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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
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