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Classics Graduate Colloquium: Time in Antiquity

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Keynote Address by Peter Bing, 勛圖厙 of Toronto, "Tombs of Poet's Minor Characters" from Friday, October 12-Saturday, October 13, 2018 in Eaton Humanities 250.

Schedule
There and Then, Here and Now (11:00 am)


Temporal Unevenness in CicerosDe Finibus bonorum et malorum -泭Andre Matlock, 勛圖厙 of California Los Angeles

A Time and a Place: Imagining Romes Legendary Past in Augustan泭Poetry -泭Samuel Kindick, 勛圖厙 of Colorado Boulder

Infinity, Eternity, and Relativity (1:30 pm)

Anaximanders Conception of Time -泭Andrew Hull, Northwestern 勛圖厙

T堯梗Timaeusand the Elements of a Created Time -泭Blythe Greene, 勛圖厙 of California San Diego

Time Doesnt Matter: The Unreality and Irrelevance of Time in LucretiusOn the Nature of Things -泭Amber Ace, 勛圖厙 of Chicago

The Times They are A-Changin (3:30 pm)

Time and Folklore in AristotlesHistory of Animals -泭Kristofer Coffman, 勛圖厙 of Minnesota Twin Cities

Seasonal Time in Longus -泭Elizabeth Deacon, 勛圖厙 of Colorado Boulder

This event is sponsored by the Department of Classics, UGGS, CHA, GCAH, CWCTP, and the PFC.


Results

On Friday evening, Bing delivered a lecture titled "Tombs of Poets Minor Characters" to an audience of 35 in which he broadened his own earlier study of the memorializing impulse of Hellenistic poets by considering a set of epigrams that function as epitaphs of fictional characters. Focusing on Sapphos Doricha, the children of Medea, and the daughters of Lykambes from Archilochus, Bing argued that the funerary epigrams of these minor characters are metafictions of the texts in which they appear. Each metafiction assumes a different memorializing form: Doricha is venerated with a real monument (i.e., the third pyramid of Giza), Medea's children are commemorated with a structure that was no longer standing but still preserved in the written and oral tradition, and the daughters of Lykambes are honored with a monument that only exists in literature. With these examples, Bing sought to reveal the different ways in which Hellenistic poets preserved and respected the poetic past.泭


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