March 10, 2009

Added several Palaima reviews:
Review of Ancient Rome and Modern America
Review of The Inheritance of Rome: A History of Europe from 400 to 1000
Review of The Dynamite Club: How a Bombing in Fin-de-Siècle Paris Ignited the Age of Modern Terror

Added several Palaima editorials:
“Woody Guthrie’s songs can help you focus on the spirit of the season”
“UTSA is throwing a Hail Mary pass”
“‘Happy New Year!'”
“(with Nathan Tublitz) Barack Obama and the International Education Bowl”
“(with Emily Schenk) Hold onto hope for justice”
“The price of corporate culture at UT”

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 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.”

May 22, 2011

As Tom Palaima steps down as UT Austin representative on the Coalition on Intercollegiate Athletics, he invites anyone interested in these matters to read his candid and through reports of the last three years:

UT representative on the national Coalition on Intercollegiate Athletics (COIA) 2008- 2011 annual reports:

Link to Palaima comment on review of Joseph S. Nye, The Future of Power, Perseus Books ISBN 9781586488918, Published 24 February 2011:
http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/story.asp?storycode=416165

Added Palaima editorials:
“The NCAA and the Athletes It Fails”.
“Universities’ spending on sports undermines their mission: education”.

March 17, 2011

BOB DYLAN AND GREEK CULTURE CONFERENCE
at
University of Missouri St. Louis
Center for International Studies

SPONSORED BY:
THE HELLENIC GOVERNMENT-KARAKAS FAMILY FOUNDATION
PROFESSORSHIP IN GREEK STUDIES
UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI-ST. LOUIS

ORGANIZED BY Prof. Michael Cosmopoulos,
with the assistance of Terry Marshall, Richard Thomas and Tom Palaima

For those of you who are Bob Dylan fans and are in the major St. Louis area, please consider joining us for the following conference:

“Bob Dylan at 70: Immigrants, Wanderers, Exiles, and Hard Travelers in the poetry, music, and culture of Ancient Greece and Modern America”

Saturday, March 19, 10 am-5 pm, Century Room A, MSC.

Free and Open to the Public. Lunch provided.

For the full program please visit www.umsl.edu/~cosmopoulosm/Dylanprogram.pdf

There is a newsroom item on it at:
http://blogs.umsl.edu/news/2011/03/15/conference-explores-bob-dylan-immigrant-influence-on-art/

Bob Dylan at 70

10:00-10:15
Michael Cosmopoulos, UM-St. Louis
Welcoming Remarks

10:15-11:00
Barry Powell, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Freewheelin With Bob Dylan

11:00-11:45
Richard Thomas, Harvard University
Must be the Jack of Hearts in the Great North Woods

11:45-12:00
Discussion

LUNCH

12:00-13:30

AFTERNOON
13:30-14:15 PM
John Foley, University of Missouri (Columbia)
In Search of Penelope: Dylan as Wanderer

14:15-15:00 PM
Thomas G. Palaima, University of Texas-Austin
Songs of the ‘Hard Traveler’ from Odysseus to the Never-Ending Tourist

COFFEE BREAK
15:00-15:30

15:30-16:15 PM
Stephen Scobie, University of Victoria
‘And Forget My Name’ – A Reading And Commentary

16:15-17:30
Videos of Bob Dylan performing — Discussion

MY PAPER:
Songs of the ‘Hard Traveler’ from Odysseus to the Never-Ending Tourist

THOMAS G. PALAIMA
The traveler is a familiar figure in ancient Greek song and in the 20th-century American popular and folk song tradition. For emigrant and immigrant nations like Greece and the United States, songs about hard lives away from home and home communities are fundamental as ways of learning modes of behavior and expressing shared feelings about common experiences. These songs may express the thrill of adventure, the loneliness and sorrow of an unsettled and essentially friendless life,, the dangers of travel, longing for security, and the joy of finally reaching a permanent destination and setting down roots again. All of these, of course, are found in Homer’s “Odyssey,” the supreme distillation of ancient Greek, traveling-man songs. We will here examine Dylan’s own songs and his performance repertory in order to trace these same themes.

 


Added Palaima editorials:
“Closing doors to the future”
“Budget woes and our misguided priorities”
“No more excuses for UT’s excesses”
“Key to the present lies in the past”
“Let’s make this our 9-28”
“U.S. gun laws allow normal day at UT to take a scary turn”
“Game over: Helping teens deal with violence”
“Redirect UT’s resources”
“Obama’s rah-rah speech ignored sobering reality”
“Wake-up call on homelessness”

Added Palaima reviews:
A New History of the Peloponnesian War

African American Writers and Classical Tradition