ican programacao
TRANSCRIPT
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Schedule of Sessions
September 30, 3015 Wednesday
Registration 2:00pm-6:00pm, 2nd
floor
Opening Reception, Meal, and Conversation: 6:00 - 7:30
p.m.
Room: Window Box
Hosts: Silvia Montiglio (Johns Hopkins University) and Gareth Schmeling (University of Florida)
Opening Remarks and Welcome: Dr. William Flores, President, University of Houston-Downtown
Entertainment: Julie Wilsons Wonderful Jazz Quartet
Room: Arboretum I
8:00-9:30pm
Landmarks and Turning Points in the Study of the Ancient Novel since the Fourth International Conference on the
Ancient Novel, Lisbon, 2008
Participants:
Marlia P. Futre Pinheiro (Universidade de Lisboa): Publications Resulting from the Fourth International Conference on theAncient Novel, Lisbon, 2008
Stephen Harrison (Corpus Christi College, University of Oxford): Apuleius and Africa Anton Bierl (University of Basel): Progress and Recent Trends of Scholarship on the Ancient Novel in the Field of Myth,
Religion and Ritual Judith Perkins (University of Saint Joseph): Christian Fictional Narratives: Promise and Problem Bruce MacQueen (University of Silesia): The Ancient Novel: Backing into the Future
Edmund P. Cueva (University of Houston-Downtown): Closing Remarks
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October 1, 2015 Thursday
Registration 8:00-10:00am; 1:00-2:30pm, 2ndfloor
Breakfast Provided, Room: Window Box
Morning Session I: 9:30 a.m.-.12:15p.m.
Groups A/B/C and Panel 1
Group A: Emoti onal Engagement and Reader Response in Ancient and Byzanti ne Fiction, Aglae Pizzone (University of
Southern Denmark), chair and organizer
The session is sponsored by the Centre for Medieval Literature/University of Southern Denmark.
Room: Arboretum IAndrea Capra Keeping Emotions in Check: The Explicit Strategies of the
NarratorUniversit di Milano
Luca Graverini Curiosity and the Emotions in Apuleius: A Satiric Path toConversion
Universit di Siena
Aglae Pizzone Emotions and Audiences in the Byzantine Novels University of Southern DenmarkNicolette Trahoulia Illustrating Fiction in Byzantium The American College of Greece,
Deree CollegeMegan Moore The Curse of Satalia: Loving Death in the Medieval
MediterraneanUniversity of Missouri
Group B: I ntertextuali ty: Greek, Giuseppe Gerolamo Zanetto (University of Milan), chair
Room: Arboretum II
Giulia Sara Corsino Plato and the Greek Novel: An Authoritative Model to Reverse Scuola Normale Superiore Di Pisa
Benjamin McCloskey Persian Antagonists: Xenophons Cyrus Reconsidered Kansas State University
Jeffrey Ulrich Marveling at Figures and Fortunes: an of Socrates in thePrologue of theMetamorphoses
University of Pennsylvania
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Giuseppe GerolamoZanetto
Intertextuality and Intervisuality in Heliodorus University of Milan
Group C: Al lusion, Myth, and Metafiction, Michel Briand (Universit de Poitiers), chair
Room: Arboretum IIILauren Carpenter Clitophon and Niobe: Self-characterization in Achilles Tatius Fordham UniversityEmilio Capettini Artemis or Aphrodite? The Description of Charicleia at the
Beginning of theAethiopicaPrinceton University
Michel Briand Achilles TatiusEkphraseis of Abused Female Bodies: RadicalMetafiction, Intense Intermediality, (Ancient) Transmodernity
Universit de Poitiers
Claire Rachel Jackson : Metafiction and Forgery in the Prologue toLongusDaphnis and Chloe
University of Cambridge
Amanda Myers The Transformation ofMythosin Achilles Tatius University of Birmingham
Panel 1: Cognition in Ancient Narr ative, Jessica McCutcheon (University of British Columbia), organizer
Room: Arboretum V
Jessica McCutcheon Cognition, Emotion, and Narrative: Fear as a Case Study University of British ColumbiaAndrew Riggsby Narrative as Argument University of Texas at AustinJennifer Devereaux Embodied Historiography: Models for Reasoning in Tacitus
AnnalesUniversity of Southern California
Roger Beck Cognition and Narrative in Ancient LiteraryHoroscopes University of Toronto
Lunch Provided: 12:30 - 2:00 p.m., Room: Window Box*
Afternoon Session I: 2:30 - 5:45 p.m.
