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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
69.4 Language and Meter What Can Computers Do for Philology? A Case Study in Pseudo-Seneca Pramit Chaudhuri and Joseph P. Dexter 147
69.3 Language and Meter Unmetrical Mamurra: The Impure Iambs of Catullus c. 29 Michael Wheeler 147
69.2 Language and Meter The Poetics of Syntax: Pindar and the Vedic Rishis Annette Teffeteller 147
69.1 Language and Meter Rethinking Dactylo-Epitrite in Euripides' Medea Doug Fraleigh 147
61.6 Running Down Rome: Lyric, Iambic, and Satire Talking Donkeys: A Seriocomic Interpretation of Apuleius, Metamorphoses 11.2 Geoffrey Benson 147
61.5 Running Down Rome: Lyric, Iambic, and Satire There and Back Again: Inverting the Virgilian Career in Juvenal's Third Satire James Taylor 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
61.3 Running Down Rome: Lyric, Iambic, and Satire Inachia, Horace, and Neoteric Poetry James Townshend 147
61.2 Running Down Rome: Lyric, Iambic, and Satire Where is 'Here'? Analogies of Physical and Literary Space in Catullus 42 and 55 Jessica Seidman 147
61.1 Running Down Rome: Lyric, Iambic, and Satire Catullus the Mathematician Mary Jaeger 147
23.5 Emperors, Aristocrats, and Bishops in Late Antiquity Narrative Time and the Letters of Sidonius Apollinaris. Michael Hanaghan 147
23.4 Emperors, Aristocrats, and Bishops in Late Antiquity Politics, the Brain, and Public Health in Late Antiquity Jessica Wright 147
23.3 Emperors, Aristocrats, and Bishops in Late Antiquity Callidior ceteris persecutor: The Emperor Julian and his Place in Christian Historiography Moysés Marcos 147
23.2 Emperors, Aristocrats, and Bishops in Late Antiquity Public and private in fourth-century paganism: Firmicus Maternus' aristocratic Roman audience Mattias Gassman 147
23.1 Emperors, Aristocrats, and Bishops in Late Antiquity Imperial Authority and Saeculum Rhetoric from Augustus to Constantine Susan Dunning 147
15.4 German and Austrian Refugee Classicists: New Testimonies, New Perspectives Ernst Badian on Fritz Schachermeyr's Interpretation of Alexander the Great T. Corey Brennan 147
15.3 German and Austrian Refugee Classicists: New Testimonies, New Perspectives Gendering the Study of Germanophone Refugee Classicists Judith P. Hallett 147
15.2 German and Austrian Refugee Classicists: New Testimonies, New Perspectives Between three worlds: the Odyssey of a Protestant German-Jewish Classicist: Friedrich W. Lenz Hans-Peter Obermayer 147
15.1 German and Austrian Refugee Classicists: New Testimonies, New Perspectives Werner Jaeger: The Chicago Years Stanley Burstein 147
57.1 Beyond the Case Study: Theorizing Classical Reception Reception and Staying in the Field of Play Simon Goldhill 147
57.2 Beyond the Case Study: Theorizing Classical Reception Affective Interests: Ancient Tragedy, Shakespeare and the Concept of Character Vanda Zajko 147
57.3 Beyond the Case Study: Theorizing Classical Reception Borges’ Classical Receptions in Theory Laura Jansen 147
57.4 Beyond the Case Study: Theorizing Classical Reception Theorizing Closeness in Classical Reception Studies: Renaissance Supplements and Continuations Leah Whittington 147
28.1 Classical and Early Modern Tragedy: Comparative Approaches and New Perspectives Tragic Phaidra: A Diachronic Case Study between Antiquity and Early Modern Age Lothar Willms 147
28.2 Classical and Early Modern Tragedy: Comparative Approaches and New Perspectives Hanc fabulam nescio an tragoediam vocare debeam: Florent Chrestien, Isaac Casaubon, tragedy and Euripides' Cyclops Malika Bastin-Hammou 147
28.3 Classical and Early Modern Tragedy: Comparative Approaches and New Perspectives Totus Ulixes: Versions of Ulysses in the neo-Latin Ulysses Redux Emma Buckley 147
28.4 Classical and Early Modern Tragedy: Comparative Approaches and New Perspectives Merope's Legacy on the Italian Stage Tatiana Korneeva 147
16.1 New Approaches to Fragments and Fragmentary Survival When is a Fragment not a Fragment? The Problem of Fragmentary Roman Oratory Catherine Steel 147
16.2 New Approaches to Fragments and Fragmentary Survival Fragmentary Furii and Latin Historical Epic Jessica H. Clark 147
16.3 New Approaches to Fragments and Fragmentary Survival Fragmentary Texts, Contradictory Narrative, and the Roman Historical Tradition Christopher Simon 147
16.4 New Approaches to Fragments and Fragmentary Survival The Philology of Fragments Sander Goldberg 147
47.1 The Emperor Julian The making of the emperor: Julian and the succession of 361 Kevin Feeney 147
47.2 The Emperor Julian Julian and Basil of Caesarea on Impostor Philosophers Stefan Hodges-Kluck 147
47.3 The Emperor Julian Julian as Citizen: Attic Oratory and the Misopogon Joshua J. Hartman 147
47.4 The Emperor Julian In Search of a Western Julian: Ammianus and the Latin Tradition Alan Ross 147
41.1 Marx and Antiquity Ode on a Grecian Printing-Press: Marx and the possibility of antiquity Adam Edward Lecznar 147
41.2 Marx and Antiquity Marxing out on Fundus: Salvaging the Slave from Virgil’s Farm Tom Geue 147
41.3 Marx and Antiquity The Hell of the Populace: Marx, Epicurus, and the Limits of Enlightenment Martin Devecka 147
40.1 The Future of Classical Education: A Dialogue Classical Education in the UK: Boom or Bust? Arlene Holmes-Henderson 147
40.2 The Future of Classical Education: A Dialogue Trends in Teachings the Classics to Undergraduates Mary Pendergraft 147
40.3 The Future of Classical Education: A Dialogue Nondum Arabes Seresque rogant: Classics Looks East Kathleen Coleman 147
40.4 The Future of Classical Education: A Dialogue A Liberal Art for the Future Nigel Nicholson 147
27.1 Objects and Affect: The Materialities of Greek Drama Stone into Smoke: Mortality and Materiality in Euripides' Troades Victoria Wohl 147
27.3 Objects and Affect: The Materialities of Greek Drama Objects, Emotions, Words: Orestes and the Empty Urn Joshua Billings 147
27.2 Objects and Affect: The Materialities of Greek Drama Electra, Orestes, and the Sibling Hand Nancy Worman 147
27.4 Objects and Affect: The Materialities of Greek Drama Noses in the Orchestra: Sense and Substance in Athenian Satyr Drama Anna Uhlig 147
27.5 Objects and Affect: The Materialities of Greek Drama Material Ghosts: Recycled Theatrical Equipment in Fifth-Century Athens Al Duncan 147
70.3 Latin Hexameter Poetry Lucan's Hesiod: Erictho as Typhon in Bellum Civile 6.685-94 Stephen Sansom 147
70.1 Latin Hexameter Poetry Vergil's Third Eclogue at the Dawn of Roman Literature John Oksanish 147
70.2 Latin Hexameter Poetry The Aristaeus Epyllion in Georgics 4 and the Instability of Didactic Knowledge Patrick Glauthier 147