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Aνατολική Αίθουσα
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09:05 - 09:30
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Statements / Introductory Remarks
- 09.05-09.10 Statement by Professor Antonios Rengakos, Vice President of the Academy of Athens
- 09.10-09.15 Statement by Dr Athanasios Stefanis, Director of the Research Centre for Greek and Latin Literature
- 09.15-09.30 Introductory remarks by Dr Andreas Serafim on behalf of the organizers
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09:30 - 11:00
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Exploring Dramatic Chorus: Music, Vocalics and Dance
Chair: Alexandra Rozokoki (Academy of Athens)
1. Armand D’Angour (University of Oxford):The Movements of the Chorus: Euripides’ Orestes Fragment
2. Lucia Athanassaki (University of Crete): Animal Imagery and Choral Self-Expression
3. Mali A. Skotheim (Ashoka University): Telling Stories in Dance in the Roman Empire and Ancient South asia
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11:00 - 11:30
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Coffee/Tea Break
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11:30 - 13:00
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The Art of Hiding in ancient Literature: Clothing, Deception and Enigma
Chair: Athanasios Stefanis (Academy of Athens)
1. Christos Tsagalis (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki): Clothes make the Man: Dressing in Iliad 10 and the Complex Case of Odysseus
2. Christos Kremmydas (Royal Holloway, University of London): Δόλῳ δ᾿ ὅ γε δάκρυα κεῦθεν (Od. 19.212): Representations of Non-Verbal Cues of Deception in Greek Literature
3. Ioannis Konstantakos (National and Kapodistrian University of Athens):The Enigmatic Image: Bilderrätsel, Performed Riddles and Visual Communication from Herodotus to Plutarch
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13:00 - 14:00
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Non-verbal Communication in Greco-Roman Oratory
Chair: Andreas Serafim (Academy of Athens)
1. Michael Gagarin (University of Texas at Austin):Non-verbal Communication in Athenian Forensic Speeches
2. Anthony Corbeill (University of Virginia):Hearing the Earth Speak: Paralinguistic Mutterings in Cicero, De haruspicum responsis
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14:00 - 16:00
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Lunch
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16:00 - 17:30
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Power Statuses, Social Norms and Politics
Chair: Maria Kanellou (Academy of Athens)
1. Donald Lateiner (Ohio Wesleyan University):Strategies of Nonverbal Persuasion and Rule-Infractions in Heliodoros’ Aithiopika
2. Bartłomiej Bednarek (University of Warsaw):How to be Sympotikos and What it Actually Means
3. Victoria E. Pagán (University of Florida):Making Tacitus Speak: Non-Verbal Communication in the Letters of Pliny
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17:30 - 18:00
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Coffee/Tea Break
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18:00 - 19:00
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Constructing Ethnicity: The Romans and the Others
Chair: Sophia Papaioannou (National and Kapodistrian University of Athens)
1. Glenys Davies (University of Edinburgh):Body Language and Becoming Roman on Trajan’s Column
2. Lloyd Llewellyn-Jones (Cardiff University):The Art of Being Persian: Body Language, Gesture, and Etiquette as an Achaemenid Cultural Code
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19:00 - 19:15
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Concluding remarks by Professor Sophia Papaioannou on behalf of the organizers
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