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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.

Enter some terms to find a particular abstract or abstracts in a particular field.
Session/Paper Number Session/Panel Title Title Name Annual Meeting
72.4 Gender and Reception Neaira: A Greek New Comedy: From Renaissance Italy to Athens in 1985 STAVROULA KIRITSI 149
72.3 Gender and Reception The Modernist Sappho and the Genre of the Fragment Kay Gabriel 149
72.2 Gender and Reception ‘Domesticating’ Roman Religion on the Contemporary Screen Emily Chow-Kambitsch 149
72.1 Gender and Reception Hector's Wife: Andromache in Vergil and Racine Victoria Burmeister 149
71.4 Lucretius: Author and Audience Lucretius was Wrong!: Seneca’s De Rerum Natura Christopher V. Trinacty 149
71.3 Lucretius: Author and Audience Lucretius’ multiple interlocutors in the DRN Giulia Fanti 149
71.2 Lucretius: Author and Audience Empedocles in the Crossfire: Two Critical Subtexts in De Rerum Natura 1.716-733 Anna D. Conser 149
71.1 Lucretius: Author and Audience Creating an Epicurean Audience – Lucretius and his Reader Sonja K. Borchers 149
69.3 Porphyry the Polymath The Medical Side of Porphyry’s Intellectual Portrait Svetla Slaveva-Griffin 149
69.2 Porphyry the Polymath "At Once a Poet, Philosopher, and Expounder of Mysteries:” Porphyry’s Embodiment of Homeric Scholarship Jacob Lollar 149
69.1 Porphyry the Polymath Personal Knowledge in Porphyry’s Thought: The Epistemological Role of Experience” Aaron Johnson 149
67.6 Coins and Trade Trade and Economic Integration in Fourth Century CE Egypt: The Evidence from Coins and Ceramics Irene Soto 149
67.5 Coins and Trade Inter-Provincial Trade in Late Antique Syria from Excavation Coins Jane Sancinito 149
67.4 Coins and Trade Roman Coins and Long-Distance Movement. East to West Benjamin Hellings 149
67.3 Coins and Trade Funds, Fashion, and Faith: the many lives of Roman coins in Indo-Roman trade Jeremy Simmons 149
67.2 Coins and Trade Panhellenic Sanctuaries and Monetary Reform: The Spread of the Reduced Aiginetan Standard Reconsidered Ruben Post 149
67.1 Coins and Trade Small Change from a Big Island: The Spread of the Sicilian Silver Litra Standard and its Implications for the Tyrrhenian Trade Giuseppe Castellano 149
66.6 Epigraphy and Civic Identity Three Documents of the Koinon of the Cities in Pontus CHING-YUAN WU 149
66.5 Epigraphy and Civic Identity IG XIV 1 and the digital enhancement of inscriptions using photogrammetric modeling Philip Sapirstein 149
66.4 Epigraphy and Civic Identity Herodotus Reinscribed: The New Thebes Epigram and Croesus Cameron Pearson 149
66.3 Epigraphy and Civic Identity Ptolemaic Power and Local Response in Hellenistic Cyprus Paul Keen 149
66.2 Epigraphy and Civic Identity Apolides kai Xenoi: OGIS 1.266 and the Civic Status of Mercenaries Abroad Stephanie Craven 149
66.1 Epigrpahy and Civic Identity Intertextuality in Athenian Interstate Legislation: The Case of IG II^2 1 John Aldrup-MacDonald 149
65.6 Livy and Tacitus Tacitus' Humor in Annals 13-16 Mitchell Pentzer 149
65.5 Livy and Tacitus Germanicus, Mutiny and Memory in Tacitus’ Annales 1.31-49 Dominic Machado 149
65.4 Livy and Tacitus Family, Land, and Freedom in Tacitus’ Agricola Caitlin Gillespie 149
65.3 Livy and Tacitus The Comings and Goings of Scipio Africanus: Locating the Arch of Scipio in a Livian Profectio Jordan Rogers 149
65.2 Livy and Tacitus nec fuit cum Tusculanis bellum: Bloodless Conquests and the Rhetoric of Surrender in Livy Elizabeth Palazzolo 149
65.1 Livy and Tacitus Reconsidering Livy's Relationship to Valerius Antias David Chu 149
64.5 Whose Homer? Pindar and the Epic Cycle Henry Spelman 149
64.4 Whose Homer? Subversion of the Homeric Simile in Pindar’s Victory Odes Asya C. Sigelman 149
64.3 Whose Homer? Bringing Up Achilles: Child Heroes in Homer and Pindar Louise Pratt 149
64.2 Whose Homer? THEOPOMPUS’ HOMER: EPIC IN OLD AND MIDDLE COMEDY Matthew Farmer 149
64.1 Whose Homer? Rethinking the Odyssey’s Amnesty: Historical and Modern Perspectives Joel P. Christensen 149
63.6 Digital Textual Editions and Corpora The Editor(s) in the Classroom Cynthia Damon 149
63.5 Digital Textual Editions and Corpora Detecting the Influence of the Corpus Platonicum on Ancient Greek Literature using LDA-Topic Modelling Thomas Köntges 149
63.4 Digital Textual Editions and Corpora Learning from Git: Critical Editions as Version Control Peter Heslin 149
63.3 Digital Textual Editions and Corpora Open Greek and Latin: corpora, editions, and libraries Gregory Crane 149
63.2 Digital Textual Editions and Corpora The Digital Latin Library and the Library of Digital Latin Texts Samuel Huskey and Hugh Cayless 149
62.5 Goddess Worship...and the Female Gender Mary and the City Francesca Dell'Acqua 149
62.4 Goddess Worship...and the Female Gender The Survival and Rhetoric of Aphrodite in Byzantine Art Mati Meyer 149
62.3 Goddess Worship...and the Female Gender The Virgin, the Magi, and the Empress Kriszta Kotsis 149
62.2 Goddess Worship...and the Female Gender From Ephesian Artemis to Wonderworking Virgin Mary: The Case of Treskavec Svetlana Makuljević 149
62.1 Goddess Worship...and the Female Gender The Mother of God, a Mirror of Women in Late Antiquity Ivan Foletti 149
61.5 The Next Generation: Papers by Undergraduate Classics Students The ‘Twin’ Gates of Sleep in Vergil’s Aeneid VI Noah Diekemper 149
61.4 The Next Generation: Papers by Undergraduate Classics Students Setting Sun: Light and Darkness in Julius Caesar's Bellum Civile Evan Armacost 149
61.3 The Next Generation: Papers by Undergraduate Classics Students The Curious Case of Phryne: Finding Comedy in Phryne's Trial Molly Schaub 149
61.2 The Next Generation: Papers by Undergraduate Classics Students Language as an Indicator of Cultural Identity in Herodotus’ Histories Emily Barnum 149
61.1 The Next Generation: Papers by Undergraduate Classics Students Penelope's Recognition of Odysseus: the Importance of Simile in Odyssey 23 Shea Whitmore 149
60.6 Translation and Transmission: Mediating Classical Texts in the Early Modern World Tacitus in Italy: Between Language and Politics Salvador Bartera 149