University of Siena
First Call for Participation
I - QMDAA, International Summer School in
Quantitative Methods and Data Analysis in Archaeology
Villa Lanzi, Campiglia Marittima (Italy)
September 10-17, 2006
http://www.archeogr.unisi.it/qmdaa/
[log in to unmask] <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
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University of Oxford
Faculty of Classics, in association with Oriel College
Grocyn Lecturer
Salary: £19,481 - £31,476 p.a. (plus £6,621 allowance p.a. if residential
accommodation is not taken in Oriel). The college also offers a research
allowance of £1,300.
Applications are invited for the Grocyn Lecturership, tenable from 1
September 2006. The Lecturer will co-ordinate the Faculty’s language-
teaching programme; give Greek and Latin classes to undergraduates; train
graduates to teach language classes; examine language papers and develop
language courses. A fellowship at Oriel College is attached to the
lecturership, and the lecturer will be required to undertake 3 hours of
tutorial teaching per week. Candidates should have a high level of ability
in teaching in both Latin and Greek, in teacher training and in
organisation of teaching, and a commitment to course design and
development.
Applications consisting of a curriculum vitae and the names and addresses
of two referees should be sent to James Kilvington, Classics Centre,
George Street, Oxford OX1 2RL ([log in to unmask]).
Referees must be asked to send references to Mr Kilvington by the closing
date. Further particulars are available at
http://www.classics.ox.ac.uk/faculty/jobs/index.html. Deadline: 27 March
2006
The University is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
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Lecturer
Ancient History
School of European Culture and Languages University of Kent
http://jobs.ac.uk/jobfiles/CE747.html
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Call for Papers: "Regionalism and Globalism in Antiquity"
Keynote Speaker: Professor Lord Colin Renfrew (Cambridge University)
The Classical Association of the Canadian West (CACW) and the Classical
Association of the Pacific Northwest (CAPN) will hold a joint conference
on Friday, March 16 and Saturday, March 17, 2007, to be hosted by the
Department of Classical, Near Eastern, and Religious Studies at the
University of British Columbia, in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
The conference will be held at the Robson Square campus of the University
of British Columbia located in the heart of downtown Vancouver.
The theme of this conference is regionalism and globalism in antiquity. As
in the world today, ancient life at the local level was shaped by regional
and global phenomena. This conference seeks to delineate regionalism and
globalism in antiquity and to explore their effects on the local spatial
dimension. We invite papers and thematic panels from scholars, including
graduate students, interested in any aspect and time-period in antiquity
of regionalism and globalism in the Mediterranean basin and lands beyond.
Papers in all fields are encouraged--literature, epigraphy, history,
philosophy, oratory, religion, and art and archaeology. We encourage a
wide variety of approaches--disciplinary and interdisciplinary,
theoretical and empirical, and comparative and cross-cultural--and the
participation of a wide variety of scholars, not just classicists, but
also Near Eastern scholars, Eurasian prehistorians, and any others
interested in the conference theme.
Topics might include:
* sociopolitical networks (state formation, alliances, empires, etc.)
* economic, cultural, and geographic networks
* social, economic, cultural, and environmental change
* poetry, myth, music, and other creative activities
* sociolinguistics and dialects
* intellectual and spiritual traditions
* urbanism and the built environment
* ethnicity and identity
* cosmopolitanism and hybridity
* iconography and symbolism
* demography and disease
Topics might also include discussion of phenomena that encouraged and
discouraged regionalism and globalism in antiquity, and their study today,
such as:
* geography
* science and technology
* resistance and opposition of all kinds
* the commodification of society and nature
* structures and traditions of modern scholarship and teaching
Explanations of regional and global phenomena have often been couched in
terms of "influences" disseminated from areas of higher and more powerful
culture to ones of weakness and lower abilities. Recently, however, there
have been more nuanced discussions of the mechanics of interregional and
intercultural contact and interaction that could be investigated further.
