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Please find below the CFP for the CUNY Graduate Student Conference on
ancient music.

CALL FOR PAPERS

Sing, Muse: Literary, Theoretical, and Historical Approaches to Music in
Classical Antiquity

Eleventh Annual Graduate Conference in Classics

Friday, April 13, 2018

The Graduate Center, City University of New York

Keynote Speaker: Timothy Power, Rutgers University

Musical Performance: “Old Songs”

Music was an integral part of literary, artistic, social, and religious
life in ancient Greece and Rome. Beyond the power it has held in every
culture, both past and present, music in Greece was institutionalized as a
crucial element of education (mousike). The association with the divine
Muses, as well as the gods, Apollo and Hermes, illustrates its extension
into the religious sphere, where musical performance was pervasive. And yet
performance contexts were diverse and dynamic. Homeric bards recited epic
with accompaniment on the phorminx, flute girls played music at Greek
symposia, and carmina were sung at Roman games and festivals. Music held
sway over philosophical thought as well. While the Pythagoreans viewed the
cosmos itself as musical in its mathematical order and perfection, Plato’s
Socrates advises that certain modes have a negative effect on virtue. Such
moral and metaphysical ideas continued in the works of later musical
theorists; for instance, Aristides Quintillianus. On the other hand, the
movement of “new music,” an object of Plato’s attack, has increasingly come
to be seen on its own terms as innovating on the musical and poetic
traditions. Music was ubiquitous in the ancient world and is ripe for
further inquiry.

The PhD/ MA Program in Classics at the Graduate Center of the City
University of New York invites graduate students in Classics or related
fields to submit abstracts of papers that explore the theme of music in
antiquity. We encourage different approaches, such as philological,
literary, historical, theoretical, archaeological, musicological, and
anthropological.  On the whole, we hope this conference will address in
different ways what music meant to people living in ancient Greece and
Rome, as well as to those inheriting the Classical tradition.

Possible paper topics may include, but are not limited to:

·   What role(s) musicians played in Greek and Roman cultures

·   In what ways musical practice and theory changed under different
political/social contexts

·   To what extent music informed poetry and the poetic persona

·   Where Greeks and/or Romans located the line between sound and music

·   How descriptions of sound and/or music function in literature

·   What role music had in religious, military, and civic contexts

·   Where music and/or sound fit into various philosophical systems of
thought

·   How acoustic theory related to musical practices

·   How different scales and/or modes were conceptualized or were used

Please send an anonymous abstract of approximately 300 words as an email
attachment to [log in to unmask] by *January 12, 2018*.
Please include, in the body of the email, your name, university
affiliation, and the title of the presentation. Speakers will have 15
minutes to present. Selected applicants will be notified in early February.
Submissions and questions will be received by conference co-organizers Noah
Davies-Mason and Victoria Jansson.



Website: http://cunyclassicsconference2018.mozello.com/

-- 
Noah Davies-Mason
PhD Student, Classics
CUNY Graduate Center

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