The blog aggregates news about publications, activities, etc. related to Egyptian/Arabic scholarship in the field of Greco-Roman studies and thus seeks to challenge the Eurocentrism prevalent in the field. It aims also at directing the attention to relevant materials from modern nonacademic/public contexts; roughly from 1798-to the present. The news comes mainly from Egypt without excluding other Arabic countries.
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Thursday, July 31, 2014
Πέρσαι of Aeschylus performed in Arabic (audio only)
Wednesday, July 30, 2014
Greek Literature in Alexandria: The Bucolic Poetry by Mohamed S. Khafaga
Greek Literature in Alexandria: The Bucolic Poetry, Mohamed S. Khafaga,without publication's date.
The book is available also in Archive.org. Follow this link.
Who is who in Greek and Roman Mythology (in Arabic), by Amin Salama
Who is who in Greek and Roman Mythology by Amin Salama, Cairo, 2nd Edition, 1988.
The book is available in pdf format in Archive.org. Follow this link
Saturday, July 26, 2014
Sophokles Tragedies into Arabic by Abdel Rahman Badawi
TV Interview with Prof. Dr. Abdelmoety Sharawy.
Latin Grammar (1948)
As for Jack Joseph Cohen, I'm not sure if he is the same Jack Joseph Cohen who was born on March 21, 1919 in Brooklyn, New York. This Jack is said to be graduated from Brooklyn College in 1940. At The Jewish Theological Seminary he received a Doctor of Hebrew Letters in 1940, and rabbinic ordination in 1943. for more on this person, see this website of the JTS ( Jewish Theological Seminary Library, New Work) through this link.
Tuesday, July 8, 2014
Sunday, July 6, 2014
Papyri in the Egyptian newspaper Almasry alyoum (the Egyptian Today).
Saturday, July 5, 2014
Cairo University's Department of Greek and Latin Studies: 10th Conference
2015 Department of Greek and Latin Studies 10th Conference
Individual and Society in Greek & Latin Lyric Poetry
and its Echoes in Modern Times
Saturday 8 - Monday 10 March 2015
The Department of Greek and Latin Studies at the University of Cairo will host its 10th biennial conference in March 2015 . Plenary lectures , presentations and papers will be held on campus in the Faculty's Conference Room . Accommodation and meals will also be provided on campus.
We welcome proposals for papers (20 minutes long followed by discussions) and coordinated panels (comprising either 3 or 4 papers) from graduate students, academic staff, or others interested in the ancient world on the topics suggested below .
Suggested topics:
1- Roots of Lyric Poetry :
· in Epic Poetry .
· in Didactic Poetry .
2- Solo Lyric Poetry (Monody) :
· Terpander - Sappho - Alcaeus - Anacreon ….. etc.
3- Choral Lyric Poetry :
· Alcman - Ibycus - Simonides - Corinna - Pindar – Bacchylides….. etc.
4- Dithyramb :
5- Choral Odes in Greek Drama :
· Their nature and functions .
6- Alexandrian Lyric Poetry :
· The Epigrammatists : Asclepiades - Hedylus - Posidippus - Callimachus - Theocritus - Dioscorides .
7- Compilation and Classification of Classical Lyric Poetry in Alexandria .
8- Lyricism in Ancient Latin Literature :
· Livius Andronicus - Ennius - Naevius - Accius - Pacuvius .
9- The Origins of Roman Drama and Roman Lyric Legacy :
· Versus Fescennini - Satura - Fabula Atellana - Mimus (Fabula Riciniata).
10- Lyricism in Roman Comedy :
· Plautus - Terence .
11- Latin Lyric Poetry in the Golden Age :
· Catullus - Horace - Ovid . The Elegists : Gallus - Tibullus - Propertius .
12- The Influence of Sappho and the Alexandrian Lyric Poets (esp.Calli-
machus) on Latin Lyric Poetry .
13- Latin Lyric Poetry in the Silver Age .
14- Lyricism in Seneca’s Tragedies .
15- The Influence of Greek and Latin Lyric Poetry on Modern European
Literatures in Greece , Italy , France , Britain , Spain , Germany … etc .
16- The Echoes of Greek and Latin Lyric Poetry in Modern Arab Poetry :
· The School of Apollo - Abdelwahhab Elbayyati - Salah Abdelsabour - Adonis - Nezar Qabbani … etc .
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e-mail: elnahas.adel@gmail.com - alimoeinclasscaiedu@yahoo.com - samehfarouk 2002@hotmail.com
Tuesday, June 10, 2014
Prof. Dr. El-Nowieemy's Academia.edu
Friday, June 6, 2014
Ali EL-Ghamry's Biography (1926-1993)
Thursday, June 5, 2014
In Memoriam: Professor Ahmed Etman (1945–2013) by the Classical Receptions Journal, Oxford University Press.
The Obituary of the Prof. Dr. Ahmed Etman, by Lorna Hardwick
In Memoriam: Professor Ahmed Etman (1945–2013)
Classical Receptions Journal 2014 6: 175
In Memoriam: Professor Ahmed Etman (1945–2013)
We record with great sadness the death in August 2013 of Professor Ahmed Etman, who was from its inception a member of the International Advisory Board of the Classical Receptions Journal. Until his recent retirement, Ahmed Etman was a Professor of Classics and Comparative Literature in the Faculty of Arts at the University of Cairo. He also served as Chairman of the Egyptian Society of Graeco-Roman Studies and the Egyptian Society of Comparative Literature. From the start of his career he had extensive interests in the comparative histories of classical texts, both within antiquity and subsequently. He was an international authority on the history of classical scholarship in Egypt and on the role of the transmission of Greek texts through Latin and Arabic translations. In recent years, he contributed extensively on those topics to conferences in the UK and other western European countries.
Ahmed Etman had special skills in setting up large projects and bringing them to fruition. A highlight of his career was his leadership over a period of six years of the team of scholars who translated Homer’s Iliad into Arabic. This prose translation was published in 2004 and was accompanied by the reissue of a paperback edition of Soliman El_Bostany’s popular 1904 verse translation. The publication of the new translation was marked by a conference in Cairo on ‘Translation and Cultural Interaction’. Professor Etman was then under considerable pressure to facilitate a translation into Arabic of Homer’s Odyssey and in the meantime devoted attention to overseeing translation into Arabic of recent Anglophone scholarship, the publication of which he planned to launch at a conference in Cairo in the spring of 2014.
In addition to his scholarly work, Professor Etman was also a playwright, working mainly from classical figures and themes. Several of his plays were broadcast on Egyptian radio. His Cleopatra Worships Peace (1984) was translated into English, French, Greek, and Italian and The Goats of Oxyrynchus into English and French. Most recently, his play A Belle in the Prison of Socrates was published in an English translation by Professor Fawzia El-Sadr (2008). The play took the figure of Socrates as ‘gadfly’ to the democracy, presenting a collage of ancient sources in a theatrical setting. It proved prescient in its phantasmagoria on the elusive presence of demokratia at a time of internal and external conflict in ancient Athens.
Ahmed Etman’s sadly premature death has cut short his plans to use his retirement to promote cross-cultural exchange through discussion of the histories of classical scholarship and translation. We shall miss his energy and humour and especially his courteously ironic and even-handed dismissal of simplistic polarities between ‘orientalism’ and ‘occidentalism’.