Thursday 16 May
16.00–16.30
Welcome
Part I. Approaching ‘Luxury’ and ‘Austerity’ in Archaice Greece and beyond
16.30–17.00
Introduction
17:00–18.00
Alain Duplouy (Paris)
From luxury to austerity. The strange path of various Greek communities
18.30–20.00
Erich Kistler (Innsbruck)
Keynote lecture (main building, R. 2091/2): Oversizing the middle. The powerful fat ones in Archaic Greece
20.00–21.00
Reception at the “Archaischer Saal”, Collection of the Winckelmann-Institut
Friday 17 May
9.00–10.30
Discussion: Approaches. Kurke’s ‘politics of ἁβροσύνη’ and beyond
10.30–11.00
Coffee break
Part II. The Economic Dimension: The Production and Distribution of Luxuries
11.00–12.00
Fleur Kemmers (Frankfurt a. M.)
Coining riches. Resources and coinage in Southern Italy in the 6th century BCE
12.00–13.00
Gunnar Seelentag (Hannover)
Regulating the uses of resources and goods in Archaic inscriptions
13.00–14.00
Lunch Break
14.00–15.00
Lisa Eberle (Tübingen)
Horse breeders, swine herds and beechnut eaters. Economy and social identity in Archaic Greece
15.00–16.00
Moritz Hinsch (HU Berlin)
Household economy and competitive consumption in Archaic Greece
16.00–16.30
Tea break
III. Competition and Conflict: Negotiating Consumption
16.30–17.30
Jan Meister (HU Berlin / Tübingen)
Urban lifestyle and Archaic Greek ‘aristocrats’
17.30–18.30
Corinna Riva (UC London)
Oscillating value, dislodging gifts. Violence in Archaic Southern Etruria
Saturday 18 May
9.00–10.30
Discussion: Sources. Poems, families and votives in Eastern Greece
10.30–11.00
Coffee break
IV. Identities and Norms: the Moral Discourse of Consumption
11.00–12.00
Marek Wecowski (Warsaw)
Early Greek poetry and social mobility
12.00–13.00
Mirko Canevaro (Edinburgh)
Virtue signalling in ancient Athens. Philotimia and the moral economy
13.00–14.00
Lunch break
14.00–16.00
Mireia López-Bertran (Valencia)
Performing luxury in Phoenician-Punic visual and material culture (7th– 3rd centuries BCE)
16.00–16.30
Tea break
16.30–17.30
David Lewis (Edinburgh)
Slave retinues, luxurious display, and the interpretation of Timaeus, FGrHist 556 F11a