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An Invitation: 40 Years after Nicole Loraux/EHESS




For those they remember:


The Athenian Funeral Oration: 40 Years after Nicole Loraux



An International Conference



The University of Strasbourg (France)



9-11 July 2018




<http://www.usias.fr/en/evenements/the-athenian-funeral-oration-40-years-aft
er-nicole-loraux/>
http://www.usias.fr/en/evenements/the-athenian-funeral-oration-40-years-afte
r-nicole-loraux/.



CONVENOR



David M. Pritchard (Queensland/Strasbourg)



 <mailto:dpritchard@xxxxxxxxxx> dpritchard@xxxxxxxxxx



SUMMARY



Registration is now open for The Athenian Funeral Oration: 40 Years after
Nicole Loraux. This international conference is taking place at the
University of Strasbourg from 9 to 11 July 2018. English-, French- and
German-speakers often read Pericles’s famous funeral oration at school or
university. Once a year, in democratic Athens, such an oration was delivered
in honour of the war dead. For the Athenians it was a vitally important
speech, because it reminded them who they were as a people and why they had
sacrificed their sons in war. This conference is undertaking the
most-thorough study of this genre in 40 years. The book to come from it will
be published by Cambridge University Press.



In 1981 the great French ancient historian, Nicole Loraux, published a
transformational study of this oration. Loraux proved that it had played a
central part in maintaining Athenian self-identity. Yet, despite her study’s
huge impact, it was far from complete. Her study did not compare the funeral
oration and the other genres of Athens’s popular literature. Therefore
Loraux could not prove her claim that the funeral oration was the most
important of these genres. This conference completes Loraux’s study by
making this comparison. In doing so it furnishes new studies of the 5 extant
funeral orations and the most-comprehensive account to date of war’s place
in democratic Athens’s popular culture.



SPONSORS



The conference is sponsored by L’Institut d’études avancées de l’Université
de Strasbourg ( <http://www.usias.fr/en/> http://www.usias.fr/en/). The
co-sponsors are Die Fritz Thyssen Stiftung für Wissenschaftsförderung
(Germany), The Estate of the Late Nicholas Anthony Aroney (Australia), The
University of Queensland (Australia), The Australasian Society for Classical
Studies, The Friends of Antiquity (Australia), The Australian Archaeological
Institute at Athens, Le Centre d’Analyse des Rhétoriques Religieuses de
l'Antiquité and The Kytherian Association of Australia.



PARTICIPANTS



The 2 keynote speakers are Peter Hunt (The University of Colorado at
Boulder) and Dominique Lenfant (L’Université de Strasbourg). The other 23
paper-givers and session-chairs are Vincent Azoulay (L’Université Paris-Est
Marne-la-Vallée), Nathan Arrington (Princeton University), Ryan Balot (The
University of Toronto), Thomas Blank (Die Johannes-Gutenberg-Universität
Mainz), Alastair Blanshard (The University of Queensland), Leonhardt
Burckhardt (Die Universität Basel), Jason Crowley (Manchester Metropolitan
University), Violaine Sebillote Cuchet (L’Université de Paris I–Panthéon
Sorbonne), Jonas Grethlein (Die Heidelberg Universität), Johanna Hanink
(Brown University), Judson Herrman (Allegheny College), Paulin Ismard
(L’Université de Paris I–Panthéon Sorbonne), Sophie Mills (The University of
North Carolina at Asheville), Neville Morley (Exeter University), Christophe
Pébarthe (L’Université Bordeaux Montaigne), Laurent Pernot (L’Université de
Strasbourg/membre de l'Institut de France), David M. Pritchard (The
University of Queensland/ L’Université de Strasbourg), Estelle Oudot
(L’Université de Bourgogne), Charles Pry (The University of Queensland),
Kurt A. Raaflaub (Brown University), Claudia Tiersch (Die
Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin), Johannes Wienand (Die
Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf) and Bernhard Zimmermann (Die
Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg).