Groups D/E/F and Panel 2
Group D: Ekphrasis, Catherine Connors (University of Washington), chair
Room: Arboretum I
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Jos-Antonio Fernndez-Delgado and FranciscaPordomingo
Musical Ecphrasis in LongusNovel University of Salamanca
Catherine Connors The Geology and Geography of HeliodorusAethiopica University of Washington
Rachael B. Goldman Colored Clothing in the Ancient Novel The College of New JerseyEleni Bozia Petroniuss Ekphrasis and its Reincarnation in the Greek Novel University of FloridaRobert Cioffi A Phoenix Rises: Achilles Tatius and the Egyptian Landscape Dartmouth CollegeMarcus Mota Sounding Narrative Worlds: Audio Scenes ofAithiopikaas
Textual and Musical ExperimentUniversity of Brasilia
Cinthia Nepomuceno Choreographic Composition for the Audio Scenes ofAithiopikain Collaborative Process
Brazilias Federal Institute
Group E: I ntertextuality: Latin, Danny Praet (University of Ghent), chair
Room: Arboretum IISasha-Mae Eccleston LuciusPlutarchan Kinship Reconsidered Pomona CollegeMoa Ekbom Apuleius in theHistoria Augusta: Finding Elements of the
Ancient NovelUppsala University
Marsha McCoy A Tale of Two Circes: Inversion and Subversion in PetroniusSatyrica
Southern Methodist University
Danny Praet Floating Island for Dessert, Mister Trimalchio? Petronius and theOdyssey: Trimalchio as Aeolus
Ghent University
Group F: Language and Poetics, Robert Groves (University of Arizona), chair
Room: Arboretum IIIRobert Groves A Gendered Language Barrier inAethiopica10 University of ArizonaPaola Francesca Moretti Some Remarks on Colors (and Meaning) in ApuleiusGolden
AssUniversit degli Studi di Milano
Helena Schmedt Language and Style in Antonius Diogenes: Atticism and theSecond Sophistic
Goethe-Universitt Frankfurt amMain
Barbara Blythe PetroniusTalking Birds: Avian Mimicry and Death in the CenaTrimalchionis
Brown University
Ilaria Marchesi Sic notus Trimalchio?: The Cook and his King in the Cena Hofstra University
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Panel 2: Wunderkultur, Fi ction and the Landscape of the Imagination, Kareni ni Mheallaigh (University of Exeter), chair
Room: Arboretum V
Ewen Bowie Life on Earth: the Paradoxographic Turn in Antonius Diogenes,
Achilles Tatius, Iamblichus and Longus
Corpus Christi College, Oxford
Valentina Popescu PhlegonsMarvelsin Context University of California, DavisAlexia Petsalis-Diomidis Elephants Breath and Elephants Heart: Embodiment and the
Senses in Achilles Tatius, Galen and Material CultureKings College London andCorpus Christi College, Oxford
Kareni ni Mheallaigh Did Trimalchio Dream of Electric Sheep? The Reader in theWunderkammer
University of Exeter
October 2, 2015 Friday
Registration 8:00-10:00am; 1:00-2:30pm, 2ndfloor
Breakfast Provided, Room: Window Box
Morning Session II: 9:30 a.m.- 12:15 p.m.