Work elsewhere in the human sciences also suggests a role for
psychological and "epidemiological" factors in the creation of regionalism
and globalism that deserve more attention in the study of antiquity. Here
the brain has been shown to act like a common denominator in sociocultural
development and culture to spread like an epidemic or virus.
Papers are particularly encouraged on topics related to this theme.
Submissions are invited, however, on all subjects of special interest to
classicists. Questions and expressions of interest can be sent to the
chair of the conference organizing committee, Professor Franco De Angelis
(University of British Columbia) at [log in to unmask] Abstracts
of no more than 100-150 words for talks of twenty minutes should be sent
by e-mail attachment by the September 15, 2006 deadline to the programme
co-ordinator, Professor Robert Todd (University of British Columbia) at
[log in to unmask] We are seeking funding support for the
conference from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of
Canada, to help offset some of the costs of participating in the
conference and of preparing a volume of edited proceedings. Therefore, in
order to qualify, abstracts must also be accompanied by the following:
* Family name, given name, initials
* Institutional affiliation (if any) and department
* Degrees received (beginning with the most recent; please specify the
discipline)
* Recent positions held (beginning with the most recent)
* Audio-visual or other requirements
* E-mail and postal address
A preliminary program and details about participating in the conference
will be posted in early November 2006 on the conference website that will
be linked to the website of the Department of Classical, Near Eastern, and
Religious Studies at the University of British Columbia located at
http://cnrs.arts.ubc.ca.
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RESEARCH SEMINARS IN ANCIENT HISTORY AND CLASSICS:
FIRST SEMESTER 2006
Department of Classics and Ancient History School of Philosophical and
Historical Inquiry The University of Sydney
(1) 9 MARCH
Matthew McNamara (University of Sydney) ‘Some by Virtue Fall: Pliny and
the Politics of Vengeance in Post-Flavian Rome’.
Professor Philip van der Eijk (University of Newcastle upon Tyne) ‘Anti-
Classicism, Comparativism, Relativism: Current Developments in the Study
of Ancient Medicine’.
(2)16 MARCH
Dr Anton Powell (Classical Press of Wales) ‘Sex (and the Politics of
Sex) in Virgil's Aeneid’.
(3) 23 MARCH
Professor Richard Seaford (University of Exeter) ‘Sacred Sex and Tragic
Space’.
(4) 30 MARCH
Tony Natoli (University of New South Wales) ‘Socrates and Money: Plato
Apology 30b.2-4’.
Professor Stephen Harrison (Oxford University) ‘Making Waves: Marine
Metapoetics in Latin Poetry’.
(5) 27 APRIL
Tom Harber (University of Sydney) ‘Octavian and Felicitas: The Early Years
through to Philippi’.
Emeritus Professor Edwin Judge (Macquarie University) ‘Gallio, Gallienus,
Galerius: The Insoluble Problem of Toleration’.
(6) 11 MAY
Dr Julia Kindt (University of Sydney) ‘Testing the Oracle:
Authenticities and Authorities’.
Dr Trevor Evans (Oxford University) ‘The Language of the Individual in the
Zenon Archive’.
(7) 25 MAY
Ezzat Refaei (Macquarie University) ‘Local and Regional Diversity in
Predynastic Egypt: A Comparative Study of Funerary Practices’.
Luis Siddall (University of Sydney) ‘The Genealogy of Adad-Nirari III and
the Identity of the Ila-Kabkabis of the Assyrian King List’.
(8) 8 JUNE
Akiko Tomatsuri (University of Sydney) ‘A Study of the Concept of Mousikos
in Plato’s Laches’.
Associate Professor Rick Benitez (University of Sydney) ‘The Iconography
of a Virtue: Plato on Courage’.
(9) 22 JUNE
Professor Josiah Ober (Princeton University/Stanford University) ‘From
Tellus to Themistocles (via Lydia): Herodotus on Happiness, Information
and Decision-Making’.
