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Published on Monday, February 08, 2021

Abstract

This international conference, to be held in Thessaloniki in November 2021 aims to attract researchers, mainly philologists, linguists and philosophers interested in ancient practices of etymologizing in Ancient Greek and Byzantine literature. It is promoted by the International Association ETYGRAM devoted to the study of indigenous (or “emic”) ancient Greek etymologies and follows two editions in 2016 and 2018.

Announcement

Organizers

  • Maria Chriti (Aristotle Univ., Greece),
  • Claire Le Feuvre (Sorbonne Université, France),
  • Arnaud Zucker (Univ. Côte d’Azur, France).

Argument

This international conference, to be held in Thessaloniki in November 2021 aims to attract researchers, mainly philologists, linguists and philosophers interested in ancient practices of etymologizing in Ancient Greek and Byzantine literature. It is promoted by the International Association ETYGRAM (http://www.cepam.cnrs.fr/etygram/) devoted to the study of indigenous (or “emic”) ancient Greek etymologies and follows two editions in 2016 and 2018. The ancient Greek conception of etymology is fundamentally different from our modern one and has a much broader meaning. To start with, it allows a rather exceptional plasticity (see, e.g., Plato’s Cratylus) as far as semantic paronomasia is concerned. As ancient scholars understood it, etymology is chiefly a dynamic process aiming at suggesting semantic correlations between words based on phonetic similarities, with a momentous heuristic power. This intellectual game, a very serious one at that, deserves to be investigated since it is neither scientific in character (as modern linguists would describe it), nor labellable as “folk” etymology. It is rather a cultural construction, which is both an art of punning and an attempt to uncover deep semantic motivations.

The organizers welcome proposals (in French, English, Greek, German, Spanish or Italian), taking especially into account the following parameters:

  1. The technical aspects of ancient Greek etymology.
  2. Etymology and neologisms in scientific contexts.
  3. Etymology in pedagogical practices.
  4. Etymological practices in the scholia and commentaries of Late Antiquity and Byzantium.

Submission guidelines

Conference papers will be 30 minutes, with 15 minutes for discussion. Interested scholars from all academic levels are invited to send an abstract of no more than 500 words to zucker@unice.fr and assoc.etygram@gmail.com

by March 10, 2021.

Participants will be notified in April 10, 2021. Accepted papers will be presented on an equal footing with invited speakers. Accommodation and meal expenses will be covered by the organization.

Program Committee

  • Simone Beta (Univ. Siena. Italy),
  • Maria Chriti (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki. Greece),
  • Christophe Cusset (ENS Lyon. France),
  • Richard Faure (Univ. Côte d’Azur. France),
  • Claire Le Feuvre (Sorbonne Université. France),
  • Giorgos Papanastassiou (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki. Greece),
  • Nathalie Rousseau (Sorbonne Université. France),
  • Richard Seaford (University of Exeter. Great Britain),
  • Athanasios Vergados (Newcastle University. Great Britain)
  • Arnaud Zucker (Univ. Côte d’Azur. France).

Places

  • Teloglion Foundation
    Thessaloniki, Greece

Date(s)

  • Wednesday, March 10, 2021

Keywords

  • étymologie, Grèce antique, linguistique, lexique, philologie

Contact(s)

  • Arnaud Zucker
    courriel : Arnaud [dot] ZUCKER [at] univ-cotedazur [dot] fr

Reference Urls

Information source

  • Arnaud Zucker
    courriel : Arnaud [dot] ZUCKER [at] univ-cotedazur [dot] fr

License

CC0-1.0 This announcement is licensed under the terms of Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal.

To cite this announcement

« Etymological Theories and Practice in Ancient and Byzantine Greece », Call for papers, Calenda, Published on Monday, February 08, 2021, https://doi.org/10.58079/15xw

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