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Gaius Gracchus addressing the plebeians. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

Blog: Impeachment and Republican Rome

Serena Witzke |

Blog: Between Charybdis and Scylla: Greeks and Romans in Panama After 1903

Catherine Muñoz Arango |

Blog: ‘Vercingetorix in Vietnam’: Addressing the Intersection of Classics and Vietnamese Culture

Kelly Nguyen |

Blog: Are We Orpheus or Eurydice? Singing Salvation in Popular Music

Eleonora Colli |

Blog: How to Kill a Canon: Sourcebooks that Address the Silence

Sarah Bond |

Blog: Will Reading Fiction Make You a Better Ancient Historian?

Carlos Noreña |
Photo by Christopher Trinacty and used by permission.

Blog: Music and Mythology: A Classics Playlist for the End of Summer

Christopher Trinacty |
Close-up of the statue base of “Silent Sam” on campus at UNC-Chapel Hill with ink and blood running down (Image by permission of the Workers Union at UNC-CH).

Blog: Removing "Silent Sam": Confederate Statues and the Misuse of Classics at UNC-Chapel Hill

Kelly McArdle |
Dancers and musicians, tomb of the leopards, Monterozzi necropolis, Tarquinia, Italy. UNESCO World Heritage Site. Fresco a secco. Height (of the wall): 1.70 m. 475 BCE. from Le Musée absolu, Phaidon, 10-2012, photographer Yann Forget. CC By 1.0.

Blog: Finding and Teaching Latin Later in Life: A Memoir

Ann Patty |
Scene from Roman History, depicting a Youth receiving Armor from a Dying Man

Blog: A Transitional Latin Reading Environment

Emma Vanderpool |
Virgil Reading the Aeneid to Augustus, Octavia, and Livia

Blog: The Golden Line—From Classroom to Canon

Kenneth Mayer |

A New Incarnation of Latin in China, by Yongyi Li

Ellen Bauerle, Yongyi Li |