September 30, 2009

Added Palaima editorial:
“Aesop and the UT Budget”


PASP would like to announce two upcoming guest speakers:

Colloquium 1: Thursday November 12 4 PM WAG 116

Dimitri Nakassis (Ph.D. 2006 UT Austin)
Assistant Professor Department of Classics
University of Toronto

“Under the Sceptre of Agamemnon? Economy, Archaeology and Texts in Mycenaean Greece”

Professor Nakassis will also be giving a lecture in Prof. Palaima’s AHC 378 class on Friday November 13 at 2:00 PM WAG 112 on the topic: “Mycenaean society: in search of a middle class.”

Prof. Nakassis won the prize for best dissertation in humanities and fine arts (UT Austin 2007). His research interests include: Greek history, Greek archaeology, especially Late Bronze Age, social theory, ancient religion

His publications now include:

  • “Named Individuals and the Mycenaean State at Pylos,” in Colloquium Romanum, Atti del XII colloquio internazionale di Micenologia, Roma, 20-25 febbraio 2006, ed. A. Sacconi, M. del Freo, L. Godart and M. Negri (Rome 2008) 549-561.
  • “Siteless Survey and Intensive Data Collection in an Artifact-rich Environment: Case Studies from the Eastern Corinthia, Greece,” JMA 19.1 (2006) 7-43, co-authored with W. Caraher and D. Pettegrew.
  • “The Eastern Korinthia Archaeological Survey: Integrated Methods for a Dynamic Landscape,” Hesperia 75.4 (2006) 453-523, co-authored with T.F. Tartaron et al.
  • “Gemination at the Horizons: East and West in the Mythical Geography of Archaic Greek Epic,” TAPA 134.2 (2004) 215-233.
  • “Linear A and Multidimensional Scaling.” In K.P. Foster and R. Laffineur eds., Metron: Measuring the Aegean Bronze Age, Aegaeum 24 (Liège and Austin 2003) 335-342, co-authored with Kevin Pluta.

His articles accepted and in progress are on the following topics: (1) the finances of Mycenaean Pylos, (2) state and society in the Aegean Bronze Age, (3) the concept of redistribution in Aegean archaeology, (4) feasting and the king in Mycenaean Pylos, (5) structuration and the Mycenaean state, and (6) the Dipolieia festival and the Kylonian conspiracy.

 

Colloquium 2:

Thursday December 3 4 PM WAG 116

Ruth Palmer (Ph.D. University of Cincinnati 1989)
Associate Professor of Classics and World Religions
Ohio University

“What the scribe saw: artistic representations of deer and the invention of the Mycenaean deer ideogram.”

Professor Palmer will discuss how deer are represented in Mycenaean art from the Shaft Graves at Mycenae (and before) to the end of the palatial period, with a special focus eventually on the ambience in which scribes created the ideogram they used in Linear B.

Professor Palmer will also be giving a lecture in Prof. Palaima’s AHC 378 class on Monday November 30 at 2:00 PM WAG 112 on the topic: “Between Pylos and Knossos: women workers in the Linear B texts.”

Here Prof. Palmer will present the kinds of evidence that we can extract from the Linear B tablets about the status and jobs done by the female work force, and the difference in social conditions that exists in the groups listed in the Knossos tablets vs. the Pylos tablets. She will also bring in comparisons with the Mesopotamian records of the female work forces.

Professor Palmer is one of the foremost authorities on foodstuffs in the ancient world and their role in society.

Her publications include her definitive monograph: Wine in the Mycenaean Palace Economy.

Review: J. T. Killen, in Minos 29-30 (1997) 371-373.
Review: Paul Halstead, in JHS 117 (1997) 242-244.

And many articles, including:

  • “Trade in Wine, Perfumed Oil and Foodstuffs: the Linear B Evidence and Beyond.” Ploes… Sea Routes… Interconnections in the Mediterranean, 16th-6th c. BC. Proceedings of the International Symposium held at Rethymnon, Crete, September 29th-October 2nd 2002, Stampolidis, Nicholas Chr. and Vassos Karageorghis, eds. Athens, University of Crete and the A. G. Leventis Foundation, 960-7143-25-6. p. 125-140.
  • “Bridging the Gap: The Continuity of Greek Agriculture from the Mycenaean to the Historical Period.” Tandy, David W., ed. Prehistory and History: Ethnicity, Class and Political Economy. Montréal, New York, and London: Black Rose Books. 1-55164-189-5 (hardcover)//1-55164-188-7 (paperback). p. 41-84.
  • “Perishable Goods in Mycenaean Texts.” Deger-Jalkotzy, Sigfrid, Stefan Hiller, and Oswald Panagl. Eds. Floreant Studia Mycenaea. Akten des X. Internationalen Mykenologischen Colloquiums in Salzburg vom 1.-5. Mai 1995. Band I. Wien: Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. p. 463-485.
  • “Models in Linear B Landholding: An Analysis of Methodology”. Bennet, John and Jan Driessen, eds. A-na-qo-ta. Studies Presented to J. T. Killen. Minos 33-34. p. 223-250 (Bibliographical Abbreviations, 371-375).
  • “Linear A Commodities: A Comparison of Resources.” Laffineur, Robert and Wolf-Dietrich Niemeier, eds., Politeia: Society and State in the Aegean Bronze Age. Proceedings of the 5th International Aegean Conference / 5e Rencontre égéenne internationale, University of Heidelberg, Archäologisches Institut, 10-13 April 1994, Vol I., Aegaeum 12. Université de Liège, Histoire de l’art et archéologie de la Grèce antique; University of Texas at Austin, Program in Aegean Scripts and Prehistory. p. 133-155.
  • “Wheat and Barley in Mycenaean Society.” Olivier, J.-P., ed. Mykenaïka. Actes du IXe Colloque international sur les textes mycéniens et égéens, Centre de l’Antiquité Grecque et Romaine de la Fondation Hellénique des Recherches Scientifiques et École française d’Athènes. BCH Suppl. 25. Diffusion de Boccard, Paris. p. 475-497.
  • “Subsistence Rations at Pylos and Knossos.” Minos 24. p. 89-124.

