Ce colloque traitera de la question des réfugiés politiques dans le monde grec depuis ses origines jusqu’à la conquête romaine de la Grèce.
===) Les 15 et 16 juin 2017, Maison méditerranéenne des sciences de l’homme, Aix-en-Provence.
Image : site archéologique antique de l’Acropole d’Athènes, en Grèce © Cyril FRESILLON/CNRS Photothèque, 2013.
ORGANISATION SCIENTIFIQUE & CONTACTS
Organisé par Laura Loddo, historienne, post-doctorante LabexMed, Centre Paul-Albert Février - TDMAM (UMR 7297), Université d’Aix-Marseille.
Courriel : lauraloddo82@gmail.com
LabexMed : Mathilde Favier - mfavier@mmsh.univ-aix.fr
Communication : Patricia Zuntow - pzuntow@mmsh.univ-aix.fr
+ 33 (0)4 42 52 43 32
This conference, whose title is taken from the first modern volume on this topic (E. Balogh, Political Refugees in the Ancient Greece from the Period of the Tyrants to Alexander the Great), aims at exploring the subject of political refugees in the Greek world from its origins up the Roman conquest of Greece. As in 1943, this subject remains dramatically relevant even today. Many contributions, in fact, have been devoted to the topics of the exile (phygé) and the civil war (stasis) in ancient Greece, aspects that seem to have been endemic in the Greek cities, but far less attention has been paid to the very subject of refugees, so that many aspects still remain to be investigated. As the concept of “refugee” is a relatively recent idea, elaborated as a consequence of the dramatic experience of the Second World War, when millions of persons were displaced in Europe by reason of the war, each investigation about refugees in antiquity cannot ignore comparison with the modern notion of refugee. Nevertheless, some reconsiderations on the specific features of Greek politics and society are called for in relation to the ancient concept of refugee (phygas), and this will be the subject of the conference.
PROGRAMME
JEUDI 15 JUIN 2017
Salle Georges Duby, MMSH, Aix-en-Provence
– 9h - 9h15 | Accueil
Première séance 9h15 - 10h30
– 9h15 | Ouverture du colloque par Sophie Bouffier (Aix-Marseille Université),
directrice de la Maison méditerranéenne des sciences de l’homme
– 9h30 | Amandine Gouttefarde (Université Paris IV - Sorbonne)
Lieux communs et représentations littéraires des exilés
– 9h55 | Pamina Fernández Camacho (Universidad de Almería)
“Skilled at Grasping”. The Dangerous Refugee Stereotype in Stories about Phoenicians
Deuxième séance : 10h45 - 12h15
– 10h45 | Annette Teffeteller (Concordia University)
Three Thousand Years of Sanctuary. Anatolian Refugees in Greek Lands : The Bronze Age Beginnings
– 11h10 | Laura Loddo (Aix-Marseille Université, LabexMed, CPAF)
Ἕως ἂν κατέλθωσιν εἰς τὴν αὐτῶν : dispositifs d’accueil et protection des réfugiés
à Athènes au IVe siècle
– 11h35 | Nick Cross (Baruch College, New York)
The Hearth as a Place of Refuge and Redemption in Ancient Greece
– 12h | Discussion
– 12h30 -14h | Déjeuner
Troisième séance : 14h - 15h30
– 14h | Dennis Alley (Cornell University)
Pindar’s Poetics of Repatriation in the Fourth Pythian Ode
– 14h25 | Gabriella Vanotti (Università del Piemonte Orientale)
Les sorts croisés de deux célèbres réfugiés : Thémistocle et Cimon
– 14h50 | Suvi Kuokkanen (University of Oulu)
Ostracism, the Dynamics of Reintegration, and Inner Change in Classical Athens
– 15h15 | Discussion
– 15h30 | Pause
Quatrième séance : 15h45 - 16h30
– 15h45 | Étienne Helmer (Universidad de Puerto Rico), visioconférence
“Savoir être étranger” : la question des réfugiés dans les Suppliantes d’Eschyle
– 16h10 | Discussion
VENDREDI 16 JUIN 2017
Salle Georges Duby, MMSH, Aix-en-Provence
– 9h - 9h15 | Accueil
Cinquième séance 9h15 - 10h45
– 9h15 | Emmanuèle Caire (Aix-Marseille Université, CNRS)
L’activité politique des réfugiés pendant la guerre du Péloponnèse
– 9h40 | Cinzia Bearzot (Università Cattolica di Milano)
Extradition et saisie de la personne des refugiés athéniens à l’époque des Trente Tyrans
– 10h05 | Hans van Wees (University College London)
Refugee Crises in Ancient Greece : Causes and Solutions
– 10h30 | Discussion suivie d’une pause
Sixième séance 11h - 12h30
– 11h | Tamara Cheishvili (I. Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University)
The Socio-Political Role of the Refugee Women in the Trojan Women
– 11h25 | Paolo Andrea Tuci (Università Cattolica di Milano)
Persian Refugees in Ancient Greece ?
- 11h50 | Hamish Williams (University of Cape Town)
Shame and the Pariah : Wladyslaw Szpilman’s The Pianist and the Ancient Pollution Story
– 12h15 | Discussion
– 12h30 | Déjeuner
Septième séance 14h - 15h30
– 14h | Chiara Militello (Università di Catania)
From Heroes to Zeroes : The Pythagorean Refugees of the 6th and 5th Centuries
– 14h25 | Jason R. Harris (Harvard University – Center for Hellenic Studies)
The Reaction of the Refugee : The Banishment of Court Scholars in the 4th Century BC and the Political Power of their Writings
– 14h50 | William O. Stephens (Creighton University)
Refugees, Stoicism, and Cosmic Citizenship
– 15h15 | Discussion suivie d’une pause
Huitième séance 15h45 - 16h45
– 15h45 | Benjamin Gray (University of Edinbur
Refugees’ Political Engagement in Ancient Greek History and Modern Refugee Studies
– 16h10 | Francesco Mari (Polis Institute of Jerusalem)
À l’abri d’Apollon. Les Alcméonides réfugiés à Delphes (513-511 av. J.-C.)
– 16h35 | Discussion et conclusions des travaux