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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
24.4 SCS-24: Catullus What is in a name? Ariadne and the Eumenides in Catullus 64 Jennifer Ranck, CUNY Graduate Center 155
24.5 SCS-24: Catullus A Republican Choral Poetics And Catullus’ Political Chorus Marina Grochocki, University of Wisconsin 155
24.6 SCS-24: Catullus Catullus’ Nemesis: Amorous and Literary Retribution in the Catullan Corpus Hannah Kloster, Boston University 155
25.1 SCS-25: Hellenistic Literature Aristotle’s Manuscripts and the Fate of his Library Richard Janko, University of Michigan 155
25.2 SCS-25: Hellenistic Literature Family Trees: Orchards and the Raising of Children In Greek Epic Amanda Rivera, Boston University 155
25.3 SCS-25: Hellenistic Literature Peleus and the Fate of Achilles: Iliadic Allusions in the Odyssean Argonautica Amelia Bensch-Schaus, University of Pennsylvania 155
25.4 SCS-25: Hellenistic Literature Apollonius’ Μοῦσαι ὑποφήτορες and the interpretation of the Egyptian tradition Camilla Basile, University of Virginia 155
25.5 SCS-25: Hellenistic Literature Callimachus's Vibrant Materiality: Reading Non-Human Agency in Hymn to Artemis Marissa Gurtler, University of Wisconsin 155
26.1 SCS-26: Place, Landscape and the Natural Environment Rereading De Architectura 8: Nature and the Natural Environment in Vitruvius Amie Goblirsch, University of Wisconsin-Madison 155
26.2 SCS-26: Place, Landscape and the Natural Environment Land Animals as Roman Propaganda in Pliny the Elder Patricia Hatcher, CUNY Graduate Center 155
26.3 SCS-26: Place, Landscape and the Natural Environment Cape Malea as narrative node: the poetics of divergence in the Odyssey Frances Pickworth, University of Bristol 155
26.4 SCS-26: Place, Landscape and the Natural Environment Forswearing Monstrosity: Giants and Epichoric Identity in Arcadia Stella Fritzell, Bryn Mawr College 155
26.5 SCS-26: Place, Landscape and the Natural Environment Asteria and Leto: The Island of Delos, Sisters, and Theôria Laurialan Reitzammer, University of Colorado Boulder 155
27.1 SCS-27: Translators' Showcase: Bilingual Readings Translating Apuleius’ Metamorphoses: two examples Ellen Finkelpearl, Scripps College 155
27.2 SCS-27: Translators' Showcase: Bilingual Readings Catullus the Valedictorian: Translating Latin in a High School Active Latin Classroom Noreen Kupernik, Thaden School 155
27.3 SCS-27: Translators' Showcase: Bilingual Readings Columbus Carmen Epicum, an Early-Modern Aeneid Jordi Alonso, Independent Scholar 155
27.4 SCS-27: Translators' Showcase: Bilingual Readings “Oh, anxious humankind! How great the universe’s void! Who’ll read this stuff? This you ask me? No one, dammit. No one?” Satire 1.1-2 Kate Meng Brassel, University of Pennsylvania 155
27.5 SCS-27: Translators' Showcase: Bilingual Readings A cordel translation of the Odyssey Luís Márcio Nogueira, Independent Scholar 155
27.6 SCS-27: Translators' Showcase: Bilingual Readings Greek and Latin Lyric Poetry: From Archilochus to Martial Christopher Childers, Independent Scholar 155
27.7 SCS-27: Translators' Showcase: Bilingual Readings Selections from Euripides' Hecuba Diane Rayor, Grand Valley State University 155
28.1 SCS-28: Personal and Political in Rome and China: New Approaches to Sino-Roman Comparison Metaphor and Microcosm: The Body and the State at the Dawn of Empire in Rome and China Amy Russell, Brown University 155
28.2 SCS-28: Personal and Political in Rome and China: New Approaches to Sino-Roman Comparison Losers: Dynamic and Discourse of Defeated Generals in Rome and China Jordan Thomas Christopher, Loyola Marymount University 155
28.3 SCS-28: Personal and Political in Rome and China: New Approaches to Sino-Roman Comparison The Politics of the “New Music” Tradition in Roman Greece and Warring States China Patrick Huang, University of Western Ontario 155
28.4 SCS-28: Personal and Political in Rome and China: New Approaches to Sino-Roman Comparison Astrologers and Occultists in the Courts of Rome and Han Yacong Qiu, University of California, Santa Barbara 155
28.5 SCS-28: Personal and Political in Rome and China: New Approaches to Sino-Roman Comparison Occupational Associations and Religion: Early Rome Empire and Tang Dynasty Compared Jinyu Liu, Emory University 155
29.2 SCS-29: Culture and Society in Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Egypt Who Will Pay Child Support? Divorce, Roman Citizenship, and a New Latin Papyrus Giuliano Sidro, University of California, Berkeley 155
