Evelia Arteaga
Universidad Autónoma de la Ciudad de México, Colegio de Humanidades y Ciencias Sociales, Profesora-investigadora de tiempo completo
Licenciada, maestra y doctora en letras clásicas por la UNAM. Soy profesora-investigadora de la UACM desde 2006 donde imparto materias relacionadas con el área de español y de griego.
También soy parte del Colegio de Letras Clásicas de la UNAM donde he impartido materias del área de griego.
Mi área de estudio es el ámbito de la muerte: sus manifestaciones y su relación con la sociedad (género, jerarquías, creencias, etc.) tanto en la cultura griega arcaica y clásica como en la actualidad.
Soy parte del Sistema Nacional de Investigadores.
Evelia Arteaga Conde has a PhD in Classical Languages from UNAM (2014). She has been working since 2006 as a full-time professor/researcher for the Universidad Autónoma de la Ciudad de México (UACM), where she has lectured in the areas of Spanish Language and Greek Culture. She has publications about the Greek world and their traditions for specialized magazines (for instance, UNAM´s Nova Tellvs in 2019 and 2021); for Revista de Filosofía de la Universidad Iberoamericana, (Philosophy magazine of the Universidad Iberoamericana) on 2020 and for Revista de Estudios Clásicos de la Universidad Nacional de Cuyo (Magazine of Classical Studies of the National University of Cuyo) in 2020. She has participated in several national and international congresses with lectures regarding Archaic and Classic Greek culture, with subjects such as the funerary epigrams and the manifestations of beliefs related to the death in the Greek world.
También soy parte del Colegio de Letras Clásicas de la UNAM donde he impartido materias del área de griego.
Mi área de estudio es el ámbito de la muerte: sus manifestaciones y su relación con la sociedad (género, jerarquías, creencias, etc.) tanto en la cultura griega arcaica y clásica como en la actualidad.
Soy parte del Sistema Nacional de Investigadores.
Evelia Arteaga Conde has a PhD in Classical Languages from UNAM (2014). She has been working since 2006 as a full-time professor/researcher for the Universidad Autónoma de la Ciudad de México (UACM), where she has lectured in the areas of Spanish Language and Greek Culture. She has publications about the Greek world and their traditions for specialized magazines (for instance, UNAM´s Nova Tellvs in 2019 and 2021); for Revista de Filosofía de la Universidad Iberoamericana, (Philosophy magazine of the Universidad Iberoamericana) on 2020 and for Revista de Estudios Clásicos de la Universidad Nacional de Cuyo (Magazine of Classical Studies of the National University of Cuyo) in 2020. She has participated in several national and international congresses with lectures regarding Archaic and Classic Greek culture, with subjects such as the funerary epigrams and the manifestations of beliefs related to the death in the Greek world.
less
Uploads
Papers by Evelia Arteaga
This text will analyze the way in which deictic elements, particularly those for place (here) and time (now) play a role to make some funerary epitaphs from the classical era in the Attic region be considered a representation of “acts of speech”, that is, each time they are read, communication actions in a given con- text happen once again; these actions contain three elements: sender, receiver and message intention. Epitaphs are an important source to get to know Greek thought, because what was written there had to make sense for the society as a whole, as will be shown below.
This paper deals with the way in which Classical Attic funerary epigrams compiled by Petrus Allanus Hansen establish a representation of a "speech act"; my aim here is to analyze the way Greek society would relate to the world of the dead. The study of these testimonies is important because they reflect in a high manner general conceptions of Greek culture; besides, this kind of analysis on such specific epitaphs has not been undertaken before.
Books by Evelia Arteaga
This text will analyze the way in which deictic elements, particularly those for place (here) and time (now) play a role to make some funerary epitaphs from the classical era in the Attic region be considered a representation of “acts of speech”, that is, each time they are read, communication actions in a given con- text happen once again; these actions contain three elements: sender, receiver and message intention. Epitaphs are an important source to get to know Greek thought, because what was written there had to make sense for the society as a whole, as will be shown below.
This paper deals with the way in which Classical Attic funerary epigrams compiled by Petrus Allanus Hansen establish a representation of a "speech act"; my aim here is to analyze the way Greek society would relate to the world of the dead. The study of these testimonies is important because they reflect in a high manner general conceptions of Greek culture; besides, this kind of analysis on such specific epitaphs has not been undertaken before.