CONFERENCE THEME



Each year the classical Athenians held a public funeral for fellow citizens
who had died in war. On the first two days they displayed the war dead’s
coffins in town centre of Athens. On the third day they carried them in a
grand procession to the public cemetery. There they placed the coffins in a
funeral monument that the democracy had built at great expense. Beside it a
leading politician delivered an oration ostensibly in the war dead’s honour.
In 1981 Nicole Loraux published a transformational study of this funeral
oration. Before her The Invention of Athens ancient historians had
considered this speech of little importance. But Loraux proved that it
played an absolutely central role in the self-perception of the Athenian
people. Each funeral oration rehearsed the same image of them: the Athenians
were always victorious and capable of repelling foreign invaders, because
they were braver than the other Greeks, while their wars only brought
benefits and were always just. The Invention of Athens proved that the
funeral oration typically created this image by narrating Athens’s military
history in mythical and historical times. Her study also made bold claims
about the genre. For Loraux it was the most important one for the
maintenance of Athenian self-identity, whose content, she asserted, was
confined to what the funeral oration rehearsed. The Invention of Athens
claimed that this self-identity adversely affected how the dēmos (‘people’)
conducted foreign affairs. Yet, her study did not systematically compare the
funeral oration and the other genres of Athens’s popular literature.
Consequently Loraux was unable to prove these bold claims.



This conference builds on Loraux’s rightly famous study by making this
comparison. The first way that it does so is by exploring the extent to
which the other genres reproduced the funeral oration’s commonplaces. In
dramatising the genre’s mythical military exploits tragedy certainly
rehearsed its image of the Athenians, while comedy regularly parodied it.
All this shows the funeral oration’s importance. At other times, however,
these two genres contradicted its commonplaces, depicting, for example, not
just the benefits but also the huge human costs of war. If Loraux’s claim
about the funeral oration’s adverse impact is correct, its image of the
Athenians must have had a big part in the assembly’s debates about war. The
political speeches that survive partially support her claim; for they do
show how proposals for war often were couched in terms of justice. But, it
appears, again, that this genre’s treatment of war also went well beyond the
funeral oration. The second way that the conference makes this comparison is
by studying how these different genres depicted the state’s military
history, democracy and sailors. This, too, will force us to modify Loraux’s
claims. There is no doubt that the funeral oration set the pattern for the
depiction of Athens’s wars. But this, apparently, was not the case with the
other common topics; for tragedy, it seems, took the lead with democracy,
while all genres equally reflected the dēmos’s positive view of sailors.



The Invention of Athens showed the need to study the funeral oration’s
intertextuality. By completing such a study this conference measures how
important this genre was in Athens’s popular culture. The conference will
provide what is the richest account yet given of war’s depiction in
democratic Athens. It also studies anew the 5 complete examples of the
funeral oration, because each continues to have ongoing problems. The first
funeral oration, which is said to be the one that Pericles delivered in 431
BC, comes from Thucydides, who did not accurately record speeches. There is
uncertainty, too, about the funeral orations from the Corinthian War, as
their authors, clearly, did not deliver them; for Lysias, as a metic, was
not entitled to do so, while Plato detested Athens’s democratic politics.
With each of these examples the conference considers why each writer wrote
or recorded it and to what extent it is good evidence of the genre. The
other 2 funeral orations must be re-examined as well, because, in spite of
the fact that they were delivered in, respectively, 337 and 321, the
authorship of Demosthenes’s still raises doubts, while Hyperides’s breaks so
many of the genre’s commonplaces. Since Loraux’s 1981 book a lot more has
been learnt about Athens’s funeral monuments and cultural history.
Consequently the conference will also re-examine how the funeral oration
related to the public funeral as well as Loraux’s claim that both were a
democratisation of elite practices. Because Reception History is now a major
sub-discipline, the conference can also do what Loraux never attempted: to
begin to write the history of the funeral oration’s reception in ancient and
modern times.



GENERAL INFORMATION




<http://www.usias.fr/en/evenements/the-athenian-funeral-oration-40-years-aft
er-nicole-loraux/>
http://www.usias.fr/en/evenements/the-athenian-funeral-oration-40-years-afte
r-nicole-loraux/.



Dr David M. Pritchard



Chercheur



Institut d’études avancées

Université de Strasbourg

5 allée du Général Rouvillois

67083 Strasbourg

FRANCE




Web:  <http://www.usias.fr/fellows/fellows-2017/david-pritchard/>
http://www.usias.fr/fellows/fellows-2017/david-pritchard/


Posted by:


Anastasia Serghidou,M.A,PhD (EHESS)
Ass.Prof.Ancient History
History Department
Rethymnon
University of Crete

Former Office 36 and tel: 28310-77352)
Tel. 28310 77352 (Dpmt.Secretary)
Fax. 28310 77338 (Dpmt.Secretary)







--- Begin Message ---

STRASBOURG (FRANCE)

 

The Athenian Funeral Oration: 40 Years after Nicole Loraux 

 

An International Conference

 

The University of Strasbourg (France)

 

9-11 July 2018

 

http://www.usias.fr/en/evenements/the-athenian-funeral-oration-40-years-after-nicole-loraux/.

