Skip to main content
Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 results. Use the filters to limit the results.
Title
A crowded scene of a Roman triumph featuring soldiers, onlookers, and spoils. In the background are trees and a Roman building.

Blog: How to Conference Again: A Conversation with Kate Stevens

Erika Sakaguchi, Kate Stevens |
Two handled Greek wine cup with two faces, one of a Black African man and one of a Greek woman

Blog: “What is it like to be the only Black person in your department?”

Javal Coleman |
An illustration of an infographic titled "How UVM Admin Manufactured the Arts & Sciences Budget Crisis"

Blog: News from Vermont: The Ambrose Graduate Fellowship in Classical Languages

John Franklin |
A human pushing a round boulder up a steep incline

Blog: Tracing Tragedy: Classical Reception in Modernist Literature

Manya Lempert, Arum Park |
A mosaic showing three people, one dark skinned and two light skinned, with long hair

Blog: What Do We Mean When We Say “Diversity”? Addressing Different Kinds of Inequity

Joy Reeber, Arum Park |

Blog: What Does Productivity Even Mean to a Classics Administrator?

Erik Shell |

Blog: Diversifying Classics II: The University of Michigan’s Bridge MA

Arum Park |
Roman Era Mummy Portraits from the Getty, Met, Wikimedia.

Blog: Diversifying Classics: A New Initiative at Princeton

Arum Park |
Figure of the heavenly bodies - Illuminated illustration of the Ptolemaic geocentric conception of the Universe by Portuguese cosmographer and cartographer Bartolomeu Velho (?-1568). From his work Cosmographia, made in France, 1568 (Public Domain).

Blog: What Is "The West"? Addressing The Controversy Over HUM110 at Reed College

Sarah Bond |
Hellen Cullyer

Blog: A Day in the Life of a Classicist

Ayelet Haimson Lushkov, Helen Cullyer |
Tarquinius en Lucretia

Blog: Teaching Classics in the Age of #MeToo

Sara Hales, Arum Park |
Terracotta kylix (drinking cup)

Blog: Being An Independent Scholar in Classics

Ann Raia, John Jacobs, davidjmurphy |

“Gallows enthusiasm” on and beyond the academic job market

T. H. M. Gellar-Goad |