Pourdavoud Center Lecture Series with Ann Hunnell Chen: Dislodging Disciplinary Silos at Dura-Europos

Royce Hall 314 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

Founded by the Seleucids, successively occupied by the Arsacids (Parthians) and Romans, and spectacularly conquered in a Sasanian siege, the borderland town of Dura-Europos (Syria) was home throughout its history to a fascinatingly diverse population. Since its initial excavation, the site has become justly famous thanks to unique circumstances of preservation that resulted in the...

Res Difficiles 4 | Difficult Conversations in Classics

The 2023 Res Difficiles conference will take place on March 24th 2023. Register for the conference here. Classics at the University of California Los Angeles, and Classics, Philosophy, & Religious Studies at the University of Mary Washington present Res Difficiles: A Conference On Challenges and Pathways for Addressing Inequity In Classics. Co-organized by Hannah Čulík-Baird and Joseph...

Elitzur Bar-Asher Siegal | How Many Grammars Does Jewish Babylonian Aramaic Have?

Kaplan Hall 365 415 Portola Plaza, Los Angeles, California

In this lecture, we will explore how languages evolve through linguistic diversity, aiming to shed light on the intricate relationship between language, its evolution, and its transmission through historical texts. Drawing on the principles of sociolinguistics, we will examine how speakers and writers of a language navigate between competing grammars. We will also explore the...

AchWorks 1 – Identity, Alterity, and the Imperial Impress in the Achaemenid World

Royce Hall 314 10745 Dickson Plaza, Los Angeles, CA

Identity, Alterity, and the Imperial Impress in the Achaemenid World   The Inaugural Symposium of the Achaemenid Workshops Series April 12–14, 2023 | 314 Royce Hall Morning refreshments and check-in begin at 8:00 am.  Panels begin at 9:00 am. The Pourdavoud Center for the Study of the Iranian World is convening an international workshop on...

Maria Wyke | Feminizing Ancient Rome: Women at the Cinema from the 1900s to the 1920s

Audio / Visual Romans I Thursday April 20th 2023 Annual UCLA Joan Palevsky Lecture Professor Maria Wyke, University College London “Feminizing Ancient Rome: Women at the Cinema from the 1900s to the 1920s“ The medium of the moving image started out as part of variety programmes and women often appeared in it advertising to men...