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Links for the abstracts for the annual meeting appear below. To see the abstract of a paper to be delivered at the annual meeting, click on the abstract's title. To find a particular abstract, use the search field below. You can also click on the column headers to alter the order in which the information is sorted. By default, the abstracts are sorted by the number of the session and the order in which the papers will be presented. Please note the following apparent anomalies: Not all sessions and presentations have abstracts associated with them. Panels in which the first abstract is listed as .2 rather than .1 have an introductory speaker.

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Session/Paper Number Session/Panel Title Title Name Annual Meeting
32.4 Friendship and Affection Friendship and θυμός in Aristotle Paul Ludwig 147
21.6 Ancient Kingship The Inception of the Seleukid Empire Paul Vadan 147
2.5 Republican Literature Tusculan Villas as Political Tools in Cicero’s Writings: More than Meets the Eye Paula Rondon-Burgos 147
79.5 Homeric Poetics at the Dawn of Christianity Pagan Vision and Christian Voice in Eudocia’s De martyrio sancti Cypriani Pavlos Avlamis 147
76.3 Imitation in Medieval Latin Literature Archpoet’s Archicancellarie, vir discrete mentis: Ovidian Imitation and its Metapoetical Implications Pedro Baroni Schmidt 147
5.1 The Ides of March: New Perspectives Damned with Feigned Praise: The Role of Architecture in the Death of Julius Caesar Penelope Davies 147
30.2 Euripides Musical Language and Performance in Euripides' Troades Peter Blandino 147
7.1 Globalizing the Field: Preserving and Creating Access to Archaeological Collections The Giza Project at Harvard: Consolidated Access to the Pyramids Peter Der Manuelian 147
31.3 Gender and Identity The Gender Ratio in the Attic Stelai Peter Hunt 147
35.2 Standardization and the State Who Benefits? Incentive and Coercion in the Selection of Greek Monetary Standards Peter van Alfen 147
54.5 Greek and Latin Linguistics Accenting Sequences of Enclitics in Ancient Greek: Rediscovering an Ancient Rule Philomen Probert 147
72.2 Response and Responsibility in a Postclassical World Socrates, Gandhi, Derrida Phiroze Vasunia 147
69.4 Language and Meter What Can Computers Do for Philology? A Case Study in Pseudo-Seneca Pramit Chaudhuri and Joseph P. Dexter 147
56.1 Neo-Latin Texts in a World Context: Current Research Laura Cereta’s In asinarium funus oratio Quinn Radziszewski Griffin 147
55.5 Sexuality in Ancient Art Beyond the Male Gaze: The Power of the Knidian Aphrodite in Her Narrative Context Rachel H. Lesser 147
17.2 Rome: The City as Text Utopian Rome in Ovid’s Externalized View from Exile Rachel Philbrick 147
84.4 The Next Generation: Papers by Undergraduate Classics Students Incertas Umbras: The Mysterious Pastoral in Virgil's Eclogues Rachelle Ferguson 147
85.3 Experimentation: Querying the Body in Ancient Medicine Hippocratic Experimentation and Poetic Simile in Homer Ralph Rosen 147
14.3 Traditions of Antiquity in the Post-Classical World: Religious, Ethnographic, and Political Representation in the Poetic Works of Paulinus of Nola, Claudian, and George of Pisidia A Still Triumphant Empire with the Barbarians at the Gates: Imperial Epic and Ethnographic Discourse in the Bellum Geticum of Claudian Randolph Ford 147
36.5 Fides in Flavian Poetry Affirmatio Religiosa: Piety and Fides in Silius Italicus’ Punica Ray Marks 147
77.3 Gender Trouble in Latin Narrative Poetry Making Livia Divine: Carmentis, Hersilia, and Ovid’s Poetic Power Reina Callier 147
4.2 Herodotus at 2500 Rewriting the North: Herodotus, Aristeas, and the Construction of Authority Renaud Gagné 147
