Frames and Framing in Antiquity

Frames and Framing in Antiquity

Veranstalter
Sven Günther (IHAC, NENU, Changchun) / Elisabeth Günther (IfDH, Göttingen)
Veranstaltungsort
Online via Zoom
PLZ
130024
Ort
Changchun
Land
China
Vom - Bis
16.10.2020 - 18.10.2020
Von
Sven Günther, Institute for the History of Ancient Civilizations (IHAC), Northeast Normal University

Frames and framing have entered the public discourse already before covid-19 but have recently become a hotly debated issue. In the last couple of years, frame analysis has also gained attention in the field of ancient studies. However, the model’s full potential is yet to be exploited as it is still not comprehensively tested against the various ancient sources. The conference aims at filling this obvious gap.

Frames and Framing in Antiquity

Frames and framing have entered the public discourse already before covid-19 but have recently become a hotly debated issue due to the styling of news, for instance in social media, that partly replace other possibilities of social communication at the moment. Based on models from the field of sociology, psychology, and communication studies, “frames” describe how people understand, react to, and are influenced by situations and activities (frame analysis). The phenomenon of “framing” assesses how individuals or institutions might use, modify, or challenge existing frameworks by creating new frames, or add new slots and fillers to common frames. Thus, the concept of framing is a useful tool for a broad range of disciplines since communication is viewed as a complex entanglement of sender, receiver, and medium and their related frames and not as a one-directional process of sending information from A to B.

In recent years, frame analysis has also gained attention in the field of ancient studies, particularly in ancient history and linguistics as well as classical archaeology with a specific focus on visual studies. However, the model’s full potential is yet to be exploited as it is still not comprehensively tested against the various ancient sources. Hence, the conference attempts to fill this obvious gap by assessing the theoretical tool-set as well as the application of such models to case-studies.

The dimensions of frame and framing models will be discussed in five panels, with each paper lasting 5-7 minutes followed by a respondent and an open question slot:
Panel I: From Theory to Practice
Panel II: Greek Frames and Modern Perception
Panel III: Greek and Roman Frames
Panel IV: Framing Strategies in the Late Roman Republic and Early Empire
Panel V: Framing Narratives in Archaeology

The key-note speech will be given by Professor Hartmut Leppin (University of Frankfurt) on the concept of parrhesia (“free speech”) in antiquity.

We warmly welcome participants to register under: svenguenther@nenu.edu.cn to receive the link to the online platform (Zoom) and further information as well as abstracts of the conference papers.

Programm

(all times are Central European Time, i.e. UTC+2)

Friday, 16 October 2020
14.00–14.20: Opening and greeting words

14.20–14.45
OPENING REMARKS
Elisabeth Günther (Institute for Digital Humanities, University of Göttingen)
How to understand an owl in armor: frames and framings in ancient studies

14.45–16.00
KEY-NOTE LECTURE
Hartmut Leppin (University of Frankfurt)
Parrhesía and the framing of expectations in the social worlds of antiquity

Saturday, 17 October 2020
PANEL I: FROM THEORY TO PRACTICE
8.30-9.00
Sven Günther (IHAC, NENU, Changchun)
Frames and framing theory avant la lettre? Johann Gustav Droysen’s Historik and the future of ancient studies

9.00-9.30
Martina Sauer (Institute of Image and Cultural Philosophy, Bühl)
Promise of happiness, security and community − frames and framing in a new light

Respondents: Ben White (Günther), Elisabeth Günther (Sauer)

PANEL II: GREEK FRAMES AND MODERN PERCEPTION
9.45–10.15
Riccarda Schmid (University of Zurich)
Frames and framing in Attic rhetoric

10.15–10.45
Sven-Philipp Brandt (Special Collection “Amploniana”, University of Erfurt)
Sustainability as a framework? The concept of αὐτάρκεια in late classical Athens

10.45–11.15
Jelle Stoop (Brussels / University of Sydney)
Taste in early Greek poetry: production versus consumption

11.15–11.45
Guendalina Taietti (University of Liverpool)
Framing the Macedonians, becoming Greek: on the importance of Ancient Macedon in the nation-making of the Hellenic state

Respondents: Guo Zilong (Schmid & Stoop), Sven Günther (Brandt & Taietti)

PANEL III: GREEK AND ROMAN FRAMES
13.30–14.00
Hendrikus A.M. van Wijlick (Peking University)
Re-framing friendship in the late Republic and early Principate: the personification of φίλος-epithets

14.00–14.30
Guo Zilong (IHAC, NENU, Changchun)
Framing the Delphic oracle, institutionalizing the Olympian Games: a case study on Phlegon of Tralles’s Olympiads (FGrH 257 F 1)

14.30–15.00
Xu Zhenhuang (IHAC, NENU, Changchun)
Framing accusations against prosecutors: multi-level images of delatores in the 1st and 2nd century AD

Respondents: Sven Günther (van Wijlick & Guo Zilong), Francesco Ginelli (Xu Zhenhuang)

Sunday, 18 October 2020
PANEL IV: FRAMING STRATEGIES IN THE LATE ROMAN REPUBLIC AND EARLY EMPIRE
9.00-9.30
Jan Lukas Horneff (TU Dresden)
How to treat cunnilingus – Framing in Apuleius’ Apologia

9.30–10.00
Zhang Hongxia (IHAC, NENU, Changchun)
From Chinese perspective: frame and framing theory, Cicero’s Pro Cluentio, and Chinese modes of perception

10.00–10.30
Francesco Ginelli (Università degli Studi di Verona)
«...rem publicam a domination factionis oppressam in libertatem vindicavi». Frame analysis, ancient life writing, and political propaganda

Respondents: Hendrikus van Wijlick (Horneff & Zhang Hongxia), Elisabeth Günther (Ginelli)

PANEL V: FRAMING NARRATIVES IN ARCHAEOLOGY
13.30–14.00
Amy Smith (Curator, Ure Museum of Greek Archaeology / Department of Classics, Reading)
Unpeeling the Pan Painter’s pictures

14.00–14.30
Ben White (University of Nottingham)
Porticus, keys, and brackets: towards a Goffmanian framework for exploring the colonnades of ancient Rome

Respondents: Martina Sauer (Smith), Amy Smith (White)

14.30–15.00
Final Discussion

Kontakt

svenguenther@nenu.edu.cn
sveneca@aol.com