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Call for Papers

"Valuing Others in Classical Antiquity"
Penn-Leiden Colloquia on Ancient Values
University of Pennsylvania
University of Leiden
Leiden (The Netherlands)
6-8 June 2008

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The "Penn-Leiden Colloquia on Ancient Values" was
established as a biennial venue for investigating the
diverse aspects of Greek and Roman values. Each colloquium
focuses on a single theme, which participants explore from a
diversity of perspectives and disciplines. So far, three
volumes have appeared, exploring a personal value, a
community value, and the spatial mapping of values
respectively: Andreia. Studies in Manliness and Courage in
Classical Antiquity, Leiden 2003, Free Speech in Classical,
Leiden 2004, City, Countryside, and the Spatial Organization
of Value in Classical Antiquity, Leiden 2006. A fourth
volume, on "badness and anti-values" is in preparation.

The topic of the fifth colloquium, to be held at the
University of Leiden, the Netherlands, June 6-8, 2008, will
be: "Valuing Others in Classical Antiquity"

In classical antiquity, a variety of value terms articulate
the idea that people 'belong together' or 'relate to each
other' as a family, a group, a polis, a community, parts of
the cosmos, or just as individual fellow human beings. Which
values were thought relevant in this connection? How do
these different conceptualizations function? What contexts
do they belong in, what contexts do they create? And what
effects do they generate, i.e. how do ideas about what we
might call 'fellow-feeling', 'empathy', 'humanity', 'unity'
and 'citizenship' work in Antiquity to make a group a group
or to make people 'do the right thing by each other'?

In this colloquium, our point of departure will not be any
one specific value, designated by just one Greek or Roman
term. Rather, we will explore the different values, with
their different perspectives, that ancient society found
useful in thinking about belonging together, social cohesion
and unity. Ancient terms that come to mind are, e.g.,
philanthrôpia, compounds with homo-, such as homoiotropos,
homonoia, homophuloi (and other kinship terms); oikeiôsis,
philia, sungeneia, koinon, koinônia, sumpatheia, communitas,
and humanitas or - from the negative side - the (anti-)-
values that produce stasis.

The question of 'valuing others', 'belonging together',
'social cohesion' is a highly relevant one in our
contemporary society, in which the 'integration',
'adaptation', 'assimilation' and 'participation' of minority
groups is a contested issue. What values are used to
articulate what binds together our multicultural society? Or
is that notion defunct?

For this fifth colloquium, therefore, we invite abstracts
for papers (30 minutes) on all aspects of our proposed
topic.

Selected papers will be considered for publication by Brill
Publishers. Those interested in presenting a paper are
requested to submit a 1-page abstract, by email (preferable)
or regular mail, before October 1st, 2007.


Contact:
(please copy both with email correspondence)

Professor Ineke Sluiter
Classics Department
University of Leiden
Doelensteeg 16, Johan Huizinga-building
POB 9515
2300 RA Leiden
The Netherlands
Phone: +31 (71) 527 3311
Email: [email protected]

Professor Ralph M. Rosen
Department of Classical Studies
University of Pennsylvania
202 Logan Hall
Philadelphia PA 19104-6304
USA
Phone: +1 (215) 898 7425
Email: [email protected]


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