 

CONVENOR

 

David M. Pritchard (Queensland/Strasbourg)

 

dpritchard@xxxxxxxxxx

 

SUMMARY

 

Registration is now open for The Athenian Funeral Oration: 40 Years after Nicole Loraux. This international conference is taking place at the University of Strasbourg from 9 to 11 July 2018. English-, French- and German-speakers often read Pericles’s famous funeral oration at school or university. Once a year, in democratic Athens, such an oration was delivered in honour of the war dead. For the Athenians it was a vitally important speech, because it reminded them who they were as a people and why they had sacrificed their sons in war. This conference is undertaking the most-thorough study of this genre in 40 years. The book to come from it will be published by Cambridge University Press.

 

In 1981 the great French ancient historian, Nicole Loraux, published a transformational study of this oration. Loraux proved that it had played a central part in maintaining Athenian self-identity. Yet, despite her study’s huge impact, it was far from complete. Her study did not compare the funeral oration and the other genres of Athens’s popular literature. Therefore Loraux could not prove her claim that the funeral oration was the most important of these genres. This conference completes Loraux’s study by making this comparison. In doing so it furnishes new studies of the 5 extant funeral orations and the most-comprehensive account to date of war’s place in democratic Athens’s popular culture. 

 

SPONSORS

 

The conference is sponsored by L’Institut d’études avancées de l’Université de Strasbourg (http://www.usias.fr/en/). The co-sponsors are Die Fritz Thyssen Stiftung für Wissenschaftsförderung (Germany), The Estate of the Late Nicholas Anthony Aroney (Australia), The University of Queensland (Australia), The Australasian Society for Classical Studies, The Friends of Antiquity (Australia), The Australian Archaeological Institute at Athens, Le Centre d’Analyse des Rhétoriques Religieuses de l'Antiquité and The Kytherian Association of Australia.

 

PARTICIPANTS

 

The 2 keynote speakers are Peter Hunt (The University of Colorado at Boulder) and Dominique Lenfant (L’Université de Strasbourg). The other 23 paper-givers and session-chairs are Vincent Azoulay (L’Université Paris-Est Marne-la-Vallée), Nathan Arrington (Princeton University), Ryan Balot (The University of Toronto), Thomas Blank (Die Johannes-Gutenberg-Universität Mainz), Alastair Blanshard (The University of Queensland), Leonhardt Burckhardt (Die Universität Basel), Jason Crowley (Manchester Metropolitan University), Violaine Sebillote Cuchet (L’Université de Paris I–Panthéon Sorbonne), Jonas Grethlein (Die Heidelberg Universität), Johanna Hanink (Brown University), Judson Herrman (Allegheny College), Paulin Ismard (L’Université de Paris I–Panthéon Sorbonne), Sophie Mills (The University of North Carolina at Asheville), Neville Morley (Exeter University), Christophe Pébarthe (L’Université Bordeaux Montaigne), Laurent Pernot (L’Université de Strasbourg/membre de l'Institut de France), David M. Pritchard (The University of Queensland/ L’Université de Strasbourg), Estelle Oudot (L’Université de Bourgogne), Charles Pry (The University of Queensland), Kurt A. Raaflaub (Brown University), Claudia Tiersch (Die Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin), Johannes Wienand (Die Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf) and Bernhard Zimmermann (Die Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg). 

