heavenly Steps (Astronomica
4.119-121) (15 mins.)
3. Lora Louise Holland, University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill
Human Votaries and Divine Associations in the Cult of Diana (15
mins.)
4. Christopher Michael McDonough, Boston College
The Banquet
of Crassus: Politics, Myth, and Ritual (15
mins.)
5. J. Rufus Fears, University of Oklahoma
Trajan and the Ruler Cult (15 mins.)
6. Karen E. Klaiber, Temple University
Priestesses at the Roman Wedding (15 mins.)
2:00 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Section 65 Salon K
1. Donald Johnson and Jean Johnson, New York University
Conceptualizing and Writing an Integrated World History for Secondary
Students (15 mins.)
2. Steven W. Hirsch, Tufts University
The Ancient
Civilizations of the Mediterranean in a Global
Context (15 mins.)
3. Jennifer T. Roberts, City University of New York
Creative Compromise: Collaboration in the Writing of Textbooks (15
mins.)
4. Keith R. Bradley, University of Notre Dame
The Roman Empire in the First Century (15 mins.)
5. Ronald Mellor, University of California, Los Angeles
Documentaries and Historical Fiction in Teaching Ancient History (20
mins.)
Respondent: Peter Cohee, Boston Latin School (15
mins.)
2:00 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Section 66 Salon I
1. Christos Nifadopoulos, University of
Cambridge
Priscian in Constantinople: Transforming Hellenismos into
Latinitas (20 mins.)
2. Jocelyn Penny Small, Rutgers University
Artists and
Literacy: The Vatican Vergil (20
mins.)
3. Dorothy Verkerk, University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill
Early Medieval Learning, Literacy, and Looking (20 mins.)
4. Michael C. Tinkler, Hobart and William Smith Colleges
Reading the Writing on the Walls of Carolingian Francia (20
mins.)
5. Sarah Powrie, University of Toronto
Oral and Literate Traditions in Twelfth-Century Scholastic Traditions
(20 mins.)
Respondent: John Miles Foley, University of Missouri, Columbia
(10 mins.)
2:00 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Section 67 Independence
3
1. Calvert Watkins, Harvard University
Some Indo-European Logs (25 mins.)
2. Fabrice Cavoto, University of California, Los Angeles
The Complex Origin of the Greek Paradigm of lambano and its
Reflection of Indo-European Root Structure (25 mins.)
3. Jeremy Rau, Cornell University
Greek eidulis, Poluidos and the Perfect Participle
Active (25 mins.)
4. Coulter George, University of Cambridge
The Expression of the Agent with the Greek Perfect Passive (25
mins.)
5. Yelena Baraz, University of California at Berkeley
Recomposition of Latin Compound Verbs (25 mins.)
American School of Classical Studies at Athens 216
Archaeology Magazine 416
Ares Publishers, Inc. 110
Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers 315
Cambridge University Press 215/ 217/ 219
Center for Education Abroad at Arcadia Univ. 317
David Brown Book Co. 208/210
Focus Publishing/ R. Pullins Co. Inc. 306
Getty Publications 214
Hackett Publishing 106
Harvard University Press 310
Indiana University Press 316
John Benjamins Publishing 308
Journal of Roman Archaeology 314
Oxford University Press 407/409
Peeters Publishers 319
Penguin Putnam Inc. 311
Petra Fine Arts 108
Princeton University Press 406/408
Routledge 207
The American University in Cairo Press 320
The Scholar's Choice 322/324
The University of Wisconsin Press 209
University of California Press 211
University of Michigan Press 414
University of North Carolina Press 309
University of Pennsylvania Museum Publications 114
University of Texas Press 115
Walter de Gruyter, Inc. 107/109/111
Wimbledon Publishing Co., Ltd 511
Yale University Press 307
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