Groups G/H/I and Panel 3
Group G: L iterary Functions of Magic in the Novels, Regine May (University of Leeds), organizer and chair
Room: Arboretum I
Leonardo Costantini The Entertaining Function of Magic in ApuleiusMetamorphoses
University of Leeds
Regine May Magic in Apuleius: Isis from Witchcraft to Mystery Cults University of Leeds
Artemis BrodThe Bond Tied Elsewhere: Magic and Story in ApuleiusMetamorphoses Stanford University
Group H: Reception of the Ancient Novel: Lati n, Stephen Harrison (Corpus Christi College, University of Oxford), chair
Room: Arboretum II
Jacqueline Arthur-Montagne
Naufragus Hospes Aquis: Apollonius of Tyre in MerovingianGaul
Stanford University
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M Carmen Puche Lpez Maternidad, Muerte y Reencuentro:La Historia Apollonii RegisTyriy el Milagro Marsellsde Mara Magdalena
Universidad de Alicante
Stephen Harrison Apuleius at the Court of Louis XIV: Lully and Molire Corpus Christi College, Universityof Oxford
Sonia Sabnis Transnational Translation: Apuleius in the Twentieth Century Reed CollegeRichard Fletcher A is for Orses (Not for Asses): ApuleiusMetamorphosesin
Contemporary ArtOhio State University
Christian Blood A Roman Butterfly in the Land of Morning Calm: ApuleiusCupid and Psychein Korean(manhwa)
Yonsei University, Seoul, SouthKorea
Christopher Star Self-Made Men: The Origins and End of Trimalchio and JayGatsby
Middlebury College
Group I: Classical Egyptian Narr ative, Daniel L. Selden (University of California), organizer and chair
Room: Arboretum IIIDaniel L. Selden Introductory Remarks University of California, SantaCruz
Susan T. Hollis Late Egyptian Literary Tales SUNY Empire State CollegeMaulana Karenga The Moral Narrative of Khunanpu: Philosophical Notions of
Justice in Classical Kemetic ThoughtCalifornia State University, LongBeach
Colleen Darnell Historical Fiction in New Kingdom Egypt Yale UniversityJacqueline E. Jay The Demotic Inaros-Petubastis Cycle Eastern Kentucky University
Panel 3: The Greek Novel, Genre, and Cultu ral H istory, Tim Whitmarsh (University of Cambridge) and Helen Morales
(University of California at Santa Barbara), organizersRoom: Arboretum V
Tim Whitmarsh Unspoken Consent: the Ethics of Seduction in Musaeus andAchilles Tatius
University of Cambridge
Pavlos Avlamis The Fall of Troy and the Paradoxical Cityscape in Quintus ofSmyrnaPosthomerica13
University of Cambridge andUniversity of Oxford
Emily Kneebone Human and Non-human Animals in Onosand the Oppians University of CambridgeDaniel Jolowicz Anti-Roman possibilities and the Greek Novel University of Oxford
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Helen Morales Greek Fictions Incestuous Relations University of California at SantaBarbara
Lunch Provided: 12:30-2:00 p.m., Room: Window Box
Afternoon Session II: 2:30-5:45 p.m.
