Daily Archives: 13 September 2016

Tara Auty, PMRG/CMEMS Free Lunchtime Lecture @ UWA

“Medea’s Pathological Passions: Seneca’s Dramatic Inversion of Stoicism”, Tara Auty (UWA)

Date: 20 September, 2016
Time: 1:00pm
Venue: Arts Lecture Room 6 (G.62, ground floor, Arts Building), University of Western Australia

This is a free event. You don’t need to RSVP – just come along.

Traditionally, Seneca’s Medea has been problematised when considered against his prose works. However, recent scholarship has shown that, far from showcasing the failure of Stoicism, Medea inverts the ideals advanced in Seneca’s prose works in order to prove the effectiveness of Stoic philosophy by that very inversion. This paper will demonstrate that Medea is not a character whose reason succumbs to her passions, but rather, that her passions in fact arise from a from a system of reasoning that is internally coherent. The development and sustenance of her passions from and through her reason can thus be read as evidence of one of the most basic tenets of Stoicism, that emotions are based on value judgements. Her practise of constancy – advocated by Seneca to foster consistent character – consolidates her motives and solidifies her drive, so that she develops from being a character temporarily experiencing certain emotions to a character defined by the permanency of those emotions.


Tara Auty is a PhD candidate in Classics and Ancient History at The University of Western Australia (UWA), working under the umbrella of the Languages and Emotion research cluster, contributing to both the Meanings and Change programs of ARC CHE. Her current research project for her PhD, due in 2018, is a study of the effect of community emotions in response to the Fall of Constantinople on the production of neo-Latin epic in the Quattrocento. This project benefits from, and contributes to, fields as varied as scholarship on Latin Humanism, the study of Classical Latin epic, early Modern Italian history, and the cultural history of the emotions.

Cultures of Performance: Medieval English Theatre Society Annual Meeting 2017 – Call For Papers

Cultures of Performance: a Celebration of the Work of Philip Butterworth
Medieval English Theatre Society Annual Meeting
University of Glasgow
25 March, 2017

Conference Website

The 2017 meeting honours Philip Butterworth, recently retired from Leeds University, and formerly of Bretton Hall College. Philip has been a loyal contributor to Medieval English Theatre, and was one of those present at the first meeting in Lancaster in 1978. His numerous influential publications on the performance of early drama, as well as his many productions, suggest that the time is right to celebrate that contribution.

The topic for the meeting is Cultures of Performance and we invite proposals for 20 minute papers on topics including (but not limited to):

  • Changing conceptions of dramatic genre
  • Para-theatrical traditions
  • Performance and performers – acting and actors
  • Staging and stage spaces
  • Spectacle and stage-effects
  • Voice and speech
  • Modern performance of early dramatic texts and shows
  • Preparation and rehearsal

Please send abstracts of no more than 200 words to Pamela King (Pamela.King@glasgow.ac.uk) by Wednesday 14 December. 2016.