Sather Professorship of Classical Literature

Chair at the University of California, Berkeley From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Jane K. Sather Professorship of Classical Literature is an endowed chair for the study of classics at the University of California, Berkeley. Established in 1914 after a donation by Jane K. Sather, widow of the Norwegian-American banker Peder Sather, the professorship requires its holder to spend one term at the university. Sather Professors would teach a full programme of classes. Since 1919, the post entails a set of lectures on a unified topic which is later published as a book by the University of California Press. According to classicist Oliver Taplin, the chair is "the most prestigious [professorship] in the subject in the world".[1]

Sather Tower at the University of California, Berkeley

Foundation

In 1886, the Norwegian-American banker Peder Sather died, leaving a substantial fortune to his second wife Jane K. Sather.[2] In 1900, after managing the bequest herself for some time, she decided to make an initial donation of $75,000 and other assets to the University of California at Berkeley. At this time, Sather stipulated that her donation be used to establish a professorship of the Classics and a fund for the study of law. Shortly before her death in 1911, she arranged for the funds to be consolidated; they were now to pay for what would become the Sather Tower and the establishment of two professorships: one in Classics and one in historiography.[3] The Regents of the University of California complied with Sather's wishes and divided her donation accordingly. $100,000 were allocated for each of the professorships.[4] Although her husband had accumulated the initial donation, both the tower and the professorships were named after her.[5] In 1914,[1] Benjamin Ide Wheeler, the university's president, appointed the British archaeologist John Myres to be the first holder of the chair.[6]

Professorship

Wheeler Hall, where the Sather professor traditionally lectures

Initially, holder of the professorship would spend one term at Berkeley, teaching a full programme of classes.[7] In 1919, classicists Ivan Mortimer Linforth and George Calhoun modified the nature of the appointment: henceforth, holders would give a specified number of lectures (initially eight, later six) on a unified topic. The lectures should then be published as a book by the University of California Press. Until 1952, Sather Professors were given access to an office in the university's Wheeler Hall which included its own lavatory.[8] The office has since been replaced by rooms in Dwinelle Hall furnished with a dedicated library and portraits of past holders of the chair.[8]

The Sather Professorship has been held by numerous distinguished scholars including Cyril Bailey, E. R. Dodds, Denys Page, Geoffrey Kirk, Ronald Syme, Edward Rand, and Bernard Knox.[8] Appointments in the 21st century have included Latinists Philip Hardie, Alessandro Barchiesi, and Denis Feeney, Hellenists Helene P. Foley, and Gregory Nagy, and historians Mary Beard and Nicholas Purcell.[9] According to classicist Oliver Taplin, the chair is "the most prestigious [professorship] in the subject in the world".[1]

List of Sather Professors

Beginning in 1919, the duties of the Sather Professorship included a series of six lectures preparatory to book-length publication. From 1967 to 2001, lecture series titles were not publicized; in these cases, the subsequent book title is given. Lecture series that did not or have not yet resulted in a book publication are indicated with a §.

