Springe direkt zu Inhalt

Prof. Shane Butler (John Hopkins University): Ghost Machines

18.05.2018 | 10:00

Vortrag in der Veranstaltungsreihe „WissensFragen“, konzipiert und organisiert vom Sonderforschungsbereich 980 „Episteme in Bewegung“.

In a pair of lectures given at the Collegio Romano early in the seventeenth century, Famiano Strada, professor of eloquence, delighted audiences with a fictitious account of a lavish contest a century before. Dressed as their favorite ancient poets, the leading humanists of the day (Pontano, Bembo, Castiglione, etc.) were carried down the Tiber, Strada explains, perched on a floating Parnassus. Each later offered, in the guise and style of his ancient model, a new poem; these, of course, are really Strada’s own virtuosic compositions, and their topics include a remarkably precocious attempt to imagine the electric telegraph. Reconsidering this odd text in order to rethink the workings of classical reception, this paper will argue that beneath the fun lies a startling disruption of the space-time continuum, by which the present, haunted by a past already haunted by another past, suddenly finds itself connected to a dimly seen future.

Shane Butler is Nancy H. and Robert E. Hall Professor in the Humanities and Professor and Chair of Classics at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore.


Aufgrund der begrenzten Platzzahl bitten wir Nicht-SFB-Mitglieder um Anmeldung: info@sfb-episteme.de.

Ort: Sitzungsraum der SFB-Villa (EG), Schwendenerstraße 8, 14195 Berlin-Dahlem

Weitere Informationen auf der Website des SFB.

Schlagwörter

  • Schwendenerstraße 8, 14195 Berlin-Dahlem
  • Sitzungsraum der SFB-Villa (EG)
Tutoring
Mentoring
Akkreditierte Studiengänge_v3