[SydPhil] FW: Critical Antiquities Workshop - Marco Formisano
jeffruffels
jeffruffels at optusnet.com.au
Sat Nov 4 17:13:52 AEDT 2023
I hope you can see a recording of this.Love and kisses Jeff Sent from my Galaxy
-------- Original message --------From: Tristan Bradshaw <tbradshaw at uow.edu.au> Date: 3/11/23 11:48 am (GMT+10:00) To: sydphil at mailman.sydney.edu.au Subject: [SydPhil] Critical Antiquities Workshop - Marco Formisano
Dear all,
At the next Critical Antiquities Workshop, we are very excited to host
Marco Formisano (Classics, Ghent University) for his paper, ‘“The Nomadic Alternative”: Classics in Motion.’
Please note, this will be a
hybrid event. It will be broadcast on Zoom from the University of Sydney, in the School of Humanities Common Room (Rm 822 Brennan-MacCallum Building). Please join us in person if you are able.
It will be held on
Thursday, November 16, 9:30am-11am (Sydney, Canberra, Melbourne time).
Here is the time in other locations:
Los Angeles/Vancouver: Wednesday, November 15, 2:30pmChicago/Mexico City: Wednesday, November 15, 4:30pmNew York: Wednesday, November 15, 5:30pmSantiago/Buenos Aires/Rio de Janeiro: Wednesday, November 15, 7:30pmDublin/Belfast/London: Wednesday,
November 15, 10:30pmParis/Berlin/Rome/Johannesburg: Wednesday,
November 15, 11:30pmJohannesburg/Athens/Cairo: Thursday,
November 16, 12:30amBeijing/Singapore/Perth: Thursday, November 16, 6:30amTokyo: Thursday, November 16, 7:30amDarwin: Thursday, November 16, 8amBrisbane:
Thursday, November 16, 8:30amAdelaide: Thursday, November 16, 9am
To register, please sign up for the Critical Antiquities Network mailing list to receive Zoom links and CAN announcements:
https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/MujnCwV1vMfvrv8j3TVKT_y?domain=signup.e2ma.net
Here is the abstract:
Nothing seems to be so alien to scholarly activity than nomadic life, i.e. a non-sedentary existence, in constant motion and with an unstable identity, an identity
that is not strictly connected to a specific place. Moreover, nomadic culture almost sounds like an oxymoron from a certain perspective: culture is always connected with fixed places and their possible transformations through the ages. But what if classicists
adopt a nomadic perspective in order to read ancient Greek and Latin texts? Is there a textuality that can be defined as nomadic? Philosopher Rosi Braidotti discussed and identified a “nomadic theory” that resists dominant neo-liberal concepts of culture by
emphasizing alterity, post-human otherness and the relevance of the environment. In this talk, bearing the title of a book that British writer Bruce Chatwin wanted to write but was not able to accomplish, I launch the hypothesis of a nomadic approach to ancient
texts, with the purpose of offering a new perspective on current debates proliferating around the discipline of Classics, its role in contemporary culture, and its uncertain future.
We hope to see you there,
Tristan and Ben
Tristan Bradshaw
Lecturer, School of Liberal Arts | Co-director, Critical Antiquities Network
Faculty of the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities | Building 19 Room 1085
University of Wollongong NSW
2522 Australia
T +61 2 4221 3850
uow.edu.au | criticalantiquities.org
Honorary Associate
University of Sydney
School of Humanities, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences
University of Wollongong CRICOS: 00102E
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