18.4 Plutarch and Late Republican Rome Plutarch’s Caesar and the Historical Tradition Regarding Caesar’s Gallic War Rex Stem 147
49.2 Athenian Unity? The Hoplite Class as a Complex Category in Greek Thought Richard Fernando Buxton 147
83.1 Herculaneum in Word and Text Editing in three dimensions: the papyri from Herculaneum Richard Janko 147
5.2 The Ides of March: New Perspectives Interpreting the Omens for Caesar's Assassination Richard Westall 147
14.1 Traditions of Antiquity in the Post-Classical World: Religious, Ethnographic, and Political Representation in the Poetic Works of Paulinus of Nola, Claudian, and George of Pisidia Anchoring Epic: Vergilian Quotations in Paulinus’ Epic on John and the Christian Tradition Roald Dijkstra 147
39.5 Digital Resources for Teaching and Outreach Dependency Syntax Trees in the Latin 1 Classroom Robert Gorman 147
35.1 Standardization and the State Materiality and Performance in the Use of Standardized Measures Robert Schon 147
12.4 Money Matters The End of Hegemony? Revisiting Athenian Finance and Foreign Policy after the Social War Robert Sing 147
56.2 Neo-Latin Texts in a World Context: Current Research Summum ius, summa injuria: The Function of aequitas in Thomas More’s Utopia and Christopher St. Germain’s Dialogus De Fundamentis Legum Anglie et de Conscientia Roger S. Fisher 147
66.3 New Wine in Old Wineskins: Topicality in Modern Performance of Athenian Drama Antigone, Once Again: The Right to Live and To Die with Dignity Rosanna Lauriola 147
42.2 Herodotus’ “Constitutional Debate” From the Inside Out Megabyxus in the Constitutional Debate Rosaria V. Munson 147
62.3 Truth and Lies The Fool's World in Seneca's Epistle 58 Sam McVane 147
16.4 New Approaches to Fragments and Fragmentary Survival The Philology of Fragments Sander Goldberg 147
67.5 The Commentary and the Making of Philosophy Plato’s Self-Moving Myth: Tracking the migration of Plato’s Myth in late antique text networks Sara Rappe 147
83.4 Herculaneum in Word and Text The Latin Papyri from Herculaneum Sarah Hendriks 147
52.2 Roman Dance Cultures in Context Choreography and Competition in Lucian, Dialogues of the Courtesans 3 Sarah Olsen 147
71.1 Nec converti ut interpres: New Approaches to Cicero’s Translation of Greek Philosophy Epistolary Reflections on Philosophical Translation Sean McConnell 147
19.2 Poster Session A Library with a Garden: The Arthur & Janet C. Ross Library at the American Academy in Rome Sebastian Hierl 147
61.4 Running Down Rome: Lyric, Iambic, and Satire Horace's Unified, Epicurean Persona in the "Diatribe Satires" (1.1-3) Sergio Yona 147
70.4 Latin Hexameter Poetry De Rerum Natura 1.44-49: A Spoiler in Lucretius’ first proem? Seth Holm 147
29.2 Responses to Homer’s Iliad by Women Writers, from WW2 to the Present Reading Homer in Troubled Times: Rachel Bespaloff’s On the Iliad Seth Schein 147
29.4 Responses to Homer’s Iliad by Women Writers, from WW2 to the Present “Everything Here is Conflictual”: American Women Poets Read the Iliad Sheila Murnaghan 147
57.1 Beyond the Case Study: Theorizing Classical Reception Reception and Staying in the Field of Play Simon Goldhill 147
49.6 Athenian Unity? Xenophon and the Unequal Phalanx: A 4th-Century View on Political Egalitarianism Simone Agrimonti 147
83.2 Herculaneum in Word and Text Philodemus’ De dis 1 and Understanding Epicurean πρόληψις Sonya Wurster 147
80.4 Ancient Athletics and the Modern Olympics: History, Ideals, and Ideology Pindar in 1896 and the Poetics of the First Modern Olympiad Stamatia Dova 147
15.1 German and Austrian Refugee Classicists: New Testimonies, New Perspectives Werner Jaeger: The Chicago Years Stanley Burstein 147
47.2 The Emperor Julian Julian and Basil of Caesarea on Impostor Philosophers Stefan Hodges-Kluck 147