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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 |
A hand-drawn map on yellowed parchment with drawings of buildings and an aqueduct. In the center, a togaed man sits on a throne with a spear in his right hand and a halo behind him, indicating his sainthood. Red text behind his head reads ANTIOCHIA.

Blog: Power to Punish and Authority to Forgive: Imperial State and Imprisonment in 4th-Century Antioch

Alberto De Simoni |
A section of a painted fresco showing a woman with auburn hair tied into a low bun. She wears a laurel crown and a turquoise toga over one shoulder, and she looks down to her right.

Dissertation Spotlight: A New History of Roman Emotion

Jennifer Devereaux |
Broken Statue of Ramses II

Blog: Ancient Worlds, Modern Communities: Ozymandias and Nero Inspire New Podcasts

Nina Papathanasopoulou |
Header image: Gold death-mask, known as the ‘mask of Agamemnon’. Mycenae, Grave Circle A, Grave V, 16th cent. BC. National Archaeological Museum of Athens.

Blog: Ancient Worlds, Modern Communities: Ancient Worlds through Modern Podcasts

Nina Papathanasopoulou |

Blog: Funding Opportunities for Students and Teachers of Classics, Ancient History, Art History, and Archaeology

Bill Beck |

Blog: Vox Populi: Podcasting and Equity at the SCS Annual Meeting

Curtis Dozier |
A stone sculpture of a face with an open mouth and furrowed brow

Blog: Siliquasparsiones: Podcasts in Latin

Curtis Dozier, Christopher Polt |

Blog: Conversations with Classicists: Interview Podcasts

Christopher Polt |

Blog: Narrative Podcasts about the Classical World

Christopher Polt |

Blog: A Spotlight on Classics Podcasting

Christopher Polt |

Blog: What a Difference an ἤ Makes: Hippocrates, Racism, and the Translation of Greco-Roman Thought

Lisl Walsh |
Façade of the Celsus library, in Ephesus, near Selçuk, west Turkey. Benh Lieu Song (Image via Wikimedia under a CC-BY-SA 3.0 License).

Blog: Being an Independent Scholar in Classics: Challenges and Reflections

Helen Cullyer |
A landscape of a mountainside with text reading AMPHORA

The Bumpy Path to Classics

Wells Hansen, erich |
Text that says AMPHORA

Changing the Guard at Amphora

Wells Hansen, Ellen Bauerle |

Amphora: How to Use the Exhibit Hall at the Annual Meeting

Ellen Bauerle |

Amphora: Flipping a Coin—Building a Numismatic Database with Undergraduate Researchers

Julie Langford |

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

Angeline Chiu |

Amphora: A New Incarnation of Latin in China

Yongyi Li |

Amphora: Editing for Good

Wells Hansen |