Texts and Monuments in Augustan Rome

Conference/Symposium

Texts and Monuments in Augustan Rome

Texts and Monuments in Augustan Rome

Day three of a four day conference. The aim of the conference is to enlighten the relationship between texts and monuments in the Augustan city, giving particular (though not exclusive) attention to the Forum Romanum, an important city center often overlooked in scholarship on Augustan Rome.

Investigating the relationship between the written Rome and the built Rome is nothing new; the last two decades have already seen important works by Ann Vasaly (1993), Catharine Edwards (1996), A.J. Boyle (2003), and Tara Welch (2005). A parallel preoccupation with text-image relationships more generally has also blossomed in the past decade, guided by, among others, Jaś Elsner (2007), Verity Platt (2011) and Michael Squire (2009, 2012).These works have made important inroads, paving the way for future studies of verbal-visual interactions. The conference will take a next step forward by focusing narrowly on the entanglement of individual monuments and the texts that shape them, and vice versa. How do monuments shape texts, and how do texts shape monuments? In what ways do the physical reality of Rome populate and inflect the literary landscape, and what new resonances do authors give to the city through their narratives?

The conference is co-sponsored by the University of Notre Dame’s Institute for Scholarship in the Liberal Arts, College of Arts and Letters, Henkels Lecture Series; the Classics Departments at New York University, Stanford University and the University of Notre Dame; the American Academy in Rome; and the University of Rome, La Sapienza.

For the program or for instructions on how to register, http://augustantextandmonument.com.

Date & time
Wednesday, July 2, 2014
Location
AAR Lecture Room
McKim, Mead & White Building
Via Angelo Masina, 5
Rome, Italy