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CULTURAL HISTORY OF THE GREEKS   

 

Inaugural Queensland Greek History Conference

 

22-23 October 2010  

The University of Queensland  

Brisbane, Australia  

 

CONVENOR 

 

Dr David Pritchard (The University of Queensland) 

 

http://www.arts.uq.edu.au/?page=138090&pid=105822 

 

Registration is now open for the Inaugural Queensland Greek History
conference, which will be taking place at The University of Queensland
on Friday 22 and Saturday 23 October 2010. The keynote speakers are
Professor Vincent Gabrielsen of the University of Copenhagen and
Professor Margaret C. Miller of the University of Sydney. The conference
will be opened by His Excellency Alexios G. Christopoulos, the
Ambassador of Greece to Australia. The theme of this conference is the
cultural history of the Greeks and its main sponsor is The University of
Queensland Cultural History Project. The other sponsors are the R D
Milns Classics and Ancient History Perpetual Fund and the Greek Orthodox
Community of St George, Brisbane.

 

CONFERENCE THEME  

 

The Inaugural Queensland Greek History Conference showcases the
diversity of research on the cultural history of the Greeks which is
currently being undertaken in the universities of our region. Thus the
program of this conference includes papers on, among other topics,
mentalities and collective identities of the Greeks; the impact of these
cultural constructions on politics and foreign policy; representations
and reminiscences of migration, war and war atrocities; and the
reception of the recent or ancient past in subsequent periods of Greek
or European history. The conference also seeks to consolidate the ties
of solidarity between professional historians of the Greek world and
those outside of the research sector with a stake in the language,
history or culture of the Greeks from antiquity to the present day.

 

The writing of the history of the Greeks from ancient to modern times
has been profoundly altered by the recent cultural turn in the
Humanities. For much of the previous century historians had commonly
viewed culture as the product of relations between social classes or of
economic conditions, which, they believed, were the primary determinants
of reality and historical change. From the early 1970s this primacy of
social history began to be challenged. Historians of the ancient and
modern worlds showed how conceptions of, for example, social class,
national character or sexuality helped to constitute the human
behaviours which they purportedly only described. Today many historians
widely accept that social reality is largely discursively constituted
and turn to the realm of culture for their historical explanations.
Historians of the ancient and modern Greeks have been at the forefront
of this moving of cultural history from the periphery to the centre of
our discipline.  

 

KEYNOTE SPEAKERS  

 

Vincent Gabrielsen is Professor in the SAXO Institute at the University
of Copenhagen and holds Denmark's only Chair of Ancient History. His
research interests have ranged over the economic, fiscal and social
history of classical and hellenistic Greece; the institutional and
military history of the classical Athenian democracy; and the histories
of Rhodes and the Black Sea in ancient times. Among his books are
Remuneration of State Officials in Fourth Century BC Athens (Odense,
1981), Financing the Athenian Fleet: Public Taxation and Social
Relations (Baltimore, 1994), The Naval Aristocracy of Hellenistic Rhodes
(Aarhus, 1997) and The Black Sea in Antiquity: Regional and
Interregional Economic Exchanges (Aarhus, 2007), which he co-edited with
J. Lund.

 

Margaret C. Miller is Arthur and Renee George Professor of Classical
Archaeology at the University of Sydney. Her research interests lie in
the social culture of archaic and classical Greece with special
attention to exchange between Greece, Anatolia and the ancient Near East
in the Achaemenid period. Among her books are Athens and Persia in the
Fifth Century BC (Cambridge, 1997) and The Origins of Theatre in Ancient
Greece and Beyond: From Ritual to Drama (Cambridge, 2007), which she
co-edited with E. Csapo. She is at present completing a book on the
representation of Persians in Attic art. 

 

GENERAL INFORMATION   

 

The full program of the Inaugural Queensland Greek History Conference is
now available at http://www.arts.uq.edu.au/conference-program-138090.
Registration for paper-givers and other delegates is now open. There is
a heavily subsidised registration fee for postgraduate and undergraduate
students and all of those who register online before 31 August 2010 pay
only reduced early-bird rates. Delegates can obtain a hard copy
registration form at
http://www.arts.uq.edu.au/conference-registration-138090. 

 

Dr David Pritchard

 

Cultural History Project

Centre for the History of European Discourses

Discipline of Classics and Ancient History

 

School of History, Philosophy, Religion and Classics

Faculty of Arts 

University of Queensland

Brisbane 

QLD 4072 

Australia

 

Telephone: +61 7 3365 3338

Fax: +61 7 3365 1968

Email: [log in to unmask]