45.3 |
Myth and History |
οὐ κατ᾽ ἀνδραγαθίην σχὼν ἀλλὰ κατὰ γένος: Spartan Kingship, Generational Power, and the Agōgē |
Luke Madson |
152 |
45.4 |
Myth and History |
Networks of Ethnicity in Greek Mythic Genealogies |
Benjamin Winnick |
152 |
46.2 |
Indigenous Voices and Classical Literature |
Lost Voices and the Politics of Language: Classical Literature in Irish |
Isabelle Torrance |
152 |
46.3 |
Indigenous Voices and Classical Literature |
Latin and the Creation of a Usable Past in Colonial Nyasaland |
Emily Greenwood |
152 |
46.4 |
Indigenous Voices and Classical Literature |
Boundary Crossings: the Creation of Modern Theater in Post-Colonial Ghana |
Sarah Nooter |
152 |
46.5 |
Indigenous Voices and Classical Literature |
Medea's Ghosts: Cherríe Moraga and Euripides on the Body's Tragedies |
Nancy Worman |
152 |
47.2 |
Culture and Society in Greek Roman and Byzantine Egypt |
A Study on Composition and Reception: ἄλλο προοίμιον of Plato’s Theaetetus (PBerol inv. 9782) |
Marta Antola |
152 |
47.3 |
Culture and Society in Greek Roman and Byzantine Egypt |
The Funeral Stele of Heliodora |
Roger Bagnall, Cathy Calloway, and Alexander Jones |
152 |
47.4 |
Culture and Society in Greek Roman and Byzantine Egypt |
Epic Poetry in Egypt: The Forgotten Epyllium Telephi |
Martina Delucchi |
152 |
47.5 |
Culture and Society in Greek Roman and Byzantine Egypt |
Scribes and Grammarians in Roman Egypt |
Michael Freeman |
152 |
47.6 |
Culture and Society in Greek Roman and Byzantine Egypt |
Binnenwanderung Revisited: Local Migration in the Roman Arsinoite |
Alejandro Quintana |
152 |
47.7 |
Culture and Society in Greek Roman and Byzantine Egypt |
“Anything Illicit:” Censorship and Book-Burning in Roman Egypt |
Susan Rahyab |
152 |
48.1 |
Emotions and the Body in Greco-Roman Medicine |
Galen on "Natural" Personalities, Intractable Souls and Bodily Mixtures |
Ralph Rosen |
152 |
48.2 |
Emotions and the Body in Greco-Roman Medicine |
Beneath the Skin: Investigating Cutaneous Conditions as Somatisations of Gendered Emotions |
Chiara Blanco |
152 |
48.3 |
Emotions and the Body in Greco-Roman Medicine |
Mind-Body Balance and Sexual Regimen in Antiquity |
Brent Arehart |
152 |
48.4 |
Emotions and the Body in Greco-Roman Medicine |
The Emotions as Causes in Galen |
Andrew Mayo |
152 |
48.5 |
Emotions and the Body in Greco-Roman Medicine |
Using Literary Eremetic Space to Prevent Emotional Distress in Galen’s De Indolentia |
Molly Mata |
152 |
49.2 |
Laughing with the Gods: Religion in Greek and Roman Satire Comedy Epigram and other Comedic Genres |
Dionysian Theology and Anthropology: Animal Sacrifice in Greek Comedy |
Bartek Bednarek |
152 |
49.3 |
Laughing with the Gods: Religion in Greek and Roman Satire Comedy Epigram and other Comedic Genres |
Heracles’ Inheritance and Other Paradoxes: Aristophanes on Euripides and the Anthropomorphism of the Gods |
Avi Kapach |
152 |
49.4 |
Laughing with the Gods: Religion in Greek and Roman Satire Comedy Epigram and other Comedic Genres |
Scapegoats and Slapstick: Laughing with Expulsion in Aristophanes’ Acharnians |
Brian Credo |
152 |
49.5 |
Laughing with the Gods: Religion in Greek and Roman Satire Comedy Epigram and other Comedic Genres |
“O Bearded Hermes, what’s up with your prick?” – Gods, Erection, and Philosophy in Callimachus’ Iambi |
Ekatarina But |
152 |
51.2 |
Latin Literature and the Environmental Humanities: Challenges and Perspectives |
The Philosophy of Compost (Lucretius, De Rerum Natura 1.146-264) |