Groups J/K/L and Panel 4
Group J: The Body and the Ancient Novel, Froma Zeitlin (Princeton University), chair
Room: Arboretum I
Ashli Baker Cruci-fiction: Real and Metaphorical Capital Punishment inApuleiusMetamorphoses
Bucknell University
Ian Repath Achilles Tatius: Bellies, Births, and Bastards Swansea UniversityFroma Zeitlin From the Neck Up: Kissing and other Oral Obsessions in
Achilles Tatius
Princeton University
Erik Fredericksen In the Mouth of the Crocodile: Interiors, Exteriors, and Problemsof Penetrability in Achilles TatiusLeukippe and Clitophon
Princeton University
Elizabeth Bearden Monstrous Births and Disabling Receptions: Heliodorus,Cervantes, and the Representation of Disability in the Reception ofthe Greek Romance
University of Wisconsin, Madison
Jrme Bastick propos des reprsentations de la beaut physique dans le romanbyzantin du XIIme sicle: le portrait enfin assum
cole Normale Suprieure deLyon
Group K: Reception of the Ancient Novel: Greek, Mary Cozad (Northern Illinois University), chairRoom: Arboretum II
Rodolfo GonzlezEquihua
ThePersilesof Cervantes as asummaof the Ancient Novel Universidad Nacional Autnomade Mxico
Brian Knight Suspended Causality and Slow Beliefin SidneysNewArcadia
University of Wisconsin, Madison
Anna Lefteratou The Travails of Love: The Use of Erotic Mythological Exemplain NonnosDionysiacain Connection to the Greek Novel
Georg-August-UniversittGttingen
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Saiichiro Nakatani The Sound of WavesRevisited Keio UniversityMary Cozad Longus in the Sixteenth-Century West Northern Illinois University
Patrizia LiviabellaFuriani
Bocca baciata non perde ventura(Boccaccio,Decameron, II 7 =Boito-Verdi,Falstaff, Act III): Theory and Practice of Eros in
HeliodorusNovel
University of Perugia
Group L: Psychology and the Novel, Michael Fontaine (Cornell University), chair
Room: Arboretum III
Michael Fontaine Schizophrenia in the Golden Ass Cornell UniversityKatherine van Schaik Nam quod nemo novit, paene non fit: Perspective, Identity,
Narrative, and Mental (Dis)Order in Apuleiuss Golden AssHarvard Department of theClassics, Harvard Medical School
Zacharias Andreadakis The Concept of Anxiety in ApuleiusMetamorphoses University of Michigan
Pinelopi Flauona Dreams in the Ancient Greek Novel University of Ioannina
Panel 4: Senses in the Ancient Novel, Silvia Montiglio (Johns Hopkins University), organizer and chairRoom: Arboretum V
David Konstan Taste: The Most Dangerous Sense? New York UniversityTimothy OSullivan Human and Animal Touch in Apuleius Trinity UniversityDonald Lateiner Smells and Smelling in the Ancient Novel Ohio WesleyanAlex Purves Touch and Time in HeliodorusAethiopica University of California, Los
AngelesMario Telo Echoes of a Sound Ending in HeliodorussAethiopica University of California, Los
Angeles
Silvia Montiglio Sensuous Silences: Moves of Seduction in Achilles TatiusLeucippe and Clitophonand MusaeusHero and Leander
Johns Hopkins University
October 3, 2015 Saturday
Breakfast Provided, Room: Window Box
Morning Session III: 9:30 a.m. - 12:15 p.m.
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Groups M/N/O and Panel 5
Group M: Empir e and History, Hugh Mason (University of Toronto), chair
Room: Arboretum I
John Hilton Narrative Fiction in the Works of the Roman Emperor Julian University of KwaZulu-NatalHugh Mason LongusMytilenean Readers University of TorontoSilvia Mattiacci Haemus and Plotina in Apul.Met. 7.5-8: an Inserted Tale for the
Roman ReadershipUniversit di Siena
Saundra Schwartz Sages, Pirates, and Governors with Naked Axes in the VitaApollonii
University of Hawaii
Benjamin Wheaton TheHistory of Apollonius King of Tyreand the Transformationof Civic Power in the Late Empire
University of Toronto
Marilyn Skinner Social Reproduction among PetroniusFreedmen University of Arizona
Group N: Sex, Desir e, or Jealousy, Romain Brethes (Lyce Janson de Sailly), chair
