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From: Mark Joyal
<
M_Joyal@UManitoba.CA>
In Memoriam
James Lawrence Peter Butrica
Jim Butrica died on July 20, 2006, after a year-long struggle with
cancer.
Jim was born in 1951 in Camden, New Jersey. He studied at Amherst
College (B.A. 1972) and the University of Toronto (M.A. 1973, Ph.D.
1978), where his doctoral research was supervised by Richard Tarrant.
From 1977 to 1979 he was a postdoctoral fellow at the University of
Victoria, and from 1979 to 1981 a member of its Department of
Classics. He joined the Department of Classics at Memorial University
of Newfoundland in 1981, where he spent the rest of his career. His
professional milestones included the President's Award for
Outstanding Research from Memorial in 1986, promotion to Professor in
1994, and appointment in 2000 to the Accademia Properziana del Subasio.
The subject of his doctoral dissertation was the Propertian
manuscript tradition. This study formed the basis of his book The
Manuscript Tradition of Propertius (Toronto 1984), which remains the
standard work on the highly corrupt text of this author. Throughout
his career he continued to refine his often controversial beliefs
about Propertius' text and its transmission (e.g. ICS 21 [1996]
87-158, CQ 47 [1997] 176-208), and he worked for many years on a
commentary on Book 3, even as his interests and publications spread
far into other areas. Some of these were related closely to Latin and
Greek poetry — not only elegy but epic, tragedy, and comedy as well —
others were very different from those subjects, including (among
others) ancient medicine, the ancient book trade, and medieval and
Renaissance literature and culture. He was a prolific and industrious
scholar, and only in the last months of his disease did he begin to
slow. Numerous substantial works will appear posthumously, including
two volumes in the University of Toronto's Collected Works of Erasmus
(vols. 67 and 68) and a chapter in the Brill Companion to Propertius.
The curiosity Jim had about Greek and Roman civilization and the
clarity of his thought were apparent to the students who attended his
classes at Memorial, to the scholars who heard his papers on many
occasions in North America and Europe, and to all who read his
articles and book reviews. The wide range of his interests grew from
a drive to understand ancient people from all angles, but his
knowledge ran deep in areas as diverse as opera and classical music,
television, radio and film, visual art and popular literature, modern
languages, and not least the game of Bridge, which he played with
considerable success. In recent years his learning was on display in
his many entertaining and edifying contributions to the Classics-List, a medium ideally suited to his knowledge of culture both high-brow and popular, as well as to his unique wisdom and wit and his
lack of pretension.
From 1994 until the time of his death he served as co-editor of one
of the CAC's two scholarly journals, Echos du Monde Classique/
Classical Views, renamed Mouseion in 2001. The editorial standards he
set were very high, and although he had a low tolerance for jargon
and fad, he always took pains to ensure that submissions to the
journal received a fair hearing and were assessed by referees who did
not have disciplinary or personal axes to grind. He had patience for
the efforts of good young scholars in particular and would often
spend much time helping contributors to improve their articles for
publication. He worked hard to attract the best submissions possible
and to find the right reviewers for books. He was, in short, devoted
to the job of editor and brought just the right temperament to it.
As a teacher Jim deplored intellectual laziness and sought to
challenge his students' easy assumptions. To those who responded to
the challenge he gave his time without reserve, teaching many
overload courses throughout his career. He had a special affinity for
his younger colleagues, for whom he provided an exacting but humane
model. His learning was widely known across his Faculty and elsewhere
in the University, and his non-classical colleagues frequently went
to him for help of many kinds. He was justifiably proud of the
service that he gave to his Department and University, and to the
cause of Classics in Canada, including a year as Head of his
Department in 1996-97, terms as council-member of the CAC and as
editorial board-member of Phoenix in the late '80s and early '90s,
his organization of the CAC conference in St. John's in 1997, a CAC-
sponsored lecture-tour in Ontario and Quebec in 2000, and many
memorable talks to the MUN Classics Society. Some of his more
remarkable studies trace their origin to these latter presentations,
including his discussion of ancient uses of cannabis, now recognized
as authoritative on this subject.
Although Jim's untimely passing is marked with profound sadness by
his colleagues in Canada and abroad, we take comfort in the memory of
his friendship and in his impressive scholarly legacy.
Next regular issue 2006 09 15
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