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A Woman’s Pleasure: Philosophy and Sexuality in the Poetry of Sulpicia

Zoom Meeting Online

A lecture by Erin McKenna Hanses (Penn State University), part of the Winter 2022 CMRS-CEGS Research Seminar, Classics 250, “Eros. Amor. The Erotic Cultures of the Early Global World” taught by Professor Giulia Sissa (Political Science and Classics). In his diatribe against love in De Rerum Natura Book 4, Lucretius includes an idea found rarely in male-authored Roman poetry: the Epicurean asserts...

Green Like a Woman: Gender Expression and Erotic Manners

Zoom Meeting Online

A lecture by Tommaso Gazzarri (Union College), part of the Winter 2022 CMRS-CEGS Research Seminar, Classics 250, “Eros. Amor. The Erotic Cultures of the Early Global World” taught by Professor Giulia Sissa (Political Science and Classics). Professor Gazzarri's research explores the ancient association of the color galbinus with the figure of the cinaedus (Martial 3.82.5; Juvenal 2.97)....

A Two-Way Road: Comparative Anthropology of Eros and Sensuality in Latin Elegy and the Greek Novel

Zoom Meeting Online

A lecture by Romain Brethes (Sciences Politiques, Paris), part of the Winter 2022 CMRS-CEGS Research Seminar, Classics 250, “Eros. Amor. The Erotic Cultures of the Early Global World” taught by Professor Giulia Sissa (Political Science and Classics). One of the emerging questions facing scholars of the Greek novel, and imperial Greek literature more generally, is the...

Why (and How) Should a Platonist Laugh at Eros? Humor and Love in the “Symposium”

Zoom Meeting Online

A lecture by Pierre Destrée (Université de Louvain), part of the Winter 2022 CMRS-CEGS Research Seminar, Classics 250, “Eros. Amor. The Erotic Cultures of the Early Global World” taught by Professor Giulia Sissa (Political Science and Classics). In all societies and cultures, the erotic experience is complex. It is shaped by norms, habits, emotions and manners...

CMRS-CEGS Research Seminar: Iranian 250

Zoom Meeting Online

Dominic Brookshaw (Oxford University) "Zulaykha’s Redemption: From Lustful Villain to Female Icon" The guile associated with Zulaykha in the Qur’an is largely absent from her depiction in the ghazals of fourteenth-century Iran. The negativity surrounding Zulaykha’s expression (or manifestation) of female sexuality dims in the Persian ghazal where we witness the character’s salvific rehabilitation. On...

CMRS-CEGS Research Seminar: Iranian 250

Zoom Meeting Online

Leili Anvar (Sorbonne, Paris) "From the Desert of Arabia to the Gardens of Herat: Wanderings of Majnûn, the Poet-Lover" In this presentation, we will follow Majnûn in his journeys from the Arabic poems to the great Persian masnavis (composed by Nezâmi, Amir Khosrow Dehlavi and Jâmi). We shall see how -with the development of sufism and...

CMRS-CEGS Research Seminar: Iranian 250

Zoom Meeting Online

Prashant Keshavmurthy (McGill University) "Reading Niẓāmi Ganjavī’s Leylī u Majnūn as a Novel" Neither the Byzantines nor the Persians had any generic name for the Greek and Persian novels that were composed in the 12th century. Beholden to older (Attic Greek and Abbasid Arabic) models, the taxonomies of literary forms in both geographically adjacent literary cultures lagged...

CMRS-CEGS Research Seminar: Iranian 250

Zoom Meeting Online

Justine Landau (Sorbonne) "An Epic Tribute to the Lyric Poem" Poetry does things with words. In the premodern world, this fact is perhaps nowhere acknowledged more unanimously than in the Persianate sources. Chief among the arts of language, lyric poetry is associated with “licit magic,” after the Arabic saying, since its mastery is said to...

CMRS-CEGS Research Seminar: Iranian 250

Zoom Meeting Online

Julia Rubanovich (Hebrew University of Jerusalem) presents an online lecture titled "The Tale of Yūsuf and Zulaykhā through the Eyes of a Jewish Poet". This talk will examine a string of episodes from the tale of Yūsuf and Zulaykhā embedded into the “Book of Genesis” (Bereshit-nāma), a biblical poem composed by the fourteenth-century Judeo-Persian poet...

CMRS-CEGS Research Seminar: Iranian 250

Zoom Meeting Online

Paul Losensky (Indiana University) "A Common Thread: Three Literary Careers in Early Modern Persia, England, and Spain" The emergence of the concept of the Global Renaissance has brought new attention to the political, diplomatic, economic, and artistic connections between major civilizational centers in the early modern period. For the most part, however, literature has remained...