29.3 SCS-29: Culture and Society in Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Egypt Paideia among the Orphans in Roman Egypt: The Case of P.Mich. IX 532 Yuecheng “Russell” Li, Princeton University 155
29.4 SCS-29: Culture and Society in Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Egypt Intertextuality between Compilation and Application: A Demotic Spell for Compulsion and the So-Called Greco-Egyptian Magical Formularies Foy Scalf, University of Chicago 155
29.5 SCS-29: Culture and Society in Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Egypt On Nascent Nomes and Nebulous Nomarchs Joe Morgan, Yale University 155
29.6 SCS-29: Culture and Society in Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Egypt Open Sesame? The Vegetable Oil Industry from the Ptolemies to the Romans Nico Dogaer, Belgian American Educational Foundation 155
29.7 SCS-29: Culture and Society in Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Egypt Literary and Documentary Reflections on Mawālī and the Origins of the Islamic Patronate in Umayyad Egypt Paul Ulishney, University of Oxford 155
31.1 SCS-31: HYBRID: Neo-Latin and the State Why is Milton ‘Milto’? Giovanni Salzilli, John Milton and Aelian Michele Ronnick, Wayne State University 155
31.2 SCS-31: HYBRID: Neo-Latin and the State In the Mirror and on the Stage: the Perfect Prince According to Jesuits Mirella Saulini, Historical Archives of the Pontifical Gregorian University 155
31.3 SCS-31: HYBRID: Neo-Latin and the State Human and divine statecraft in the manifesto Universis orbis Christiani principibus and in the Confessio peccatoris of Francis II Rákóczi Dániel Kiss, Universitat de Barcelona 155
31.4 SCS-31: HYBRID: Neo-Latin and the State What (is) the best condition of a state?” (QUIS OPTIMUS REIPUB. STATUS, CW 3.2, no. 198): Thomas More’s Epigrammata as political discourse Bradley Ritter, Ave Maria University 155
31.5 SCS-31: HYBRID: Neo-Latin and the State Plenam potestatem et auctoritatem: The Commissions of Henry VIII in the correspondence of Sir Thomas More David White, Baylor University 155
31.6 SCS-31: HYBRID: Neo-Latin and the State Radivilias, The Epic of the Lithuanian People Simone Carboni, Independent Scholar 155
32.2 SCS-32: HYBRID: Indigenous Perspectives, Ancient and Modern: A Mountaintop Coalition Panel Punic Silence: Recovering Rural Voices in Augustine’s Africa Cassandra M.M. Casias, Duke University 155
32.3 SCS-32: HYBRID: Indigenous Perspectives, Ancient and Modern: A Mountaintop Coalition Panel “Good-Bye Aristotle”: A Critical Indigenous Perspective on Aristotle, Colonialism, and Race Ashley Lance, University of Cambridge 155
32.4 SCS-32: HYBRID: Indigenous Perspectives, Ancient and Modern: A Mountaintop Coalition Panel Colonization, Imperialism and the Hudson’s Bay Company: The Consequence of Classics on the Indigenous People of North America Caitlin Mostaway Parker, Independent Scholar 155
32.5 SCS-32: HYBRID: Indigenous Perspectives, Ancient and Modern: A Mountaintop Coalition Panel (Re)visiting (New) Mexico’s Ancient Origins: Ancestral Native Kinship Beyond Classical Civitas Kendall Lovely, University of California, Santa Barbara 155
33.0 SCS-33: AncientMakerSpaces (Workshop, Joint Session) Using TinkerCAD in 7-12 Michelle Martinez, Walnut Hills High School 155
33.0 SCS-33: AncientMakerSpaces (Workshop, Joint Session) A virtual exploration of art and architecture at the prehispanic capital of Monte Alban through edify’s VR learning platform Alex Elvis Badillo and Marc N. Levine, Indiana State University, 155
33.0 SCS-33: AncientMakerSpaces (Workshop, Joint Session) Ugarit: a tool for Translation Alignment on Ancient Languages Chiara Palladino and Joshua Kemp, Furman University 155
33.0 SCS-33: AncientMakerSpaces (Workshop, Joint Session) Pitch Accents and Melody in Greek Tragedy Anna Conser, University of Cincinnati 155
33.0 SCS-33: AncientMakerSpaces (Workshop, Joint Session) Mapping Myth: Medea on the World’s Stage Anna Santory Rodriguez, University of Michigan 155
33.0 SCS-33: AncientMakerSpaces (Workshop, Joint Session) Write what you know: Enabling open, collaborative publications with commercial tools Charles Pletcher, Columbia University 155
33.0 SCS-33: AncientMakerSpaces (Workshop, Joint Session) Magnifying the Minute: Numismatics and digital accessibility at the Yale University Art Gallery Emily Pearce Seigerman and Benjamin Hellings, Yale University Art Gallery 155
33.0 SCS-33: AncientMakerSpaces (Workshop, Joint Session) Kerameikos.org Tyler Jo Smith, University of Virginia 155
33.0 SCS-33: AncientMakerSpaces (Workshop, Joint Session) A Commercial Low-code Database for Legacy Archaeological Data Allison Sterrett-Krause, College of Charleston 155