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A circle chart in various shades of green showing a small, yellow circle labeled "Catullus tokens" contained within a much larger turquoise circle labeled "GPT-3 Latin Tokens"

Blog: How Much Latin Does ChatGPT “Know”?

Patrick Burns |
A screenshot from the Ugarit website showing a passage from the Odyssey in Ancient Greek on the left and an English translation by Murray on the right

Blog: Review: The UGARIT Translation Alignment Editor

Clifford Robinson |
A rust-colored mosaic of a man's face with shaggy hair and a beard

Odysseus Shot First: Signs of Differing Traditions in Odyssey 16-22

Ben Winnick |
An old book opened to show a page entitled "The Twenty-Second Book of the Iliad"

Blog: Translation at the SCS

Richard Armstrong, Elizabeth Vandiver |
A row of six people, all but one dressed in varied togas. Two of the men raise their right hands in an oratorical gesture. Above each person is the name of a character in the Phormio.

Blog: Paternalism and the “Good Slave” in the Speech for Phormion and the Legacies of Slavery

Javal Coleman |
Oil painting of a white man sitting in a large chair facing left with a dissatisfied expression. He wears a white toga with red drapery over his left arm, a crown, a gold cuff bracelet, and short curly hair. A tiger sits between his legs.

Blog: Dissertation Spotlight: Humor in the Historical Works of Tacitus

Emma Warhover |
A window display featuring books about Greek myth, a model of the Ishtar Gate, and a large papier-mache figure of Poseidon.

Blog: First Contact: Why Middle School Ancient History is So Important

Stephen Guerriero |
A bronze bust of a man with short, wavy hair and a slightly pained expression on his face.

Blog: Dissertation Spotlight: The Shape of an Empire: Environments, Economies, and the Nature of the Seleucid State

dmklokow |
A tan piece of paper with a pencil drawing of part of a double helix shape, comprised of lines and circles

Blog: The Two Cultures: Classics and Science in a Time of Pestilence

Kyle Harper |
Cover of Euripides' The Trojan Women: A Comic, by Rosanna Bruno and Anne Carson

Blog: “Can We Strangle the Muse?”: Carson and Bruno’s The Trojan Women

Christopher Trinacty, Emma Glen, Emily Hudson |
A page from Martin Kraus’ Aethiopica Epitome processed using LatinOCR within VietOCR. It handles the opening chapter summary well but is only 88% accurate with the italicized body text.

Blog: Review: LatinOCR and Rescribe

hmcelroy |
14th century illustrated manuscript of Omne Bonum (by James le Palmer – British Library MS Royal 6 E. VI, fol. 301ra); it shows a bishop instructing clerics with leprosy.

Blog: “Disease Discourse” as a Phenomenon: Classical, and Christian, and Contemporary

Carson Bay |
Logo of the Women's Classical Caucus

Blog: An Interview with Peopling the Past, Recipient of the WCC 2020–2021 Public Scholarship Award

Caroline Cheung, Suzanne_Lye |

Classics Everywhere: Bringing Knowledge of the Ancient World to Rural Italy

Nina Papathanasopoulou |

Blog: The Grammar of our Discontent: Ovid, Wishes, and the Virtual Term

Hilary Lehmann |

Review: The Duolingo Latin Course

Ashley Francese |

Review: Reconstructing Ptolemy and his Global Legacy

Alberto Bardi |

Review: A Digital Glossary of Arabic and Latin Terms

Aileen Das |

Blog: The Art of Translation: An Interview with Jinyu Liu

Adrienne Rose |

Blog: Women in Classics: An Interview with Dee Clayman

Claire Catenaccio |