9:00-10:30 Intertextuality and interdisciplinarity I
Chair: Alexandra Lianeri (aristotle University of Thessaloniki)
Edith Hall (Durham University)
The Iliad: Poem of the Anthropocene
Bernhard Zimmermann (University of freiburg/Heidelberger akademie)
Nietzsche’s “Geburt der Tragödie aus dem Geiste der Musik” and the consequences
Ioanna Karamanou (aristotle University of Thessaloniki)
Restoring the Past through Multispectral Imaging
10:30-11:00 COFFEE / TEA BREAK
11:00-12:30 Intertextuality and interdisciplinarity II
Chair: Bernhard Zimmermann(University of freiburg/Heidelberger akademie)
Florian Steger (Ulm University/Heidelberger akademie)
Why history, philosophy, and ethics of medicine in a medical faculty?
Sophia Xenophontos (aristotle University of Thessaloniki)
Boosting the Classics with shots of interdisciplinarity: Some remarks on the future of Classical Studies
Therese Fuhrer (Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich)
On the concept of “slow reading” in Latin language and literature
12:30-14:30 LUNCH BREAK
14:30-16:00 Patterns of politics and “socio-culture” I
Chair: Richard Hunter (University of Cambridge)
Josiah Ober (Stanford University)
Practical reasoning, ancient and modern (via Zoom)
Douglas Cairns (University of edinburgh)
Hubris, ancient and modern
Jacqueline Fabre-Serris (Charles de Gaulle University – Lille III)
Desire and sexual violence in the Metamorphoses
(Salmacis, Hermaphrodite; Arethusa, Alphaeus).
How to read and understand Ovid in his/our social context
16:00-16:30 COFFEE / TEA BREAK
16:30-18:30 Patterns of politics and “socio-culture” II
Chair: Lucia Athanassaki (University of Crete)
Roderick Beaton (King’s College London/British School at athens)
Civilisation or civilisations? New contexts for the ancient
Greek achievement
Margalit Finkelberg (Tel aviv University)
Julian’s school law, cultural capital, and the study of Classics
Paul Cartledge (University of Cambridge)
Why Sparta and the Spartans still matter (via Zoom)
Joshua T. Katz (american enterprise Institute)
Classics: Inside out and upside down (via Zoom)