Just a heads up: the lectures are going to be delivered virtually this year.
February 6
“Art and Allusion: Image Construction in Attic Vase-Painting”
François Lissarrague, Directeur d'Études Emeritus, École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, Paris
February 27
“Imperial Transgressions: Satire and Subversion in the Life of Elagabalus”
Mary Beard, Professor of Classics, University of Cambridge and Fellow of Newnham College
March 13
“Defying Grammar: Linguistic Privileges for the Gods”
Maurizio Bettini, Professor Emeritus of Classical Philology and Director of the Center for Anthropology and the Classics, University of Siena
April 3
“The Shield and the Cave: Motion and Emotion in Plato's Republic”
Mary Margaret McCabe, Professor of Ancient Philosophy Emerita, King's College London
All lectures at 11am Pacific Time.
Registration info can be found here:
https://classics.berkeley.edu/people/sa ... her-series
Sather Lecture Series 2021
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- Textkit Member
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Sather Lecture Series 2021
Why, he's at worst your poet who sings how Greeks
That never were, in Troy which never was,
Did this or the other impossible great thing!
---Robert Browning
-------------------------------------------------------
Hal Friederichs
That never were, in Troy which never was,
Did this or the other impossible great thing!
---Robert Browning
-------------------------------------------------------
Hal Friederichs
- seneca2008
- Textkit Zealot
- Posts: 2006
- Joined: Wed Sep 09, 2015 1:48 pm
- Location: Londinium
Re: Sather Lecture Series 2021
Thank you Ahab very much for posting this.
I missed the first lecture but watched the second last night. It was a very interesting account of the treatment of Elagabalus in the sources and what it can tells us about autocracy and the way it is problematised.
The lecture is now available on line here https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xyzwmwKDz54.
I haven't found the link for the first lecture but apparently all four of the lectures are to find their way onto the Berkley classics YouTube channel. The Beard lecture is an unlisted video so perhaps that's the case with the first.
I missed the first lecture but watched the second last night. It was a very interesting account of the treatment of Elagabalus in the sources and what it can tells us about autocracy and the way it is problematised.
The lecture is now available on line here https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xyzwmwKDz54.
I haven't found the link for the first lecture but apparently all four of the lectures are to find their way onto the Berkley classics YouTube channel. The Beard lecture is an unlisted video so perhaps that's the case with the first.
Persuade tibi hoc sic esse, ut scribo: quaedam tempora eripiuntur nobis, quaedam subducuntur, quaedam effluunt. Turpissima tamen est iactura, quae per neglegentiam fit. Et si volueris attendere, maxima pars vitae elabitur male agentibus, magna nihil agentibus, tota vita aliud agentibus.
-
- Textkit Member
- Posts: 114
- Joined: Sun May 08, 2011 2:22 pm
Re: Sather Lecture Series 2021
The first lecture is now online:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OOO_NzH ... eyClassics
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OOO_NzH ... eyClassics
Why, he's at worst your poet who sings how Greeks
That never were, in Troy which never was,
Did this or the other impossible great thing!
---Robert Browning
-------------------------------------------------------
Hal Friederichs
That never were, in Troy which never was,
Did this or the other impossible great thing!
---Robert Browning
-------------------------------------------------------
Hal Friederichs
- seneca2008
- Textkit Zealot
- Posts: 2006
- Joined: Wed Sep 09, 2015 1:48 pm
- Location: Londinium
Re: Sather Lecture Series 2021
Thanks for the link, Ahab. It was a fascinating lecture. I have always wondered about those shields and cups floating around detached from the "main" scene on pots and now I have a some new ways of thinking about them. It was an illuminating insight into the methods of the painters and underlined how radical some of their ideas must have been, particularly the way they played with the frame and how it cut across figures leaving you to imagine what was outside.
I also watched last night's lecture "Defying Grammar: Linguistic Privileges for the Gods" by Maurizio Bettini. He talked about how texts often use the plural form of God's names despite ancient grammarian's saying that there is no plural form and that the gods are singular.
He was dismissive of the usual explanation (by Fordyce et al) of Catullus' "Lugete, O Veneres Cupidiniseque" as simply "characteristic extravagance" and developed an argument based on the Gods' lack of personhood so that the idea of grammatical number didn't really apply to them.
This lecture is well worth listening to. There is also a handout here available from this page https://classics.berkeley.edu/events/sa ... leges-gods
I watched on Zoom and the lecture unfortunately has not yet turned up on the Berkeley Classics YouTube channel. The link I gave to the Mary Beard lecture is no longer working so I can only find the first lecture which Ahab posted. That lecture has been subtitled and perhaps that accounts for the delay in posting them. Ellen Oliensis (who hosted) reiterated the intention to have all the lectures on line, as well as some older material. If anyone has links please post them.
I also watched last night's lecture "Defying Grammar: Linguistic Privileges for the Gods" by Maurizio Bettini. He talked about how texts often use the plural form of God's names despite ancient grammarian's saying that there is no plural form and that the gods are singular.
He was dismissive of the usual explanation (by Fordyce et al) of Catullus' "Lugete, O Veneres Cupidiniseque" as simply "characteristic extravagance" and developed an argument based on the Gods' lack of personhood so that the idea of grammatical number didn't really apply to them.
This lecture is well worth listening to. There is also a handout here available from this page https://classics.berkeley.edu/events/sa ... leges-gods
I watched on Zoom and the lecture unfortunately has not yet turned up on the Berkeley Classics YouTube channel. The link I gave to the Mary Beard lecture is no longer working so I can only find the first lecture which Ahab posted. That lecture has been subtitled and perhaps that accounts for the delay in posting them. Ellen Oliensis (who hosted) reiterated the intention to have all the lectures on line, as well as some older material. If anyone has links please post them.
Persuade tibi hoc sic esse, ut scribo: quaedam tempora eripiuntur nobis, quaedam subducuntur, quaedam effluunt. Turpissima tamen est iactura, quae per neglegentiam fit. Et si volueris attendere, maxima pars vitae elabitur male agentibus, magna nihil agentibus, tota vita aliud agentibus.