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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
84.2 Vergil An Amber River at Georgics 3.522 Julia Scarborough 150
60.2 Herodotus and Thucydides Amplifying prestige: Herodotus and the Lindian Chronicle in 99 BCE Simone Oppen 150
35.2 Rome and the Americas American Philological Associations: Latin and Amerindian Languages Andrew Laird 150
16.3 From APA to SCS: 150 Years of Professional Classics in North America African American Members of the Society for Classical Studies: A Census of Affiliations  (1875-1938) Michele Valerie Ronnick 150
3.6 Roman Political Self-Representation Aemulatio Traiani? Constantine’s Restored Dacia and the Tervingi Timothy Campbell Hart 150
12.5 The Next Generation: Papers by Undergraduate Classics Students Advancing an Eschatological Conversation: An Interpretation of Via Latina’s “Hercules Cycle” through the Eyes of the Late Antique Roman Viewer Katie Hillery 150
71.3 Prospective Memory in Ancient Rome: Constructing the Future Through Text and Material Culture Ad futuram memoriam: The Augustan Ludi Saeculares Eric Orlin 150
68.3 Ovid Studies: the Next Millennium Actaeon in the Wilderness: Ovid, Christine de Pizan and Gavin Douglas Carole Newlands 150
70.3 Geospatial Classics: Teaching and Research Applications of GIS Technology Accessing Economic, Material, and Social Networks in Antiquity Through GIS and Linked Data Ryan Horne 150
83.3 Philosophy Academic Ends of Interpretation: Plato the Sceptic in Cic. Luc. 74 Peter Osorio 150
44.3 Allusion and Intertext A Vergilian Revision of Homeric Repetition Alexander Forte 150
39.4 What's Roma Got to Do with It? A Surfeit of Gods: Performing Roman polytheism in Plautus’ Bacchides Christopher Jon Jelen 150
92.2 Homer and Hesiod A Question of Memory: Who and Whose are You? Justin Arft 150
61.1 Literature of Empire A Polytheist or Christian Journey in Alexander’s Letter to Olympias? Matthew W Ferguson 150
36.6 Systems of Knowledge and Strategic Planning in Ancient Industries A painting workshop in the Catacomb of San Gennaro, Naples Jenny R. Kreiger 150
7.2 Culture and Society in Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Egypt A New Understanding of the State Auction Process(es) in Egypt Andrew Hogan 150
85.5 Medical Communities in the Ancient Mediterranean A Glass of Wine a Day... Medical Experts and Expertise in Plutarch’s Table Talk Michiel Meeusen 150
41.6 Centering the Margins A Diverse Ancient History for a Diversifying Classroom Rebecca Futo Kennedy 150
38.3 What Can Active Latin Accomplish A Day in the Life of an Active Latin Teacher Skye Shirley 150
3.2 Roman Political Self-Representation A Community of "Second Selves": the alter ego dynamic and the nature of aristocratic influence in the late Republic Adam Littlestone-Luria 150
34.5 Political Enculturation A case-study of intergenerational participation in Roman professional associations Jeffrey Easton 150
11.4 Theatre and Social Justice: The Work of Luis Alfaro 9-1-1 is a Joke in Yo Town: Justice in Alfaro’s Borderlands Tom Hawkins 150
47.5 Varro the Philosopher 288 Ways of Looking at the summum bonum: Varro the Roman Eclectic Katharina Volk 150
16.2 From APA to SCS: 150 Years of Professional Classics in North America 1869: The Year That Changed Classical Studies in America Eric Adler 150
37.3 Writing the History of Epigraphy and Epigraphers 150 years, and more, of Teaching the Epigraphical Sciences (or, Epigraphical Training Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow) Graham Oliver 150
23.3 Attic Oratory (Dis)Placing Timarchos: The Use of Place in Aeschines 1 Allison Glazebrook 150
12.2 The Next Generation: Papers by Undergraduate Classics Students 'Your Marriage Murders Mine': The Moral Consciousness of the Tragic Virgin M. Katherine Pyne-Jaeger 150
32.4 Hannibal's Legacy 'Doing their Bit’: Remembering Women’s Contributions during the Second Punic War Anne Truetzel 150
32.5 Hannibal's Legacy 'A death more becoming to himself’ Gender role reversal, Carthaginian Female Suicide and the Roman Imagination Eve MacDonald 150
58.5 Ancient Drama / New World "Why We Build the Wall": Hadestown in Trump's America Claire Catenaccio 150
14.1 Greek Political Thought "Philanthrōpia, Democracy, and the Proof of Power" Ted Parker 150
13.4 Reception and National Traditions "Ne quid detrimenti capiat res publica": The Senatus Consultum Ultimum and a Print of George Washington Emilio Capettini 150
19.2 The Cosmic-Text: Metapoetics and Philosophy in Latin Literature Summoning Forth the Gods in Lucretius: an Idealist Interpretation of Venus and Mars Gordon Campbell 150
67.5 Ancient Mediterranean Literatures Phoenician and Punic Civilizations Josephine Crawley Quinn 150
28.2 Allegory Poetics and Symbol in Neoplatonic Texts Gymnasia for the Soul: Proclus and the First Lines of the Parmenides Alex Tarbet 150
35.5 Rome and the Americas Alterae Romae? The Values of Cross-Cultural Analogy Claire Lyons 150