Pan and the Anthropocene Symposium

20 July 2023, 9.00 AM - 20 July 2023, 6.00 PM

Peel Lecture Theatre and Hepple Lecture Theatre, School of Geographical Sciences, University of Bristol University Road Bristol BS8 1SS + online, via Zoom

The goat-legged ancient Greek deity Pan might not seem an obvious mascot for the twenty-first century. Yet he is a god of wild spaces and universal nature, whose composite bodily form – half-human, half-animal – makes him an appropriate figurehead for anxieties surrounding the relationship between humanity and the natural world. Even within classical literature, his penchant for terrorising shepherds suggests an uneasy relationship with human attempts to domesticate wild landscapes. It is no surprise that cultural depictions of Pan previously exploded in the wake of the Industrial Revolution, nor that critical attention is returning to the goat-god in the twenty first century, as we confront humanity’s impact upon the planet.

This event, which is sponsored by the Institute of Greece, Rome, and the Classical Tradition (IGRCT), asks what it means to look backwards to antiquity in a time of ecological emergency. What can we learn from the classical past in this most contemporary crisis?

The symposium will take place in hybrid format:

Registration opens at 9am. A draft programme, subject to possible change, is available: Pan and the Anthropocene programme (PDF, 148kB).

Contact information

Inquiries about this event should be directed to Dr Billie Gavurin at bg13358@bristol.ac.uk.

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