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OIKOS CRASIS Masterclass and Annual Meeting on 'Exemplarity'

When:Fr 25-02-2022
Where:Groningen, online

Registration is now open for the CRASIS Annual meeting on 25 February 2022 at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands. The Annual Meeting is designed to promote discussion and the exchange of ideas about the ancient world across traditional disciplinary boundaries. You can register for the Annual Meeting via this form. The deadline for registration for in-person attendance is Friday 18 February, for online attendance 23 February.

Each year, an internationally acknowledged expert in one of the fields represented by CRASIS is invited to deliver the CRASIS Keynote Lecture at the annual meeting. This year we are honoured to welcome Prof. Rebecca Langlands (University of Exeter) as keynote speaker and master. The overall theme of the 2022 Masterclass and Annual Meeting is: Exemplarity.

Theme

Exemplarity is an important feature of all human societies. We use specific examples as tools for developing abstract thoughts or sharing our ideas with others. Skills in music, painting and sport – even handwriting – are developed through contemplation and imitation of exemplary models. This is true for broader life skills too: when it comes to learning how to fit in socially and how to live one’s life well. Most cultures celebrate outstanding figures as a way of sharing normative values and ways of life: heroes, saints, villains, leaders. Real lives are simplified and transformed into easily graspable paradigms, providing a resource for ethical debate and learning. Such exemplars can be sources of inspiration or clarification, they can serve as spurs to emulation or imitation, they can delineate the limits of the possible and of the acceptable, the normative or the ideal. Their significance is also unstable and subject to contestation, as societies change or new voices emerge. In recent years we have seen how commemorative statues of historical figures around the globe have been a focus for the shared re-negotiation of value in changing communities: torn down, defended, or newly interpreted. Similarly, new kinds of exemplars can be an important means of empowerment for marginalised groups.

Exemplarity in the ancient Mediterranean world took many forms: from the exploits of Homeric heroes and their later reception to the use of exemplars and imitation in craftmanship, architecture and town-planning; from heroic statues of athletes, generals or statesmen to the depiction of virtues on sarcophagus reliefs and in funerary inscriptions; from the use of precedent in ancient law to the moralising tales prevalent in the Greco-Roman rhetorical tradition, in Stoic philosophy, in Roman exemplary ethics, and in the writings of Second Temple and Hellenistic Judaism and early Christianity.

Central topics

  • Negative examples: what role do these play in different spheres, such as ethics, education, rhetoric, or community building? Are they inherently different in their function from positive exemplars?
  • The exemplary deployed as a mode for interpreting and commemorating the past, and in the construction of identities –e.g. communal, familial, individual?
  • The movement of exemplary stories, figures or motifs between cultures, groups, or between different genres or media.
  • The effect of different media on exemplarity: does it function differently in e.g. painting, sculpture, poetry, performance, architecture, epigraphy?
  • The role of specific examples or paradigms in rhetoric or philosophy, ancient or modern; what distinction is there between real-life, historical, fictional and hypothetical?
  • Identity and exemplarity: do exempla discourage diversity? Can our role-models be people we do not identify with? (How) can a slave be a role model for a free person, or vice versa? how might gender and other intersections of status and identity disrupt or enrich the process of exemplarity?
  • Imitation, innovation, adaptation: how are examples, models and templates used as the basis for e.g. learning, education, or artistic production.
  • Reception of ancient exemplars in post-classical settings: how (and why) are ancient examples, heroes and stories made new and relevant in different settings?

About the speaker

Rebecca Langlands is Professor of Classics, with particular interests in Latin literature and Roman culture, ethics and exemplarity, the history of sexuality and classical reception. She is the author of Sexual Morality in Ancient Rome (CUP 2006), Sex, Knowledge and Receptions of the Past (edited with Kate Fisher, OUP 2015), Exemplary Ethics in Ancient Rome (CUP 2018) and Literature and Culture in the Roman Empire, 96-235. Cross-Cultural Interactions (edited with Alice König and James Uden, 2020). She is the co-director of the Sexual Knowledge Unit (with Jana Funke, Ina Linge and Kate Fisher), and also of the award-winning Sex and History project which works with museums, schools, charities and young people to promote empowering discussion of contemporary sexual issues.

Programme

09.00-9.30 ---Coffee, tea, and registration---

09.30-09.40 Opening remarks and welcome

Session 1 – Chair: Jeremia Pelgrom

09.40-10.15 Heiko Westphal (University of Fribourg) - Transgressive Behaviour and the Exemplary Discourse at Rome

10.15-10.50 Nell Mulhern (Temple University) - Foreclosure and Flattening: Exemplarity in Later Latin Poetry’

10.50-11.25 Baukje van den Berg (Central European University) - Moral Exemplarity and Ancient Poetry in Twelfth-Century Byzantium

11.25-11.55 ---Coffee/tea Break---

Session 2 – Chair: Eelco Glas

11.55-12.30 Carson Bay (University of Bern) & Jan Willem van Henten (University of Amsterdam) - Exempla in 1 Maccabees and Josephus’ Bellum Judaicum: Doing Jewish Exemplarity in the Greco-Roman World

12.30-13.05 Bärry Hartog (Protestant Theological University) - The Qumran Overseer: An Exemplar of Global Knowledge

13.05-14.00 ---Lunch---

Session 3 – Chair: Arjen Bakker

14.00-14.35 Eleni Bozia (University of Florida) - Verba volant, statuae manent? Linguistic exemplarity and fame in the High Empire

14.35-15.10 Martin Dinter (King’s College London) - Exemplarity and Transmediality

15.10-15.40 ---Coffee/tea Break---

Keynote – Chair: Bettina Reitz-Joosse

15.40-17.10 Keynote lecture by Rebecca Langlands (University of Exeter) - Making and breaking exemplary models: lessons for today

Afterwards Reception & Dinner