More information Year, Professor ...
Year Professor Lecture Topic
1913–14John Myres (I)
1914–15Henry W. Prescott"The Classical Epic"
1915–16no professor appointed due to World War I
1916–17Paul Shorey (I)"The Broader Aspects of Platonism in European Literature"
1916–17Gordon Jennings Laing"Ancient Etruria"
1917–18Francis Greenleaf Allinson"The Greeks in Literature and Life"
1917-18William Kelly Prenticeno formal series
1918–19Paul Shorey (II)no formal series
1919–20Edward Kennard Rand"The History of Classical Culture during the Middle Ages"; "The History of Pastoral Literature"
1920–21John Adams Scott"The Unity of Homer"
1921–22 §George L. Hendrickson"Roman Satire"
1922–23Herbert Weir Smyth"Aeschylean Tragedy"
1923–24Terrot R. Glover"Herodotus"
1924–25Duane R. Stuart"Epochs of Greek and Roman Biography"
1925–26John Burnet"Platonism"
1926–27John Myres (II)"Who Were the Greeks?"
1927–28Arthur L. Wheeler"Catullus and the Traditions of Ancient Poetry"
1928–29Paul Shorey (III)"Platonism Ancient and Modern"
1929–30Tenney Frank"Life and Literature of the Roman Republic"
1930–31Martin P. Nilsson"The Mycenean Origins of Greek Mythology"
1931–32Cyril Bailey"Phases in the Religion of Ancient Rome"
1932–33Robert J. Bonner"Aspects of Athenian Democracy"
1933–34 §William Abbott Oldfather"The Decline of Culture within the Roman Empire"
1934–35Werner Jaeger"Demosthenes: the Origin and Growth of his Policy"
1935–36J. Wight Duff"Roman Satire: Its Outlook on Social Life"
1936–37Samuel Eliot Bassett"The Poetry of Homer"
1937–38 §Benjamin Oliver Foster[A]no regular series due to Foster's death
1938–39 §Henri Grégoire"Constantine the Great and the Triumph of Christianity"
1939–40H.J. Rose"The Eclogues of Virgil"
1940–41Axel W. Persson"The Religion of Greece in Prehistoric Times"
1941–42 §John Beazley[B] (I)no regular series due to World War II
1942–43Hermann Fränkel"Ovid: a Poet between Two Worlds"
1943–44Gilbert Norwood"Pindar"
1944–45Rhys Carpenter"Folk Tale, Fiction, and Saga in the Homeric Epic"
1945–46Max Ludwig Wolfram Laistner"The Greater Roman Historians"
1946–47Lily Ross Taylor"Party Politics in the Age of Caesar"
1947–48Levi Arnold Post"From Homer to Menander: Forces in Greek Poetic Fiction"
1948–49Sir John Beazley (II)"The Development of Attic Black-Figure"
1949–50E.R. Dodds"The Greeks and the Irrational"
1950–51Ben Edwin Perry"The Greek Romances"
1951–52Arnold Wycombe Gomme"The Greek Attitude to Poetry and History"
1952–53André-Jean Fegustière"Personal Religion among the Greeks"
1953–54 Jakob Larsen"Representative Government in Greek and Roman History"
1954–55Joshua Whatmough"Poetic, Scientific, and Other Forms of Discourse"
1955–56Sir Frank Adcock"The Greek and Macedonian Art of War"
1956–57 §Georges Daux"An International Organization in Antiquity: The Delphic Amphictiony"
1957–58Denys Page"History and the Homeric Iliad"
1958–59Benjamin Dean Meritt"The Athenian Year"
1959–60Sir Ronald Syme"Sallust"
1960–61H.D.F. Kitto"Poiesis, or Literary Structure"
1961–62Arnaldo Momigliano"The Classical Foundations of Modern Historiography"
1962–63Bernard Knox"The Heroic Temper: Studies in Sophoclean Tragedy"
1963–64Bruno Snell"Scenes from Greek Drama"
1963–64Sterling Dow"Knossos and Mycenae: the Great Powers in the Bronze Age"
1964–65 §Viktor Pöschl"Man and Politics in Tacitus"
1965–66William Bedell Stanford"The Sound of Greek Poetry"
1966–67Kenneth Dover"Lysias and the Corpus Lysiacum"
1967–68E. J. KenneyThe Classical Text
1968–69Geoffrey KirkMyth: Meaning and Functions
1969–70Hugh Lloyd-JonesThe Justice of Zeus
1970–71F. W. WalbankPolybius
1971–72Moses FinleyThe Ancient Economy
1972–73Gordon Willis WilliamsChange and Decline. Roman Literature in the Early Empire
1973–74Albrecht DihleThe Theory of Will in Classical Antiquity
1974–75Emily VermeuleAspects of Death in Early Greek Art and Poetry
1975–76 §Ernst Badian
1976–77Walter BurkertStructure and History in Greek Mythology and Ritual
1977–78C. J. HeringtonPoetry into Drama. Early Tragedy and the Greek Poetic Tradition
1978–79 §James Frank Gilliam
1979–80 §G. E. L. Owen
1980–81Emilio GabbaDionysius and the History of Archaic Rome
1981–82Wendell ClausenVirgil's Aeneid and the Tradition of Hellenistic Poetry
1982–83Christian HabichtPausanias' Guide to Ancient Greece
1983–84G. E. R. LloydThe Revolutions of Wisdom : Studies in the Claims and Practice of Ancient Greek Science
