Warsztaty “Understanding Ancient Women: New Approaches from Material Texts”
W dniach 17 i 18 maja 2024 r. w Sali Kolumnowej Wydziału Historii UW odbędą się międzynarodowe warsztaty “Understanding Ancient Women: New Approaches from Material Texts” organizowane przez dr Karolinę Frank (Uniwersytet Warszawski) i dr Grace Stafford (Uniwersytet Wiedeński).
Wszystkich zainteresowanych historią kobiet w antyku oraz badaniami nad źródłami epigraficznymi i papirologicznymi zapraszany do wysłuchania prezentacji prelegentów i do uczestniczenia w dyskusjach.
PROGRAM:
Friday 17 May:
13.00 – 13.30 Karolina Frank (Warsaw)/Grace Stafford (Vienna): Welcome
13.30 – 14.15 Grace Stafford (Vienna): Ancient Women and Material Texts: A Methodological Introduction
14.15 – 15.00 Rachael Helen Banes (Austrian Academy of Sciences): Gendering Graffiti: Establishing Female Authorship, Presence and Behaviours in Greek Graffiti from Late Antiquity
— Break —
15.30 – 16.15 Sofia Bianchi Mancini (Erfurt): Women in Sicilian Legal Curses and Their Role in the Lawcourts
16.15 – 17.00 Marina Bastero Acha (Warsaw): Women at the Table: A Methodological Approach to Roman Banquets and Women’s Benefaction through Epigraphic Sources
Saturday 18 May:
10.00 – 10.45 Karolina Frank (Warsaw): Juxtaposing Formats: Studying Epirote Women through Personal and Public Epigraphic Texts (5th – 1st c. BCE)
10.45 – 11.30 Beatrice Pestarino (Liverpool): Women’s Sacrifices in Classical Cyprus? The Kition Tariff Revisited according to a Brelichian Approach
— Break —
12.00 – 12.45 Nuna Terri (Brussels): Choosing Thekla: Women’s Devotions Through Name-Giving and Name-Taking Practices from Inscriptions in Rough Cilicia
12.45 – 13.30 Anna Kelley (St Andrews): Violence and Social Bonds in Roman and Late Antique Egyptian Papyri: Women as Victims, Perpetrators, and Adjudicators
— Lunch —
14.30 – 15.15 Karolina Tomczyszyn (Oxford): ‘Here lies Dulis, the nun’: Shedding Light on Female Urban Asceticism in the Late Antique East through Inscriptions
15.15 – 16.00 Eugenia Vitello (Oxford): Women at the Intersection between Production and Euergetism: The Case of Roman Hierapolis
— Final discussion and wrap up —