Seminars are held more often than not every second Thursday between 4 and
6 pm in the Kevin Lee Room (Main Quadrangle H604) at the University of
Sydney. For further information on the program or to offer a research
paper of 40 minutes in second semester please make contact with the
Department’s convenor of the research seminar program, Dr David Pritchard
(+61-2-9351 6815; [log in to unmask]).
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There are only now a small number of places at this colloquium - if you
would still like to register, please contact me ([log in to unmask]) or
Marios Costambeys ([log in to unmask]) fairly soon.
best wishes, Tom Harrison
After Rome: Landmarks and Pathways
A Colloquium at the University of Liverpool
(Liverpool Centre for Medieval Studies; School of Archaeology, Classics
and Egyptology; School of History)
The last year has seen a spate of publications which offer new
perspectives on the shape and direction of the history of Europe and the
Mediterranean in the period 300-800CE. The University of Liverpool
invites you to a colloquium on Saturday 6 May 2006 at which the following
authors will discuss their recently published or forthcoming books:-
Chris Wickham (Framing the Early Middle Ages. Europe and the
Mediterranean, 400-800)
Julia Smith (Europe After Rome. A New Cultural History, 500-1000)
Peter Heather (The Fall of the Roman Empire)
Bryan Ward-Perkins (The Fall of Rome and the End of Civilization)
Stephen Mitchell (A History of the Later Roman Empire 284-641)
Respondents (to be finalized) will include: John Davies (Liverpool), Mark
Humphries (Maynooth), Michael Sommer (Liverpool), Andrew Wilson (Oxford)
ALL WELCOME
Proceedings begin at 10.30 a.m. Coffee, tea and lunch will be provided.
If you wish to register, please contact Tom Harrison
([log in to unmask]) or Marios Costambeys ([log in to unmask]): the fee is
£7, payable on arrival.
Venue: Lecture Room 1, School of Archaeology, Classics and Egyptology,
University of Liverpool, 12 Abercromby Square, Liverpool.
For directions, please refer to the website: http://www.liv.ac.uk/maps/
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Department of Classics, Royal Holloway, University of London
ON-LINE PLATO COURSE: AUTHOR REQUIRED
The Department of Classics at Royal Holloway is seeking a suitably
qualified person to write several units for its online course ‘The
Dialogues of Plato’; the course is part of the University of London
External Programme’s BA Degree in Classical Studies, developed and
administered by RHUL.
Details of the programme may be found at
http://www.londonexternal.ac.uk/prospective_students/undergraduate/holloway
/classical_studies/index.shtml
The successful applicant will work under the direction of Dr. Anne
Sheppard, Senior Lecturer in the Department of Classics. Subject to
consultation, units to be written may take into account the particular
interests and expertise of the person appointed. These units will be
offered to students in the External Programme at third-year level, and may
also be used to support Royal Holloway on-campus learning. It is expected
that course materials should be completed by 31st May 2006 or as soon as
possible thereafter.
Payment: to be negotiated. Payment will be made on a one-off basis on
submission of the completed materials.
Royal Holloway University of London and the University of London External
Programme are equal opportunities employers.
Expressions of interest should be sent as soon as possible to Professor
J.G.F.Powell, Head of the Department of Classics, Royal Holloway,
University of London, Egham Hill, Egham, Surrey TW20 0EX, preferably by e-
mail to [log in to unmask]
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St Paul’s School has a teaching vacancy for a full time teacher of
Classics for 2006.
St Paul’s offers greatly subsidised education for those who pass entry
qualifications.
Teaching experience is not essential.
Highly competitive salary and help with accommodation is available.
To find out more please contact
Ms Caroline Butler
Head of Classics
St Paul’s School
Lonsdale Road
Barnes,
London SW13 9JT
Tel: 020 8748 9162; Fax 020 8746 5353
Email: [log in to unmask]
www.stpaulsschool.org.uk
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END
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