 

CONFERENCE THEME

 

Each year the classical Athenians held a public funeral for fellow citizens who had died in war. On the first two days they displayed the war dead’s coffins in town centre of Athens. On the third day they carried them in a grand procession to the public cemetery. There they placed the coffins in a funeral monument that the democracy had built at great expense. Beside it a leading politician delivered an oration ostensibly in the war dead’s honour. In 1981 Nicole Loraux published a transformational study of this funeral oration. Before her The Invention of Athens ancient historians had considered this speech of little importance. But Loraux proved that it played an absolutely central role in the self-perception of the Athenian people. Each funeral oration rehearsed the same image of them: the Athenians were always victorious and capable of repelling foreign invaders, because they were braver than the other Greeks, while their wars only brought benefits and were always just. The Invention of Athens proved that the funeral oration typically created this image by narrating Athens’s military history in mythical and historical times. Her study also made bold claims about the genre. For Loraux it was the most important one for the maintenance of Athenian self-identity, whose content, she asserted, was confined to what the funeral oration rehearsed. The Invention of Athens claimed that this self-identity adversely affected how the dēmos (‘people’) conducted foreign affairs. Yet, her study did not systematically compare the funeral oration and the other genres of Athens’s popular literature. Consequently Loraux was unable to prove these bold claims.

 

This conference builds on Loraux’s rightly famous study by making this comparison. The first way that it does so is by exploring the extent to which the other genres reproduced the funeral oration’s commonplaces. In dramatising the genre’s mythical military exploits tragedy certainly rehearsed its image of the Athenians, while comedy regularly parodied it. All this shows the funeral oration’s importance. At other times, however, these two genres contradicted its commonplaces, depicting, for example, not just the benefits but also the huge human costs of war. If Loraux’s claim about the funeral oration’s adverse impact is correct, its image of the Athenians must have had a big part in the assembly’s debates about war. The political speeches that survive partially support her claim; for they do show how proposals for war often were couched in terms of justice. But, it appears, again, that this genre’s treatment of war also went well beyond the funeral oration. The second way that the conference makes this comparison is by studying how these different genres depicted the state’s military history, democracy and sailors. This, too, will force us to modify Loraux’s claims. There is no doubt that the funeral oration set the pattern for the depiction of Athens’s wars. But this, apparently, was not the case with the other common topics; for tragedy, it seems, took the lead with democracy, while all genres equally reflected the dēmos’s positive view of sailors.

 

The Invention of Athens showed the need to study the funeral oration’s intertextuality. By completing such a study this conference measures how important this genre was in Athens’s popular culture. The conference will provide what is the richest account yet given of war’s depiction in democratic Athens. It also studies anew the 5 complete examples of the funeral oration, because each continues to have ongoing problems. The first funeral oration, which is said to be the one that Pericles delivered in 431 BC, comes from Thucydides, who did not accurately record speeches. There is uncertainty, too, about the funeral orations from the Corinthian War, as their authors, clearly, did not deliver them; for Lysias, as a metic, was not entitled to do so, while Plato detested Athens’s democratic politics. With each of these examples the conference considers why each writer wrote or recorded it and to what extent it is good evidence of the genre. The other 2 funeral orations must be re-examined as well, because, in spite of the fact that they were delivered in, respectively, 337 and 321, the authorship of Demosthenes’s still raises doubts, while Hyperides’s breaks so many of the genre’s commonplaces. Since Loraux’s 1981 book a lot more has been learnt about Athens’s funeral monuments and cultural history. Consequently the conference will also re-examine how the funeral oration related to the public funeral as well as Loraux’s claim that both were a democratisation of elite practices. Because Reception History is now a major sub-discipline, the conference can also do what Loraux never attempted: to begin to write the history of the funeral oration’s reception in ancient and modern times. 

 

GENERAL INFORMATION

 

http://www.usias.fr/en/evenements/the-athenian-funeral-oration-40-years-after-nicole-loraux/.

 

Dr David M. Pritchard

 

Chercheur

 

Institut d’études avancées

Université de Strasbourg

5 allée du Général Rouvillois

67083 Strasbourg

FRANCE

 

Courriel: dpritchard@xxxxxxxxxx

Tél.: +33 (0)3 88 36 98 59

Portable: +33 (0)7 87 47 41 97

Web: http://www.usias.fr/fellows/fellows-2017/david-pritchard/

 

NOUVEAU LIVRE

 

Public Spending and Democracy in Classical Athens


http://utpress.utexas.edu/index.php/books/pritchard-public-spending-democracy-classical-athens

You can manage your subscription and view message archives at http://listserv.liv.ac.uk/archives/classicists.html

--- End Message ---


ΛΙΣΤΑ ΚΟΙΝΟΠΟΙΗΣΕΩΝ ΣΤΗ ΦΙΛΟΣΟΦΙΚΗ ΣΧΟΛΗ.