The Account of Demosthenes' Death in P.Berol. inv. 13045

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146th SCS AnnuAl Meeting PROGRAM SherAton new orleAnS new orleAnS MArriott FOUNDED IN 1869 AS THE AMERICAN PHILOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION

Transcript of The Account of Demosthenes' Death in P.Berol. inv. 13045

146th SCS AnnuAl Meeting

PROGRAM

SherAton new orleAnS

new orleAnS MArriott

FOUNDED IN 1 8 6 9 A S THE AMER ICAN PH I LOLOG ICAL AS SOC IAT ION

FOUNDED IN 1869 AS THE AMERICAN PHILOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION

FOUNDED IN 1869 AS THE AMERICAN PHILOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION

FOUNDED IN 1 8 6 9 A S THE AMER ICAN PH I LOLOG ICAL AS SOC IAT ION

FOUNDED IN 1869 AS THE AMERICAN PHILOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION

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An Ovid Reader xxvi + 196 pp., 5 illustrations (2014) 5” x 7¾” Paperback, ISBN 978-0-86516-722-3

556 lines of Latin selected from seven works of Ovid

A Propertius Reader xliv + 186 pp., 5 illustrations & 2 maps (2014) 5” x 7¾” Paperback, ISBN 978-0-86516-723-0

606 lines of Latin selected from all four volumes of Propertius

A Tacitus Reader xlvii + 198 pp., 5 illustrations & 2 maps (2014) 5” x 7¾” Paperback, ISBN 978-0-86516-697-4

609 lines of Latin selected from fi ve works of Tacitus

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Th ese readers, writt en by experts in the fi eld, provide well-annotated Latin selections to be used as authori-tative introductions to Latin authors, genres, or topics. Designed for intermediate/advanced college Latin stu-dents, each reader contains approximately 600 lines, making them ideal to use in combination.

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Society for claSSical StudieS 2014 officerS and directorS

officerS President Kathryn J. Gutzwiller Immediate Past President Denis Feeney President-Elect John Marincola Executive Director Adam D. Blistein Financial Trustees Bruce W. Frier Ralph J. Hexter

diviSion vice PreSidentS

Education Mary C. English Outreach Mary-Kay Gamel Professional Matters John F. Miller Program Joseph Farrell Publications and Research Michael Gagarin

directorS (in addition to the above) Joy C. Connolly David H. Porter (H[�RI¿FLR) Sarah Forsdyke Matthew Roller Sarah Iles Johnston Ralph M. Rosen Laura McClure

Program committee

Joseph Farrell (Chair) Christopher A. Faraone Karen Bassi Adam D. Blistein (H[�RI¿FLR) Lesley Dean-Jones Heather H. Gasda (H[�RI¿FLR) Emma Dench

ScS local committeeSusann S. Lusnia, Chair

ScS Staff Director of Meetings Heather H. Gasda Placement Service Director Renie Plonski

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Western Perspectives on the MediterraneanCultural Transfer in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages, 400-800 AD Ian Wood & Andreas FischerHB 9781780930275 $110.00

Beastly QuestionsAnimal Answers to Archaeological IssuesNaomi SykesHB 9781472506757 $120.00

Christianity in the Later Roman EmpireA Sourcebook David M. GwynnPB 9781441106261 $39.95

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Food and Drink in AntiquityA SourcebookReadings from the Graeco-Roman WorldJohn F. DonahuePB 9781441133458 $39.95

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table of contentS

2I¿FHUV�DQG�'LUHFWRUV ..............................................................................................................................................1

Floor Plans of the Sheraton New Orleans ............................................................................................................ 4-9

Floor Plans of the New Orleans Marriott ......................................................................................................... 10-11

General Information ...............................................................................................................................................12

Special Events ........................................................................................................................................................14

Placement Service ..................................................................................................................................................16

annual meeting Program

Thursday, January 8 ...............................................................................................................................................26

Friday, January 9 ...................................................................................................................................................27

Acknowledgment of 2013-2014 Annual Giving Contributions ....................................................................... Insert

Saturday, January 10 .............................................................................................................................................51

Sunday, January 11.................................................................................................................................................73

List of Departmental Members ..............................................................................................................................92

Exhibit Hall Information ........................................................................................................................................94

Index of Speakers ...................................................................................................................................................96

List of Advertisers ................................................................................................................................................105

Notes ....................................................................................................................................................................106

Photography policy: APA and AIA plan to take photographs at the 2015 Joint Annual Meeting and may reproduce them in APA and/or AIA publications, on association websites, and in marketing and promotional materials. By participating in the 2015 Joint Annual Meeting, attendees acknowledge these activities and grant APA and AIA the rights to use their images and names for such purposes.