1984–85Anthony SnodgrassAn Archaeology of Greece
1985–86Averil CameronChristianity and the Rhetoric of Empire : The Development of Christian Discourse
1986–87 §T. C. Gelzer
1988–89Bernard WilliamsShame and Necessity
1989–90 §Albert Heinrichs
1990–91Paul ZankerThe Mask of Socrates. The Image of the Intellectual in Antiquity
1991–92Glen BowersockFiction as History : Nero to Julian
1992–93Alexander NehamasThe Art of Living : Socratic Reflections from Plato to Foucault
1993–94Anne Pippin BurnettRevenge in Attic and Late Tragedy
1994–95Gian Biagio ConteJulian
1995–96 §Froma Zeitlin
1996–97Brunilde RidgwayPrayers in Stone : Greek Architectural Sculpture ca. 600-100 B.C.E.
1997–98Michael FredeA Free Will. Origins of the Notion in Ancient Thought
1998–99Henk Versnel"Coping with the Gods; Wayward Readings in Greek Theology"
1999–2000 §Anna Morpurgo Davies"Names and Naming in Ancient Greece: Language, Culture and Continuity"
2000–01Brian StockAugustine's Inner Dialogue. The Philosophical Soliloquy in Late Antiquity
2001–02Gregory Nagy"Homer the Classic"
2002–03Fergus Millar"A Greek Roman Empire: Power, Belief and Reason under Theodosius II (A.D. 408-450)"
2003–04Denis Feeney"Charts of Roman Time: The Uses of Time in the Formation of Roman Culture"
2004–05David Sedley"Creationism and Its Critics in Antiquity"
2005–06Roger S. Bagnall"Everyday Writing in the Graeco-Roman East"
2006–07Tonio Hölscher"Visual Power in Ancient Greece and Rome"
2007–08Helene P. Foley"Reimagining Greek Tragedy on the U.S. Stage"
2008–09Mary Beard"Roman Laughter"
2009–10 §Heinrich von Staden"The Scientific Lives of Animals: Ancient Greece and Rome"
2010–11 §Alessandro Barchiesi"The War for Italia: Conflict and Collective Memory in Vergil's Aeneid"
2011–12 §Nicholas Purcell"Venal Histories: The Character, Limits, and Historical Importance of Buying and Selling in the Ancient World"
2012–13Robert Parker"Greek Gods Abroad"
2013–14 §François Lissarrague"Panta Kala: Heroic Warriors and the Aesthetics of Weaponry in Greek Art"
2014–15 §Richard P. Martin"Comic Community: Laughter and Loathing in Athens"
2015–16Philip Hardie"Classicism and Christianity in Late Antique Latin Poetry"
2016–17 §M. M. McCabe"Seeing and Saying: Plato on Virtue and Knowledge"
2017–18 §Maurizio Bettini"City of the Spoken Word: Orality and the Foundations of Roman Culture"
2018–19Jack L. Davis"A Bronze Age Greek State in Formation"
2019–20Josiah Ober"The Greeks and the Rational: The Discovery of Practical Reason"
2020–21no professor appointed due to COVID-19 pandemic
2021–22Emily Gowers"The Small Stuff of Roman Antiquity"
2022–23 §Greg Woolf"The Rhythms of Rome: Seasonality and society in the early empire"
2023–24 §Victoria Wohl"The Poetry of Being and the Prose of the World in Early Greek Philosophy"
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Notes

A^ : Benjamin Oliver Foster died before assuming his professorship. In his stead, Oscar Broneer and Theodore Wade-Gery delivered three lectures each.
B^ : The outbreak of World War II prevented John Beazley from assuming his professorship. In his stead, Carl Blegen and Harold F. Cherniss delivered three lectures each. Beazley was reappointed in 1948.

Impact

Writing for The Times Literary Supplement, poet and author Robert Bringhurst states that the Sather Lectures and its associated publications "include many major works of classical scholarship".[10] The 1969 Lectures, given by Hellenist Hugh Lloyd-Jones, offered "an important re-examination of the religious beliefs of the Greeks in the pre-classical and classical periods".[11] They resulted in 1971 in the publication of Lloyd-Jones' first influential publication, The Justice of Zeus.[11] In 1970,[9] historian F. W. Walbank delivered the Sather Lectures on the Greek writer Polybius. His resulting book, Polybius (1972), was still considered the standard work on this topic in the early 21st century.[12] In 2007, Helene P. Foley gave the first Sather Lecture on the topic of classical reception studies. Analysing the re-performance of classical plays in the United States, her lectures are described by Taplin as "somewhat of a milestone" in moving the subject closer to the mainstream of classical scholarship.[1]

See also

References

Bibliography

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