Contact: Sarah Nicholas
STARKVILLE, Miss.鈥擜 亚洲色吧视频 visiting assistant professor will speak next Tuesday [Sept. 26] about how Roman citizens juggled information overload in their era.
Scott DiGiulio鈥檚 university presentation will explore the Roman practice of literary compilation and the techniques they developed to help navigate the quantity of available literature in their society. Titled 鈥淟iterary Compilation and the Challenges of Information Overload聽in the Roman World,鈥 the 4 p.m. event in the Coskrey Auditorium of Memorial Hall at MSU is free and open to all.
DiGiulio is a visiting assistant professor in the Department of Classical and Modern Languages and Literatures.
鈥淎t the height of the Roman Empire, readers had access to a vast amount of literature 鈥ealistically too much for any one person to read,鈥 DiGiulio said. 鈥淎t the same time, being able to display one鈥檚 intimate knowledge with this deep literary tradition was [closely connected] to social status.鈥
鈥淩eally, they suffered from聽a kind of information overload,鈥 DiGiulio said, 鈥渨hich is somewhat akin to our current abundance of writing thanks to media like the Internet.鈥
The act of reading 鈥渕ay seem simple, but there are so many ways to approach a text,鈥 said Julia Osman, incoming director for the Institute for the Humanities.
鈥淭he Romans did not have the Internet. However, learned members of society had to digest and arrange a tremendous amount of information,鈥 Osman said.听
One of the chief strategies for dealing with information overload in the ancient world was creating compilations of material. 聽These works 鈥減reserve a lot of material for us that we wouldn鈥檛 otherwise have, but what is most interesting to me is thinking about why certain authors were excerpted and others weren鈥檛,鈥 DiGiulio said.
鈥淪cott鈥檚 work on Roman literary culture provides provocative new insights on literacy, education and different Roman intellectual elites,鈥 said Peter Corrigan, department head for CMLL.听 鈥淭he late second century proved pivotal in many important social, cultural and political respects, and Scott is producing the kind of scholarship that will change our views on that era altogether.鈥
Now in his second year at MSU, DiGiulio received a bachelor鈥檚 degree from Harvard University in 2009 and a Ph.D. at Brown University in 2015, both in classics.
DiGiulio was a fellow for the Institute for the Humanities at MSU last year and is currently composing a book on the literary compilation 鈥淎ttic Nights鈥 by Aulus Gellius. He has presented lectures on Gellius鈥 works and ideas at conferences across the U.S., as well as published articles on Gellius聽and the intellectual culture of the Roman Empire.
Since 2014 DiGiulio has served as the project manager for the U.S. Epigraphy Project and was a member of the research team for the international project 鈥淰isible Words: Research and Training in Digital Contextual Epigraphy鈥 until the project鈥檚 conclusion in 2016.
His lecture is sponsored by the College of Arts and Sciences, the Institute for the Humanities and the Department of Classical and Modern Languages and Literatures.
MSU鈥檚 College of Arts and Sciences includes more than 5,000 students, 300 full-time faculty members, nine doctoral programs and 25 academic majors offered in 14 departments.听Complete details about the College of Arts and Sciences may be found at聽.
For more on the Institute for the Humanities,聽; and the CMLL department, .
MSU is Mississippi鈥檚 leading university, available online at聽.听