Papers given by (members of) the Emmy-Noether group
24 January, 2013: "Navigating the story world. Visual and contextual framing in the Iliad and the Odyssey." Paper presented by Mark de Kreij at the conference Oral Poetics and Cognitive Science, Freiburg, Germany.
24 January, 2013: "The contribution of particles to poetic structuring in South Slavic and Homeric epic." Paper presented by Anna Bonifazi at the conference Oral Poetics and Cognitive Science, Freiburg, Germany.
12 December, 2012: "Ancient Greek Particles Across Genres." Workshop with the Emmy-Noether research group, organized by Pietro Maria Liuzzo and Roberto Batisti of the Scuola di Dottorato in Culture letterarie, filologiche e storiche, Università di Bologna, Bologna, Italy.
29 November, 2012: "Greek particles in archaic and classical literature: a discourse-oriented approach." Paper by Anna Bonifazi, Annemieke Drummen, and Mark de Kreij (delivered by Anna Bonifazi) at the conference Discourse Markers in Corpus Languages, Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain.
28 September, 2012: "Problematizing early IE syndetic coordination: Ancient Greek ‘and’ from Homer to Thucydides.” Paper presented by Anna Bonifazi at the International Conference Syntactic change and syntactic reconstruction: New perspectives, Zürich, Switzerland.
28 September, 2012: "Turn beginnings in Aristophanes." Paper presented by Annemieke Drummen at the International OIKOS PhD Days, Ravenstein, the Netherlands.
6 September, 2012: "Pindaric Particularities. Questions on the presence and absence of particles in Pindar's odes." Paper presented by Mark de Kreij at the Celtic Conference in Classics, Université de Bordeaux III and Ausonius Institute, Bordeaux, France.
24 May, 2012: "Detailing Patroclus' Final Moments. Particles and Reference in Iliad 16.394-863." Paper presented by Mark de Kreij at the Ricerche a Confronto meeting, Università degli Studi Roma Tre, Rome, Italy.
12 April, 2012: “Dialogic resonance in Greek tragedy.” Paper presented by Annemieke Drummen at the 2012 Classical Association Annual Conference, Exeter, United Kingdom.
30 March, 2012: “Multifunctional καί as part of Thucydides’ discourse strategies.” Paper presented by Anna Bonifazi at the 108th CAMWS Meeting, Baton Rouge, USA.
23 September, 2011: “Stylistic variation between tragic choral songs.” Paper presented by Annemieke Drummen at the 7th International Colloquium on Ancient Greek Linguistics, Ghent, Belgium.
7 July, 2011: “Discourse organization in oral traditions and in literatures of the past: the interface between linguistic and para-/extra-linguistic features.” Panel organized by Anna Bonifazi at the 12th International Pragmatics Conference, Manchester, United Kingdom. Contributions by A. Bonifazi and D. F. Elmer, A.M. Drummen, M. Montes de Oca Vega, P. O’Connell, R. Person, G. Williams.
7 July, 2011: “Linguistic and extralinguistic discourse organization in ancient Greek tragedy.” Paper presented by Annemieke Drummen at the 12th International Pragmatics Conference, Manchester, United Kingdom.
27 April, 2011: “Less Bouquet, More Body: Rethinking Ancient Greek Particles.” Invited lecture by Anna Bonifazi, Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia.
18 April, 2011: “The Catalogue of Ships and Ibycus’ Polycrates Ode. Μέν as a marker of narrative steps.” Paper presented by Mark de Kreij at the 2011 Classical Association Annual Conference, Durham, United Kingdom.
18 February, 2011: “Discourse organization in Greek tragedy: a multi-level approach.” Paper presented by Annemieke Drummen at the conference Linguistics and Classical Languages, Rome, Italy.
18 December, 2010: “Leaving the comfort zone. Greek particles in syntactic-semantic-pragmatic interfaces.” Paper by Anna Bonifazi, Annemieke Drummen, and Mark de Kreij (delivered by Annemieke Drummen) at the conference Ancient Greek and Semantic Theory, Nijmegen, the Netherlands.
10 June, 2010: “Details of discourse? The contribution of particles to the interpretation of texts.” Paper presented by Annemieke Drummen at the conference “God is in the details.” A reflection on methodology in the humanities, Milan, Italy.