Workshop: Reception History and Colonialism

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This workshop aims to explore the intersection of ancient reception history (both Christian and non-Christian) and colonialism through a series of questions such as the following:
– How did classical knowledge and paradigms influence historical practices of colonization and colonialism?
– How did maps, letters, material objects, prints, pamphlets, techniques, etc., mediate between intellectual theories and colonial practice?
– Were classical paradigms used to guide, legitimize, or subvert existing colonial relations and practices?
– How can we account for the non-linear and often fragmented nature of reception, recognizing that knowledge is continually reconstructed through transmission and that our understanding of classical models is shaped by later practices?
– How can the fields of Bible reception and classical reception inform each other regarding the role of both elements in colonialism?

This workshop is part of the larger project “Settler Colonial Paradigms: Classical Receptions – Territoriality – Legality – Indigeneity” (SECOPS).

 

Program (please note that except for the public lecture by Dr. Sam Agbamu, this workshop is a closed event)


Tuesday 22nd

10.00-11.30 Introduction (Susanna de Beer and Dinah Wouters)

11.45-13.00 Anouk Vermeulen – Surveying Empire: The Evolution of Imperialist Discourse in the Corpus Agrimensorum Romanorum

14.00-15.15 Ivo Wolsing – Crusader colonialism and the classics: William of Tyre and the creation of “our Orient”

16.00 Excursion: Celio (Forma Urbis museum)

 

Wednesday 23rd

10.15-11.30 Dinah Wouters and Arthur Weststeijn – The Dutch Iron Age: War and Profit in the Poetry of Caspar Barlaeus

11.45-13.00 Tycho Maas – ‘What about Virgil and the transfer of empire, Mr. Grevenbroek?’ Exile, colonialism and the epic genre in 17th century European imaginations of Africa

14.00-15.15 Teddy R. Delwiche – The Classics in Colonial Connecticut: John Mettawan and Native American Education

17.00-19.00 Public Lecture KNIR Research Dialogue: Sam Agbamu – ‘In tears and ashes, I am undone’. The Punic Wars and Epics of Empire’. Click here for more information and to register.

 

Thursday 24th

10.00-11.15 Matthijs den Dulk – Paul’s Letter to the Galatians and the British Empire in the Victorian Era

11.30-12.30 Student presentations and feedback

13.30-14.45 Sam Agbamu – ‘An Epic History for a New Victory’: Petrarch’s Africa and Italian imperialism

15.00-16.00 Concluding discussion

16.30 Excursion: Flaminio

 

 

© image: Ziegenhagens utopische kolonie, Daniel Nikolaus Chodowiecki, 1791 – Rijksmuseum