München (9./10.4.26): Comedy and Commerce: Ancient Economies in the Light of Comic Texts from Classical Greece to Imperial Rome (International Conference)


Comedy and Commerce: Ancient Economies in the Light of Comic Texts from Classical Greece to Imperial Rome (9–10 April 2026, Munich)

Despite the long research tradition of using comic texts as sources for questions in economic history, the clarification of methodological issues in particular remains a desideratum. Comedies and satires are complex literary products; only at first glance do they provide direct access to the lived realities of antiquity.

The guiding insight for the conference’s conception is that the laughter of an era offers profound insights into its social order, because comedy is based on the playful frustration of everyday expectations. The three classical comic techniques—exaggeration, inversion, and transgression—indirectly point to the normative order of society. Comedy therefore not only marks social rules but also indicates their degree of validity and the extent of tolerance for their violation. Because of this multidimensionality, comedy and satire are not merely another group of sources but indeed among the most important historical sources for the study of ancient economic history. More than any other genre, they make it possible to reconstruct the lifeworldly context of economic activity.

The conference brings together interdisciplinary research approaches within a longue durée perspective: the period under investigation ranges from Greek Classical antiquity (5th century BCE) to the Roman Imperial period (2nd century CE). Topics addressed include, among others, trade, monetization, the political dimension of abundance and scarcity, value and the commodity character of (immaterial) goods, the role of law, exchange and purchasability as metaphors, and the moral evaluation of wealth and social mobility. The search for “hard” economic facts is thus combined with the reconstruction of the socio-cultural embedding of economic activity in value discourses and literary representations.

Programm

Thursday, April 9, 26

9:45–10:30 Welcome and Coffee

10:30–10:45 Introduction
Dorothea Rohde (Universität zu Köln): Comedy and Commerce: Some Introductory Remarks

10:50–12:30 Trading Laughs: The Role of Commerce in Comedy
Moritz Hinsch (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München): Long-Distance Trade in Greco-Roman Comedy: Motifs and Motives in the long durée

Monika Frass (Paris Lodron Universität Salzburg): Economics and Black Humour: Buying and Selling in Martial’s Epigrams

12:30–14:00 Lunch break

14:00–15:40 The Almighty Dollar: Money and Society in Greek Comedy
Hauke Schneider (Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel): The Economy of Comedy: Money in Aristophanes’ Late Plays

Hans Kopp (Universität zu Köln): Economic Exchange and Political Community in Aristophanes’ Later Plays

15:40–16:10 Coffee break

16:10–17:50 Not Funny? Negotiating Economic Realities and Values
Megan Bowler (University of Oxford): Automatism and Abundance: Utopian Economics in the Fragments of Old Comedy

Marta Garcia Morcillo (Newcastle University): Challenging Value and the Limits of Commodification in Lucian of Samosata

18:00 Final Discussion
Dorothea Rohde (Universität zu Köln): Remarks and Questions

19:00 Conference Dinner

Friday, April 10, 26

9:00–10:40 From Butchers to Lovers: Economic Metaphor in Comedy
Rafal Matuszewski (Universiteit Leiden): Meat Trade in Attic Comedy: From Sausage-Selling to Pimping

Goran Vidović (Univerzitet u Beogradu): Romcommercials: Marketing Love and Literature in Hellenistic and Roman Comedy

10:40–11:00 Coffee break

11:00–12:40 The Right to Laugh: Comedies as Sources for Legal History and vice versa
Joanna Pieczonka (Uniwersytet Wrocławski): Commercial Law at the Service of Plautine Comedy

Jan Lukas Horneff (Martin Luther Universität Halle-Wittenberg): Providing Prostitutes and Pretending Predators: Competing Comic Economies in Apuleius’ Apologia

12:40–14:00 Lunch Break

14:00–15:40 Upstaging New Wealth: The Nouveau Riche as Comic Archetype
Jan Meister (Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn): ‘Neoploutoi’ and ‘nouveaux riches’ (Zoom)

Cara Sewing (Universität Osnabrück): The Parvenus of Horatian Satire

15:40–16:10 Coffee break
16:10–17:50 Echoes of Comedy: Comic References Across Media
Elisabeth Günther (Universität Heidelberg): Staging Economy: Trade and Work-Related Scenes in Comic Vase Painting and Terracotta Figurines (4th century BC)

Michael Hahn (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München): ‘I feel like I’m in a theatre...’ The Reality of Life for Prostitutes in the Eastern Desert of Egypt during the Roman Empire

18:00 Final Discussion
Dorothea Rohde (Universität zu Köln): Closing Remarks

19:00 Farewell Dinner

 

Kontakt

M.Hinsch@lmu.de, Dorothea.Rohde@uni-koeln.de

Weitere Informationen

https://www.hsozkult.de/event/id/event-161064