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Reimagining Futures, Reinventing Pasts: Classical Antiquity and the Making of Imagined Worlds

Annual Meeting of Postgraduates in the Reception of the Ancient World 2026

The call for papers is open.

Abstracts due: 15 June 2026

About the Conference

AMPRAW is an annual conference designed to bring together early-career researchers in the field of classical reception studies. The 2026 meeting will mark the fifteenth edition of the conference. Since 2011, AMPRAW aims to contribute to the growth of an international network of PhD students and early career scholars working on the reception of classical antiquity, as well as to strengthen relationships between emerging researchers and established academics.

AMPRAW 2026 will be held at the Faculty of “Artes Liberales”, University of Warsaw, in the milieu of the Centre for Studies on the Classical Tradition (OBTA), from Thursday 19 November to Saturday 21 November 2026.

We anticipate holding this conference in a hybrid format. We warmly encourage participants to attend in person in Warsaw, while also providing the possibility of remote participation for both speakers and audience members. We cannot guarantee funding to cover speakers’ expenses, however, there is no conference fee.

Conference Theme
Imagined Worlds

In a world increasingly oriented toward the future – marked by rapid change, uncertainty, and recurring crisis – classical antiquity remains a powerful resource for imagining and questioning possible worlds. Far from belonging solely to the past, ancient myths, philosophies, and narratives are repeatedly drawn on to articulate hopes and fears, and to envision alternative futures. Ancient thought itself often engaged in speculative reflection, developing ways of thinking about time, nature, and society, as well as the limits of human agency – approaches that continue to shape contemporary debates.

This conference invites early career researchers to explore how classical antiquity participates in the making of imagined worlds across different temporal directions: how it is reactivated in visions of the future, used to reinvent or contest the past, and how it helps to frame the present. Particular attention is given to speculative practices – utopian, dystopian, futuristic, or counterfactual – in which antiquity functions as a shared point of reference, a critical language, or a site of ideological struggle.

At the same time, receptions of antiquity are never neutral. They emerge within specific social, political, and cultural contexts, and often reflect contemporary concerns and power relations. By approaching antiquity as a historically situated and contested resource, the conference aims to foster interdisciplinary discussion on how ancient material is used and reworked in politics, science, art, and cultural imagination.

The conference welcomes contributions from scholars working worldwide in classics, classical reception studies, cultural studies, history, sociology, and the arts. We particularly encourage innovative and interdisciplinary approaches.

Suggested Topics

Reimagining Futures
• Classical antiquity in utopian, dystopian, and speculative fictions
• Myths and classical figures in futuristic or post-apocalyptic settings
• Ancient paradigms of heroism, otherness, and hybridity in new mythologies

Reinventing and Contesting Pasts
• Counterfactual antiquities: rewriting ancient history in literature, art, and popular culture
• Political uses of antiquity in imagined communities and alternative histories
• The aesthetics of ruins and “future archaeology”: imagining antiquity from the future

Temporalities, Crisis, and Speculation
• Classical myth as a framework for negotiating crisis, catastrophe, and transformation
• Antiquity and the Anthropocene: ecological and environmental imaginaries
• Nonlinear, circular, or fragmented temporalities in classical reception

Media, Technologies, and Digital Worlds
• Digital antiquity: gaming, virtual reconstruction, and immersive worlds
• Classical reception in film, animation, and speculative media
• Mythological motifs in AI, algorithms, and other emerging media

Politics, Ethics, and Communities
• Classical antiquity in visions of political futures and alternative social orders
• Reappropriations of classical narratives in activism and critical art
• Classical frameworks in debates on democracy, justice, and citizenship

Submission Guidelines

The Organising Committee cordially invites proposals for papers. Those wishing to present a 20-minute paper are invited to submit an abstract of no more than 300 words (as a Word document or PDF) to the organisers at ampraw2026@al.uw.edu.pl by 15 June 2026. Each individual may submit only one abstract. A template for the Word submission form can be downloaded here.

Applicants will be selected and notified by 20 July 2026.

Contact

For general inquiries about the conference, please contact us at ampraw2026@al.uw.edu.pl

The Organising Committee

Hanna Paulouskaya and Marta Pszczolińska
Faculty of “Artes Liberales”, University of Warsaw