Dear all,

The Critical Antiquities Workshop is back for 2024. In our first meeting, we 
will host Sean Gurd (University of Texas, Austin) for his paper, ‘Philology and 
Music: Uncomfortable Entanglements.’


The event will take place on Zoom on Thursday, March 21, 9:30-11:00am (Sydney, 
Canberra, Melbourne time).

Here is the time in other locations:


  *   Los Angeles/Vancouver: Wednesday, March 20, 15:30-17:00
  *   Mexico City: Wednesday, March 20, 16:30-18:00
  *   Chicago: Wednesday, March 20, 17:30-19:00
  *   New York: Wednesday, March 20, 18:30-20:00.
  *   Santiago/Buenos Aires/Rio de Janeiro: Wednesday, March 20, 19:30-21:00
  *   Dublin/Belfast/London: Wednesday, March 20, 22:30-00:00
  *   Paris/Berlin/Rome: Wednesday, March 20, 23:30-1:00
  *   Johannesburg/Athens/Cairo: Thursday, March 21, 00:30-2:00
  *   Beijing/Singapore/Perth: Thursday, March 21, 06:30-8:00
  *   Tokyo: Thursday, March 21, 07:30-9:00
  *   Darwin: Thursday, March 21, 8:00-9:30
  *   Brisbane: Thursday, March 21, 8:30-10:00
  *   Adelaide: Thursday, March 21, 9:00-10:30

To register, please sign up for the Critical Antiquities Network mailing list 
to receive Zoom links and CAN announcements: 
https://signup.e2ma.net/signup/1930251/1916146

Here is the abstract:

This paper presents an overview of the interactions between the two arts 
(technai) which in the ancient world set themselves the task of disciplining 
the voice, that is, of taking what Plato called the “infinite” material of 
vocal expression and imposing limits and form upon it. These arts were music 
(techne mousike) and philology or grammar (techne grammatike). I argue that our 
view of music is unavoidably clouded by the fact that so much of the evidence 
about music comes through us through a grammatical filter, and I attempt to 
identify some of the ways in which philology’s disciplinary biases and 
self-defining procedures can be seen to inform, and even warp, written evidence 
for musical practice. As a case study, I treat the history of the debate over 
the relationship between the pitch accent and melodic contour, a debate which, 
I argue, is decisively conditioned not by any musical constraint or rule, but 
by the internal procedures and ideological consequences of the system of 
grammatical knowledge, above all as these are reflected in the techne 
grammatike attributed to Dionysius of Thrace and the commentaries which accrued 
around it.

We hope to see you there,

Tristan and Ben

Tristan Bradshaw
Lecturer, School of Liberal Arts | Co-director, Critical Antiquities Network
Faculty of the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities | Building 19 Room 1085
University of Wollongong NSW 2522 Australia
T +61 2 4221 3850
uow.edu.au<https://www.uow.edu.au> | 
criticalantiquities.org<https://criticalantiquities.org>
Honorary Associate
University of Sydney
School of Humanities, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences

University of Wollongong CRICOS: 00102E


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