CMRS-CEGS Research Seminar: Iranian 250

Zoom Meeting Online

Shahzad Bashir (Brown University) "The Market in Poetry in the Persian World" The discussion will focus on Professor Bashir’s book The Market in Poetry in the Persian World (Cambridge UP, 2021), which treats poetic utterances as objects of material value sought by those with power and resources. The book provides a sense for the texture...

*CANCELLED* CMRS-CEGS Research Seminar: Iranian 250

Zoom Meeting Online

This session has been cancelled. Camilla Miglio (La Sapienza, Rome) "From Medieval Persian Literature to Modernist German Poetry" Iranian 250, “Persian Literature in English Translation: Global and Interdisciplinary Perspectives,”  taught by Associate Professor Domenico Ingenito (NELC), offers a survey of medieval and early modern Persian literature in English translation. The seminar fosters interdisciplinary conversations among graduate...

CMRS-CEGS Research Seminar Public Lecture: Brian Baigrie

Zoom Meeting Online

"Making Things Visible: Galileo and the Spottiness of the Moon" by guest scholar Brian Baigrie (IHPST Toronto). Register to attend here. The Fall 2022 CMRS-CEGS Research Seminar is “Picturing Knowledge in Historical Perspective” (Philosophy 206) taught by Professors Calvin Normore (Philosophy) and Brian Copenhaver (Philosophy, History). This interdisciplinary seminar traces some of the ways, from...

CMRS-CEGS Research Seminar Public Lecture: Ingrid Rowland

Royce 314 10745 Dickson Ct, Los Angeles, CA

"Curzio Inghirami (1614-1655), Forger and Playwright of Volterra" by guest scholar Ingrid Rowland (Architecture, University of Notre Dame). Online with Zoom and in person in Royce 314. Register to attend in person here. Register to attend on Zoom here. The Fall 2022 CMRS-CEGS Research Seminar is “Picturing Knowledge in Historical Perspective” (Philosophy 206) taught by...

Religious Dissent and Violence in Late Antiquity – Research Seminar Public Lecture

Bunche 6275

This lecture, "Religious dissent and violence in Late Antiquity," is by Professor Maijastina Kahlos (Helsinki/Lisbon), part of the CMRS-CEGS Research Seminar graduate course for Spring 2023, Persecution and Defiance: Religious Minorities in the Roman World 200-700 CE (History201B). Violence was part of the late antique life. How considerable role did violent conflicts play in Late...

The Acts of the Christian Martyrs and Court Protocols – Research Seminar Public Lecture

Bunche 2181

This lecture, "The Acts of the Christian Martyrs and Court Protocols," is by Professor Éric Rebillard (Cornell), part of the CMRS-CEGS Research Seminar graduate course for Spring 2023, Persecution and Defiance: Religious Minorities in the Roman World 200-700 CE (History201B). It has long been assumed that acts of martyrs derived from court protocols of their...

CANCELLED: Re-Staging the Judean ‘Nation’: The Rise of the Neighborhood in Roman Palestine – Research Seminar Public Lecture

Bunche 2181

This lecture, "Re-Staging the Judean 'Nation': The Rise of the Neighborhood in Roman Palestine," is by Professor Charlotte Fonrobert (Stanford), part of the CMRS-CEGS Research Seminar graduate course for Spring 2023, Persecution and Defiance: Religious Minorities in the Roman World 200-700 CE (History201B). Co-sponsored by UCLA Alan D. Leve Center for Jewish Studies. Professor Fonrobert...

Fall 2023 Research Seminar Public Lecture – Professor Wolfgang Mueller (Fordham University)

Kaplan 193 415 Portola Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

As part of the CMRS-CEGS Research Seminar graduate course for Fall 2023, Money Matters: Between Antiquity and the Enlightenment (ca. 600-1600), guest lecturer, Wolfgang Mueller (Fordham University) will share about his research that focuses on written norms and laws of the European West between 500 and 1500 CE.  He is author of several scholarly monographs,...

Diary of a Black Jewish Messiah: David Reubeni’s How-To Manual of Messianic Redemption

Zoom Meeting Online

In the 16th century, a Hebrew-speaking, battle-scarred, Black-skinned Jew named David Reubeni appeared suddenly in Venice with a desperate plan to restore Jewish pride and political independence. Why did kings, bishops, rabbis, bankers, and even a pope, open their homes and wallets for him? Some answers from one of the weirdest documents of Jewish history,...

Fall 2023 Research Seminar Public Lecture – Professor Craig Muldrew (Cambridge, UK)

Kaplan 193 415 Portola Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

As part of the CMRS-CEGS Research Seminar graduate course for Fall 2023, Money Matters: Between Antiquity and the Enlightenment (ca. 600-1600), guest lecturer, Professor Craig Muldrew (Cambridge, UK) will share about his expertise in British Social and Economic History from 1500 to 1800. Craig Muldrew's research mainly focuses on the investigation of the economic and...