ASGLE Panels at AIA/SCS 2025

Don’t miss the two panels that ASGLE will co-sponsor with the Society of Papyrologists at the AIA/SCS meeting in Philadelphia this week!

Friday, January 3, 2:00-5:00 pm, Salon L.

SCS-31: Organization, Display, and Transfer of Knowledge (organized by the American Society of Greek and Latin Epigraphy and the American Society of Papyrologists)

James Sickinger, Florida State University, and C. Michael Sampson, University of Manitoba, Organizers

1. James Sickinger, Florida State University. Introduction

2. Eleanor Martin, Yale University. Family Time? Filiation, Kinship, and Ethnic Knowledge in North African Bilingual Inscriptions

3. Lavinia Ferretti, University of Basel. The Origin of (Papyrological) Hypomnemata across Greek, Aramaic and Demotic Evidence.

4. Marcus Ziemann, Princeton University. Assyria Grammata: How Did Greeks Encounter Near Eastern Literature?

5. Eduardo Garcia-Molina, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. From Skins to Stone: Examining Multimediality in Seleukid Inscriptions

6. Peter Satterthwaite, University of Pennsylvania. Double-edged Honor: Publicity and Social Pressure in Greek Subscription Lists

7. Steven Tuck, Miami University. Text, Material, and Meaning at Naples: The Emperor Titus’ Post-Eruption Rebuilding Inscription (CIL 10.1481)

Saturday, January 4, 2:00-5:00 pm | Salon L.

SCS-62: New Directions in Papyrology and Epigraphy in the 21st Century (organized by the American Society of Papyrologists and the American Society of Greek and Latin Epigraphy)

C. Michael Sampson, University of Manitoba, and James Sickinger, Florida State University, Organizers

1. C. Michael Sampson, University of Manitoba. Introduction

2. Morgan Palmer, University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Vestal Virgins and Roman Soldiers: Inscriptions and the Feriale Duranum (P.Dura 54)

3. Sheridan Marsh, University of Pennsylvania. Inscribing Revolts in Epigraphic Memory

4. Caroline van Toor, University of Groningen. In death not divided. Integrating text and image in the study of social history on the basis of funerary monuments

5. Helen Wong, University of Pennsylvania. “A good papyrus script”: multigenerational funerary inscriptions from the Tomb ofApollophanes

6. Qizhen Xie, Brown University. Apparition and Representation: Presence of “Toparchs” in Two “Non-Ptolemaic” Inscriptions

7. Egidia Occhipinti, University of Palermo. A multidisciplinary approach to the study of literary papyri

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