Mark D. Usher |
152 |
51.3 |
Latin Literature and the Environmental Humanities: Challenges and Perspectives |
Shared Suffering and Cyclic Destruction: Failures of Environmental Control in the Aeneid |
Aaron M. Seider |
152 |
51.4 |
Latin Literature and the Environmental Humanities: Challenges and Perspectives |
Chaos(mos): A Posthuman Ecocritical Reading of Natura in Seneca’s Thyestes |
Simona Martorana |
152 |
51.5 |
Latin Literature and the Environmental Humanities: Challenges and Perspectives |
Erictho and Ecofeminism in Lucan’s Bellum Civile |
Laura Zientek |
152 |
51.6 |
Latin Literature and the Environmental Humanities: Challenges and Perspectives |
The Poetry of Plumbing: Roman Hydraulics as Cultural Icons |
Bridget Langley |
152 |
52.2 |
COVID-19 and the Future of Classics Graduate Study |
More than Brains in Jars: A Graduate Perspective on the Future of Classics Graduate Studies |
Alicia Matz |
152 |
52.3 |
COVID-19 and the Future of Classics Graduate Study |
Digital Teaching and COVID-19 |
Hannah Čulík-Baird |
152 |
52.4 |
COVID-19 and the Future of Classics Graduate Study |
The Latin Pedagogy You Didn’t Learn in Grad School |
Thomas Hendrickson |
152 |
52.5 |
COVID-19 and the Future of Classics Graduate Study |
Professionalization and Preparation for Graduate Students |
Amy Pistone |
152 |
52.6 |
COVID-19 and the Future of Classics Graduate Study |
Building Outward Bridges |
Nandini Pandey |
152 |
53.1 |
Eta Sigma Phi |
Performance Markings in the Bankes Homer |
Thyra-Lilja Altunin |
152 |
53.2 |
Eta Sigma Phi |
Silence: A Versatile Tool |
Jacob Sorge |
152 |
53.3 |
Eta Sigma Phi |
Cicero’s Argument for Expediency in the Pro Murena |
Hope Langworthy |
152 |
53.4 |
Eta Sigma Phi |
A-Hunting We Will Go…Or No? Hunting and Warfare in the Aeneid |
Mary Clare Young |
152 |
54.1 |
Lucian |
Lucian's Philopseudeis as Metaliterary Satire |
Alessandra Migliara |
152 |
54.2 |
Lucian |
More than Idle Chatter: Powerful Bodies and Personal Agency in Lucian’s Dialogues of the Courtesans |
Suzanne Lye |
152 |
54.3 |
Lucian |
When You Have Something 'Else': Re-embodiment in Lucian's Dial. Meret. 5 |
Ky Merkley |
152 |
54.4 |
Lucian |
The Humor of Disgust: Attitudes toward galli in Lucian’s Onos and Apuleius’ Metamorphoses |
Ashley Kirsten Weed |
152 |
55.1 |
Hidden Transcripts |
The “Hidden Transcript” of the Laureolus-Mime |
Anne E Duncan |
152 |
55.2 |
Hidden Transcripts |
Josephus' Menorah and Readers of History |
Danielle J Perry |
152 |
55.3 |
Hidden Transcripts |
The Student’s Cicero: Rhetoric and Politics in Pliny, Epistulae 1.20 |
Konrad Charles Weeda |
152 |
55.4 |
Hidden Transcripts |
Agamemnon Princeps: Quoting Homer in Suetonius’ Caesars |
Keating P.J. McKeon |
152 |
55.5 |
Hidden Transcripts |
Analyzing the Principate through Antithesis in Suetonius’ De Vita Caesarum |
Wesley J Hanson |
152 |
56.1 |
Triumviral Literature |
Horace’s Stylistic Responsion and an "Iambic" Conceit in Epodes 1 |
Samuel D Beckelhymer |
152 |
56.2 |
Triumviral Literature |
Descending Doubles in Horace, Satires II |
Andrew Horne |
152 |
56.3 |
Triumviral Literature |
Civil War Pollution in the Epodes and Odes of Horace |
Jovan Cvjetičanin |
152 |
56.4 |
Triumviral Literature |
Pastoral Triumphalism and the Golden Age in Eclogue 4 |
Vergil Parson |
152 |
57.0 |
Ancient MakerSpaces |
Trapezites: an Ancient Currency Conversion Website |
Giuseppe Carlo Castellano |
152 |
57.0 |
Ancient MakerSpaces |
The Digital Archaeology Toolkit |
Rachel Starry |
152 |