Skip to main content
Displaying 41 - 58 of 58 results. Use the filters to limit the results.
Title
Roman Triumphal arch panel copy from Beth Hatefutsoth, showing spoils of Jerusalem temple. Image via Wikimedia under a CC BY-SA 3.0 License.

Blog: Roman Festivals in Rabbinic Literature and the intersection of Judaism and Rome

Catherine Bonesho |

Blog: Sites of Memory and Memories of Conflict: Imperial Rome, Jerusalem, and Nero

Catherine Bonesho |
Amazonomachy scene: An Amazon woman warrior (left) doing battle with a Greek on a frieze (decorative band that runs the length of a building's wall) panel from the Halicarnassus Mausoleum and now at the British Museum.

Blog: A Day in the Life of a Classicist

Ayelet Haimson Lushkov, Nadya Williams |

Blog: The Mythic Truth of Black Panther

Patrice Rankine |
Mosaic depicting theatrical masks of Tragedy and Comedy

Blog: Teaching Comedy through Performance

Serena Witzke, T. H. M. Gellar-Goad |

Amphora: Labors and Lesson Plans—Educating Young Hercules in Two 1990s Children’s Television Programs

Angeline Chiu |
Detail of bust in the Centrale Monemartini Museum

Amphora: The Metal Age—The Use of Classics in Heavy Metal Music

Kristopher Fletcher |

Amphora: Eurydice by Sarah Ruhl—The Power of Pretense

Victoria Pagán |

Amphora: Tartarus and the Curses of Percy Jackson (or Annabeth’s Adventures in the Underworld)

Tom Kohn |

Blog: Wrestling with Rhapsodes

William Duffy |

Amphora: Learn to Spend the Big Money: Medievalists Mary Carruthers, Irina Dumitrescu, and Barbara Rosenwein on Humanities Outreach

Ellen Bauerle |

Blog: Nondum Arabes Seresque Rogant: Classics Looks East

Kathleen Coleman |

Where Do We Come From? What Are We? Where Are We Going? by Ellen Bauerle

Ellen Bauerle |

“Gallows enthusiasm” on and beyond the academic job market

T. H. M. Gellar-Goad |

Turning toward the public

Joy Connolly |

Rehash of the Titans: Sequels to the Titanomachy on the American screen (part 2)

T. H. M. Gellar-Goad |

Rehash of the Titans: Sequels to the Titanomachy on the American screen (part 1)

T. H. M. Gellar-Goad |

From Euterpe to YouTube: Popular music and the classics

T. H. M. Gellar-Goad |