Added Palaima article: “1984: It’s Coming,” in Times Higher Education 3 September 2009
PDF available here

October 10, 2009

Added Palaima editorial:
“Dr. Antone: The Real Deal”

Note also the following important event:

University of Texas UTPCR
Bridging Divides Award
at Antone’s Nightclub
213 West 5th Street
512 320-8424
Thursday October 15 7 PM -10 PM

Featuring: Gary Clark, Jr., Eve Monsees, Cyril Neville, James Robinson, Pamela Hart, Big Chief Kevin Goodman, Tim Culver, Gaynielle Neville and Others.

Complimentary Tickets Available at Waterloo Records ($10 suggested cover).

April 3, 2012

Added Palaima editorials:
responses to Halpern-Eliot-Bigler et al. study and their reply.
Palaima description of a bad book: Victor Davis Hanson and John Heath, Who Killed Homer? The Demise of Classical Education and the Recovery of Greek Wisdom (2001).
“The wonder of our own handwriting”.
“Shootings in Afghanistan have roots in our history”.

Added Palaima reviews:
The Poetry of Thought: From Hellenism to Celan
[PDF]Everyday Writing in the Graeco-Roman East

By Palaima:
[PDF (and bibliography)]”Euboea, Athens, Thebes and Kadmos: The Implications of the Linear B References,” in D. W. Rupp, J. E. Tomlinson et al. (eds.) Euboea and Athens: Proceedings of a Colloquium in Memory of Malcolm B. Wallace. Athens, 26-27 June 2009. Publications of the Canadian Institute in Greece, No. 6 2011, pp. 53-76

October 9, 2011

Our good friend and friend of PASP, Nikos Samartzidis will be displaying his Linear-B based artwork in the exhibition in the Mainzer Rathaus: Die Linear B-Schrift und die Perlen der Aegaeis13 October to 17 November 2011.

Here is the brochure for the exhibition.

Mr. Samartzidis’ artwork graces the rooms of PASP, providing delight, cause for contemplation, inspiration, and a link between past and present creative expression.

For more on his artwork, see: http://www.nikosam-art.de/

 

Added several articles:

By Nakassis:
[PDF]Review of A Companion to Linear B. Mycenaean Greek Texts and their World. Volume 1.
[PDF]Review of The Talking Greeks: Speech, Animals, and the Other in Homer, Aeschylus, and Plato.
[PDF]”Athens, Kylon, and the Dipolieia,” in Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies 51 (2011) pp. 527-536.

By Palaima:
[PDF]”Scribes, Scribal Hands and Palaeography,” in Y. Duhoux and A. Morpurgo Davies, eds., A Companion to Linear B. Mycenaean Greek Texts and their World. Volume 2, pp. 33-136.

By Petrakis:
[PDF]”Localising Pylian Religion: Thoughts on the geographic References in the Fr Tablets Provoked by a New Quasi-Join,” Pasiphae 4 (2010) 199-215.
[PDF]”Politics of the sea in the Late Bronze Age II-III Aegean: iconographic preferences and textual perspectives,” in G. Vavouranakis ed., The seascape in Aegean prehistory (Monographs of the Danish Institute in Athens 14: 2011) 185-234
[PDF]”E-ke-ra2-wo ≠ wa-na-ka: The Implications of a Probable Non-Identification for Pylian Feasting and Politics.” Dais: The Aegean Feast. Aegaeum 29 (2008) 391-399
[PDF]”to-no-e-ke-te-ri-jo Reconsidered,” Minos 37-38 (2002-2003 [2006]) 293-316 and 372. (English and Spanish abstracts, p. 488)

October 4, 2011

Added a piece about Palaima in his involvement with the UT athletics program.

Added Palaima reviews:
The Last Pagans of Rome
Invisible Romans: Prostitutes, Outlaws, Slaves, Gladiators, Ordinary Men and Women…The Romans That History Forgot

Added Palaima editorials:
“The ‘me-firstism’ of UT athletics”.
“History gives us guidance in dealing with national tragedy”.
“”Home, where they take you in, no matter your challenges””.
“We, the people, are losing civility, understanding”.
“Pair hope 31,000 images will help spur social change”.

 

Brief Palaima review of Steve Earle’s I’ll Never Get Out of This World Alive:
Tom Palaima, professor of Classics at the University of Texas at Austin, has been reading Steve Earle’s I’ll Never Get Out of This World Alive (Harvill Secker, 2011). “No one does. So we are lucky to have storytellers like singer/songwriter Steve Earle lay bare the truths of this world. Here he takes us to live in the bargain-basement prostitution and drug zone of San Antonio, Texas in 1963 with a morphine-addicted old doctor, the ghost of Hank Williams and a young Mexican girl discovering her powers as a curandera.”