Culture, Religion and Urban Environment in Late Antiquity and Beyond
This workshop draws links between contemporary conceptions of cities and learning to those from antiquity. This event is part of the research project Gaza: Tradition and Leadership in a Learning City, funded by the Royal Society of Edinburgh (RSE Arts & Humanities Research Workshops 2014):
Gaza in Palestine underwent, in common with other cities, a profound transformation during the sixth century AD in society, economy and religion. What is significant about Gaza is its thriving culture, as documented by ample literary and material evidence. The key questions of this project are: how did major figures of religious and secular life create educational authority in the urban context and attempt to shape through their leadership Gaza as a ‘learning city’? To what extent did these attempts respond to the challenges of change? The investigation focuses on the strategies through which cultural visions were disseminated across the civic community and relates them to modern uses of learning for the promotion of urban regeneration. The objective of this pilot study is to gain insight into the situational nature of learning across times and cultures.
Attendance is free. If you are able to attend please email [email protected] by Monday 4 August
CULTURE, RELIGION AND URBAN ENVIRONMENT IN LATE ANTIQUITY AND BEYOND
Date: Thursday, 7 August 2014, and Friday, 8 August 2014
Venue: Classics, University of Glasgow, 65 Oakfield Avenue, Murray Room
Thursday, 7 August 2014
09.30–10.00 | Jan R. Stenger (Glasgow): Introduction |
10.00–10.50 | Michael Osborne (Glasgow): Learning cities |
11.20–12.10 | Nigel Sprigings (Glasgow): The impact of culture on urban development |
14.30–15.20 | Claudia Tiersch (HU Berlin): A rhetor and his city: Gaza in the letters of Procopius |
15.20–16.10 | Fotini Hadjittofi (Lisbon): Town and Gown in the Orations of Choricius |
16.40–17.30 | David Westberg (Uppsala): Virtues old and new: Choricius on courage |
18.00 | Martin Hose (Munich): Public lecture: The importance of the Greek polis for Greek literature |
Friday, 8 August 2014
09.00–09.50 | Jan R. Stenger (Glasgow): Cultural leadership in Gaza |
09.50–10.40 | Therese Fuhrer (Munich): Rhetorics of theology: religious debates in late antique Carthage |
11.10–12.00 | Christa Gray (Glasgow): Jerome, Quintilian, and Little Paula: ideal education and ideology |
12.00–12.50 | Vicky Gunn (Glasgow): Contemporary Christian pluralism and civic higher education |
Jan Stenger
Professor Jan R. Stenger
Classics, School of Humanities
University of Glasgow
65 Oakfield Avenue
Glasgow G12 8QQ
http://www.gla.ac.uk/subjects/classics/
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