Room: Arboretum II
Danilo Piana Chaereas and his Lovers: Homoerotic Elements in Callirhoe Johns Hopkins UniversityRomain Brethes A Comparative Anthropology of Desire: And if Ovid was the
(real)praeceptor amorisof Clitophon?Lyce Janson de Sailly
David Elmer Jealousies In and Of the Text in Charitons Callirhoe Harvard University
Group O: L iterature and Intergeneric Relationships, Alain Billault (University of Paris-Sorbonne), chair
Room: Arboretum III
Anton Bierl LongusViews on an Infantile Life in Lesbos University of BaselAlain Billault Chariton and the Shadow of War University of Paris-SorbonneBenedek Kruchi The Dynamics of Summarization: Charicles and Sisimithres
Interpreting the Story of HeliodorusAethiopicaHumboldt-Universitt zu Berlin
Tiziana Ragno The Light in Troy (Petron. 89). Imitation of Archaic Tragedy andDiscovery of Vergils New Epic
University of Foggia
Steven D. Smith Novel Epigrams: Transformation and Transmission Hofstra University
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Panel 5: Receptions in and of the Ancient Novel: I ntertext and H eritage, Anton Bierl (University of Basel) and Marlia Futre
Pinheiro (Universidade de Lisboa), organizers
Room: Arboretum V
Stelios Panayotakis Scattered Families between Novel and Hagiography University of Crete
Andrea Capra A 19th Century Milesian Tale: SettembrinisNeoplatonics Universit degli Studi di MilanoMarcus Mota Epiphanic Characterization inAithiopikaand its Sound
Counterpoint: An Orchestral Composition as an Experiment inReception
University of Brasilia
Organized Events
Bayou Bend Collection and Gardens
Museum of Fine Art Houston, Ima Hogg Museum Complex
Buses will leave the hotel at 2:00pm, return at 5:15pm.
This event will include tickets to the museum and a wine, beer, and light hors doeuvres reception.
Most importantly, the ICAN V group photo will be taken at the museum.
October 4, 2015 Sunday
Breakfast Provided, Room: Window Box
Morning Session IV: 9:30 a.m. - 12:15 p.m.
Groups P/Q/R and Panel 6
Group P: Narratology, William Owens (Ohio University), chair
Room: Arboretum I
Sandra Bianchet From Story-Listener to Storyteller: A Metamorphosis of Luciusin ApuleiusMetamorphoses
Universidade Federal de MinasGerais and George MasonUniversity
Magdeleine Clo Objects in the Ancient Greek Novel: From Occurrence toNarrative System
Universit Grenoble Alpes
Yasuhiro Katsumata The Narrators -Intervention in PhilostratusApollonius Kyoto University
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William Owens A Slave Owners Slave Narrative: Clitophons NarcissisticNarrative of the Slaves inLeucippe and Clitophon
Ohio University
Judith Perkins Nonretaliation in theActs of Philip University of Saint Joseph
Group Q: Poetics and Di scourse Analysis, Nadia Scippacercola (Universit degli Studi di Napoli Federico II), chairRoom: Arboretum II
Nina Ogrowksy Landscape and Environment in the Greek Novels Humboldt-Universitt
Athina Siapera Book Divisions in HeliodorusAithiopika Oxford University
Nadia Scippacercola Fabulae, umanit e fortuna nelle Metamorfosi di Apuleio Universit degli Studi di NapoliFederico II
Benjamin Nikota The Dea Syria as Foreshadowing Anti-Isis University of Georgia
Panel 6: The Reception of H eliodorus between the Sixteenth and the Eighteenth Centur ies, Heinz Hofmann (University of
Tbingen), organizerRoom: Arboretum V
Heinz Hofmann Heliodorus redivivus: from the Manuscripts to the First Editionsand Translations
University of Tbingen
Stefan Seeber A Medieval Heliodorus: The German Translation of theAithiopikaby Johannes Zschorn (1559) in Context
University of Freiburg
Robert H. F. Carver Knowing Heliodorus: The Reception of theAethiopicainSixteenth- and Seventeenth-Century England
University of Durham
Corrado Confalonieri LeEtiopichenel dibattito sui generi letterari tra Rinascimento eBarocco
Harvard University
Laurence Plazenet What did HeliodorusName Stand for in Mlle de ScudrysWorks?
