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 |