Meggie Macdonald

Archive for March, 2009

Volunteering with TOCS-IN project

by meggie on Mar.10, 2009, under Academics and News, Museums and Depts

While recently reviewing the University of Toronto Classics Department webpage, I discovered proof that it pays to keep checking back. 

The TOCS-IN project (Table of Contents of Indexes of Interest to Classicists) is run by several people out of Toronto (Canada), Louvain (Belgium) and Baltimore (USA) and I’m happy to say that I now consider myself a contributing volunteer to this monumental work.

TOCS-IN is designed to provide an interactive reference for classicists to find articles from all the available scholarly journals.  The project itself has been divided into two:  the Louvain group is focusing on all journals published before 1992 while the Toronto and Baltimore branches are working on anything published after 1992 and are also keeping the indexes up to date with new publications.

TOCS-IN is looking for volunteers who have the time, interest and inclination to scour through back issues of an incredible number of scholarly journals and compile .txt lists (using specific formatting) of the tables of contents of each and every issue.

I have offered to take on the Papers of the British School at Rome, The American Journal of Archaeology and the Cambridge Classical Journal.  My choices are based on my interests (history and archaeology) and the regularity with which I have found articles for various research projects in the past (the American Journal of Archaeology, for example), and I feel that I could make a positive contribution to this project and facilitate the research of numerous classicists around the world.

Just another reason to keep on networking.

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Yet more on Polybius

by meggie on Mar.05, 2009, under Academics and News, History

It seems I haven’t been able to get Polybius out of my head.  No, I’m not hearing voices or any such thing like that.  But my recent (and continuous) work on the lead-up to the Second Punic War (aka the Hannibalic War) has had been thinking about this austere Greek historian on and off for quite some time.

I’ve narrowed my focus for this project onto Polybius for the foreseeable future because, barring anything else, he is one of the most complete primary sources available on the Second Punic War and his background as a politician and diplomat (albeit as a hostage) make him an excellent candidate for an informed and knowledgeable perspective on the dealings between Rome and Carthage in the third century BC.

Why not Livy or Appian or Cornelius Nepos, you say?  Well, for starters, Livy is a great source for Latin literary technique and technical details on the campaigns and battles of the war.  I have no doubt that he will start haunting me with just as much penache as Polybius is doing currently when it comes to working on the nature of the war and how it played out.  For now, however, he’s not the best option for someone researching the lead-up to the war or, as my OAC history teacher would say, the long- and short-term causes of the war.  Livy’s work suggests an inevitability about the war, as though Rome and Carthage – presupposing the conclusion that Vergil made in The Aeneid, Book IV – were great enemies destined to come into conflict until one of them was completely utterly and heartwrenchingly defeated.  Livy makes you wish there was more of Livy still extant.

Polybius is a bit more withdrawn or cynical, if you like.  He knows that what happened in the third century happened and cannot be changed, so he looks at it from a more critical perspective and suggests, in a sly way, two options:  if we take the cause of war to be the attack on Saguntum, then the Carthaginians are to blame, but if we take the cause of war to be the unlawful removal of Sardinia by Rome, then the blame for the war falls on Rome (III.30).  This statement, and the language with which it is conveyed, suggest a scholarly ambiguity that tells more than any direct comment possibly could.  This is what has Polybius swimming around in my head and what, I hope, will form a solid lynchpin for my arguments about treaty precedents and potential misunderstandings that could explain the vehemence of the outbreak of the Second Punic War.

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