Universit Paris-Sorbonne
Massimo Fusillo The Serial Dramatization: Alexandre Hardys TragicomedyCharicle
University of LAquila
Lunch Provided: 12:30-2:00 p.m., Room: Window Box
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Afternoon Session III: 2:30-5:45 p.m.
Groups S/T/U and Panel 7
Group R: Construction of Characters, David Scourfield (Maynooth University), chair
Room: Arboretum IThomas McCreight The Novelist and Philosopher as Biographer: Traces of theBiographical in Apuleius
Loyola University Maryland
David Scourfield ChaereasStrategy: Comedic Inversion and Civic Values inChariton
Maynooth University
Maria Eugenia Steinberg Semitica y fisiognmica para desestabilizar la verosimilitud delSatyricon: Gestos, movimientos corporales y retratos icnicos
Universidad de Buenos Aires
Evelyn Adkins Discourse and Power: Lucius and Milo in ApuleiusMetamorphoses
The Pennsylvania State University
Group S: Papyrology and the Hi story of Scholar ship on the Novel, Niall W. Slater (Emory University) chairRoom: Arboretum II
Mara Paz Lpez-Martnez and ConsueloRuiz-Montero
The Parthenopes Novel:POxy. 435 Revisited Universidad de Alicante
Mara Paz Lpez-Martnez
Ninos, King of Legend, Novel and Perhaps More Universidad de Alicante
Yvona Trnka-Amrhein Two New Papyri of Sesonchosis Harvard UniversityLaurence Plazenet The Forgery of the Ancient Greek Novel: Literary Strategies and
Scholarly MisdemeanorsUniversit de Paris-Sorbonne
Niall W. Slater Speech Acts and Genre Games in theProtagoras Romance Emory UniversityMaria Teresa Ruggiero Fragmentaof Petronius Universit per stranieri di Perugia
Group T: Philosophy, Ellen Finkelpearl (Scripps College), chair
Room: Arboretum III
Melissa Barden Dowling Pythagoras and Heliodorus Southern Methodist UniversityEllen Finkelpearl Pythagoras in ApuleiusMet.11.1 Scripps CollegeGeoffrey Benson Cupid and Pysche and the Illumination of the Unseen Colgate University
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Panel 7: Romancing Saints: Christian Narrative Receptions of Ancient Novels in Greek, Latin and Syriac Traditions,Koen
De Temmerman (Ghent University), organizer
Room: Arboretum V
Koen De Temmerman Beyond Novelistic Heroism: The Rhetorics of eugeneia, Slaveryand Chastity in the Ancient Greek Novel and Early-ChristianNarrative
Ghent University
Aldo Tagliabue The Visionenbuchin the Shepherd of Hermasas a ChristianAutobiographical Conversion Novel
Universitt Heidelberg
Anna Lefteratou Ambrose Reader of Achilles Tatius: the Antiochene Virgin Georg-August-UniversittGttingen
Christa Gray Replacing Romance: Miracles as a Hindrance to Happiness inJeromesLife of Hilarion
University of Glasgow
Danny Praet A Novelistic Job: thepassio Eustathii (Placidae) et sociorum Ghent University
Flavia Ruani & Julie VanPelt Not Lost in Translation: Novelistic Elements in Three GreekHagiographical Texts and their Syriac Versions Ghent University
Stephen Trzaskoma Leucippe the Martyr: Achilles Tatius in a Tenth-CenturyHagiography
University of New Hampshire
Conference Banquet
7:00-9:00 p.m.
Foundation Room, House of Blues, Houston
Bus will leave the hotel at 6:30pm and return at 9:15pm
*All the breakfasts and lunches will be served in the same room. Please note that due to university and state policies, alcohol cannot be served at on and offcampus events before 5:00pm if a state institution is hosting or supporting the event in any way. However, cash bars are allowed.