Matthew Stolper and Wouter Henkelman will speak on matters relating to Persepolis at:
Signs of Writing Paris Conference
Monday, July 25 - Wednesday, July 27
The third and final international conference of the Neubauer Collegium
project, Signs of Writing: The Cultural, Social, and Linguistic Contexts
of the World’s First Writing Systems will be held at the University of
Chicago’s Center in Paris, July 25th-27th 2016.
The theme of the Paris conference is, broadly, script, society, and
literature, within the context and process of the invention of writing.
Specific topics will include scribal transmission and education, the
development of literacy, the rise of literature from earlier genres and
the extension of incipient writing systems to serve this purpose, the
materiality and archaeological contexts of writing, as well as the
relationship between writing and the non-linguistic symbolic systems
that preceded it.
Participants will include: John Baines (Oxford University); Wolfgang
Behr (Univeristy of Zurich); Françoise Bottéro (CNRS Paris); Stephen
Chrisomalis (Wayne State University); Jerry Cooper (Johns Hopkins
University); Sylvie Donnat Beauquier (Université de Strasbourg);
Jean-Jacques Glassner (CNRS Paris); Amalia Gnanadesikan (University of
Maryland); Michaël Guichard (École Pratique des Hautes Études); Wouter
Henkelman (École Pratique des Hautes Études); Stephen Houston (Brown
University); David Lurie (Columbia University); Massimo Maiocchi
(University of Chicago); Chrystelle Maréchal (CNRS/EHESS - CRLAO); Simon
Martin (University of Pennsylvania); Dimitri Meeks (CNRS - Université
Paul-Valéry - Montpellier III); Piotr Michalowski (University of
Michigan); Joel Palka (University of Illinois-Chicago); Annick Payne
(University of Basel); Christine Proust (CNRS - Université Paris
Diderot); Claude Rilly (CNRS/Inalco - Lacan); Gonzalo Rubio
(Pennsylvania State University); David Share (Haifa University); Ed
Shaughnessy (University of Chicago); Richard Sproat (Google Labs);
Andréas Stauder (École Pratique des Hautes Études); Matt Stolper
(University of Chicago); Anna Stryjewska (University of Zurich); Olivier
Venture (École Pratique des Hautes Études); Pascal Vernus (École
Pratique des Hautes Études); Haicheng Wang (University of Washington);
Gordon Whittaker (University of Göttingen); Maryanne Wolf (Tufts
University); Christopher Woods (University of Chicago); Marc Zender
(Tulane University); and Ilona Zsolnay (University of Pennsylvania)