Skip to main content

Guest speaker: Dr. Patrice Rankine, 'Does History Have a Mood?'

Please join Augustana's Classics Department in welcoming the University of Chicago's Dr. Patrice Rankine as this year's "Antiquity in the New Millennium" lecturer.

Dr. Rankine will be speaking on slavery, masses, and the elite in Herodotus in his presentation, "Does History Have a Mood?: Herodotus at the Dawn of Athenian Democracy."

Presentation abstract

'Hope' for ceasefire. 'Confidence' in the economy. 'Surprising' data. Islamophobia ('fear') post-9/11. Although emotions would seem to have no place in the recording or study of history, recent headlines reveal how approximate the affections of people are to immediate events. Emotions, moreover, are shared, accounting for collective moods conveyed in expressive life (e.g., art, music), journalism, and literature. Contemporary theorist Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht has argued that attunement with mood can be a powerful mode of literary interpretation. Historians have engaged with Gumbrecht’s studies for what they might convey about specific periods (such as the 18th century), but my aim here is something different, namely to read a historical text from the classical period as a literary artifact to which readers might attune to understand the mood or atmosphere it is expressing. Specifically, I read Herodotus’ preoccupation with democracy and slavery, freedom and forms of government, in terms of an atmosphere of expectancy. One insight or payoff of this reading is the realization of Athenian democracy not as unique or inevitable but as the byproduct of the emotional environment of the fifth century. Reading for mood helps in understanding the collective or public nature of emotions, how writers convey these feelings, and what this tells us about a people or period.

Location

Hanson 102

Hanson Hall of Science

738 35th St.
Rock Island, IL61201
United States

Google Maps

Tickets

Free; not required

Contact

Kirsten Day
KirstenDay@augustana.edu