Skip to main content
Displaying 1 - 20 of 20 results. Use the filters to limit the results.
Title
Two images of a cartoon Hades. Left, from the Hercules movie, a large, fat, gray man wearing a gray tshirt and black toga. His face is long and narrow, his eyes yellow, and his hair looks like a blue flame coming off the top of his head. Right, a blue-skinned man that looks like a human wearing a black suit and tie and white shirt, his hair is short and silvery.

Blog: Bad Boys and Worse Verse: Hades and Persephone in Translation, from Ovid’s Metamorphoses to Young/New Adult Fiction

Piper Hays |
A collection of small statues of ancient women in various poses

Blog: (Re)habilitating Old Woman A, or: Reading female bad language in Aristophanes’ Assemblywomen as a 40-something woman

Amy Coker |
A brightly colored manuscript page. On the left is calligraphy in Sanskrit; on the right is a woman in printed garb sitting in a carriage pulled by two white horses. She makes a gesture with her two palms press together. A black figure looks back at her.

Blog: Inclusive and Culturally Responsive Teaching in Classics

Dora Gao, Arum Park |
A book cover with a pink and white geometrically-patterned background. In the middle stands a cartoon man with a beard, a bald head, a toga, and a walking stick. He is surrounded by stars and symbols. A small, gray dog at his feet sniffs an ant.

Blog: Calliope’s Library: Books for Young Readers

Krishni Burns |
Penelope and the Suitors, by John William Waterhouse. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

Blog: Weaving Humanity Together: How Weaving Reveals Human Unity in Ancient Times

Anika T. Prather |
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: Come and Take It: The End of Eidolon

Sarah Bond |

Blog: Truth Behind Myth: Video Games and the Recreation of the Trojan War

Peter Gainsford |

Blog: Women in Classics: Froma Zeitlin

Claire Catenaccio |

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

Sarah Bond |

Blog: How Do We Record the History of Women in Classics?

Claire Catenaccio |
The Sphinx of Naxos. Archaeological Museum of Delphi. Picture by Yoandy Cabrera

Blog: Dissertation Spotlight: Understanding Mythological Embodiments of Emotion

Yoandy Cabrera Ortega |

Blog: Pygmalion, Polychromy, and Inclusiveness in Classics

Aimee Hinds |

Blog: Global Feminism and the Classics at the SCS Sesquicentennial

Andrea Gatzke |
Ferris Bueller’s Day Off © Paramount Pictures Corp. All Rights Reserved.

Amphora: Cult Classic: Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, Euripides’ Bacchae, and Echoes of Dionysus in Chicago

Wells Hansen, Angeline Chiu |

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

Angeline Chiu |

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 |

Labors and Lesson Plans: Educating Young Hercules in Two 1990s Children’s Television Programs, by Angeline Chiu

Ellen Bauerle |

Panorama or zoom? Two methods of teaching Myth

T. H. M. Gellar-Goad |