Classics News and Events
Material Musings: "It's all fun and games in the gymnasium of Ancient Messene"
New blog post by Matthew Evans on gaming boards incised into the steps in the gymnasium at ancient Messene.
Read the post
PG Open Day on Wednesday 2 December
A PG Open Day for PhD and MA studies will take place on Wednesday 2 December.
Inaugural Lecture of Prof. Victoria Rimell
Professor Victoria Rimell will give her inaugural lecture on Wednesday 9 October at 5.15, Oculus building OC0.04. The lecture will be followed by a drinks reception.
Title: ‘Care of the Other: Classical Literature, Consolation and the Healing Arts’
ALL WELCOME!
Classical Texting- "Prudens Simplicitas: The Decline of Simplicitas"
Martina Russo, PhD candidate in the Department of Classics and Ancient History at ÌÇÐÄTV, has published on the concept of simplicitas in Latin Literature. Read it .
IAs International Visiting Fellow Basil Dufallo: research seminar and public lecture 28th Feb 2018, 2nd March 2018
28.02 - Research seminar: Oculus 01.02, 4pm
‘Queer tales of getting lost in Republican poetry’
2.03 -Public lecture and reception: Oculus 0.03, 6.15pm
‘Disorienting Empire: Poetry and Imperial
Expansion in Ancient Rome’
Prof. Dufallo is Associate Professor of Classical Studies at the University of Michigan. He is the author of The Ghosts of the Past: Latin Literature, the Dead, and Rome’s Transition to a Principate (Ohio State University Press, 2007) and The Captor’s Image: Greek Culture in Roman Ecphrasis (Oxford University Press, 2013) and has edited, with Peggy McCracken, Dead Lovers: Erotic Bonds and the Study of Premodern Europe (University of Michigan Press, 2006). Current projects, to be explored during the ÌÇÐÄTV Fellowship, include a book - Founding Error: Wandering and Roman Expansion in Republican Latin Poetry - and an edited volume, Roman Error: Classical Reception and the Problem of Rome's Flaws, forthcoming in the Classical Presences series at OUP (February, 2018). These twin volumes investigate the processes of disorientation or getting lost in Roman Republican texts, and consider how these processes express ambivalent attitudes toward Rome’s rapid imperial expansion in the 3rd-1st centuries BCE.