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general information

The 146th Annual Meeting of the Society for Classical Studies, in conjunction with the Archaeological Institute of America, will be held January 8-11, 2015 in New Orleans, LA.

The Sheraton New Orleans Hotel, located at 500 Canal Street, will serve as the headquarters hotel for the 146th Annual Meeting. The Convention Registration area, the Exhibit Hall, AIA and SCS paper sessions, AIA Career Services interviews, and most committee meetings, receptions, and special events will be located at the Sheraton New Orleans. The primary guest room block will also be at the Sheraton.

7KH�6&6�3ODFHPHQW�6HUYLFH�RI¿FH�DQG�LQWHUYLHZV��DV�ZHOO�DV�VRPH�PHHWLQJV�DQG�HYHQWV��ZLOO�EH�KHOG�DW�WKH�1HZ�2UOHDQV�0DUULRWW�+RWHO�DW�555 Canal Street, located directly across from the Sheraton. Additional guest rooms have been blocked at the Marriott as well.

RegistrationRegistration is required for attendance at all sessions, utilization of the SCS Placement Service, admission into the exhibit area, and DFFHVV�WR�VSHFLDO�KRWHO�UDWHV�IRU�PHHWLQJ�DWWHQGHHV��1R�RQH�ZLOO�EH�DGPLWWHG�LQWR�WKH�H[KLELW�DUHD�DQG�PHHWLQJ�URRPV�ZLWKRXW�DQ�RI¿FLDO������$,$�6&6�$QQXDO�0HHWLQJ�EDGJH��5HJLVWUDWLRQ�ZLOO�EH�RSHQ�LQ�WKH�1DSROHRQ�%DOOURRP�)R\HU�RQ�WKH�WKLUG�ÀRRU�RI�WKH�6KHUDWRQ�1HZ�Orleans during the following hours:

Thursday, January 8: 12:00 noon to 8:00 p.m.Friday, January 9: 7:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.Saturday, January 10: 7:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.Sunday, January 11: 8:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon

The onsite registration fee for attendance at all sessions is as follows:

Member $175Student Member $ 65Spouse/Guest $ 80 Student Non-Member $120Non-Member $260 One-Day Registration $120One-day Exhibit Hall Pass $ 50

The spouse/guest category is for a non-professional or non-student guest accompanying a paid attendee. Only full-time students are eli-gible for the reduced student rate. One-day registration is possible for a single day only; individuals wishing to attend for more than one day must register at the full rate. The one-day exhibit hall pass provides access to the exhibit hall only; attendees with this pass will not be allowed entry into any sessions or events.

Attendees who have registered in advance may pick up badge and registration materials at the Advance Registration desks during the hours indicated above for onsite registration.

Exhibits([KLELWV�ZLOO�EH�ORFDWHG�LQ�WKH�1DSROHRQ�%DOOURRP��ORFDWHG�RQ�WKH�WKLUG�ÀRRU�RI�WKH�6KHUDWRQ�1HZ�2UOHDQV��7KH�H[KLELW�KRXUV�DUH�DV�IRO-lows:

January 8 2:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. January 9 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.January 10 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.January 11 8:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon

Your registration badge will provide you with admission to the Exhibit Hall.

SCS Display TableThe Society will have a table in the Registration Area at which registrants can obtain annual giving donation cards or pledge forms as well as information about the Society. Members of the Development and Membership Committees will be present at the table during exhibit hours to discuss Society activities and the annual giving campaign.

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Any member who has made an annual giving contribution since July 2013 should visit the table and obtain a special blue ribbon to wear during the meeting. The members of the Development Committee ask donors to join them in wearing this expression of the importance RI�WKH�DQQXDO�JLYLQJ�FDPSDLJQ�WR�WKH�RQJRLQJ�¿QDQFLDO�KHDOWK�RI�WKH�6RFLHW\�DQG�LWV�DELOLW\�WR�VXSSRUW�WKRVH�PHPEHUV��HVSHFLDOO\�WKRVH�LQ�adjunct positions, who most need that support. Anyone wearing a blue ribbon will be entitled to a free cup of coffee at the table from 9:00 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday.

PublicationsAll attendees who are SCS members will receive a printed Program in New Orleans at no charge along with other registration materials. SCS/AIA joint members will also receive a copy of the AIA Program at no charge. Extra copies of both societies’ Programs can be pur-chased at the customer service desk in the registration area for $8.00 per copy.

The Abstracts for SCS papers may be ordered in advance or purchased at the customer service desk in the registration area. The price of $EVWUDFWV is $12.00. For those who have pre-paid, $EVWUDFWV will be included with pre-registration materials. Abstracts for AIA papers can also be purchased for $12.00.

Conference App)RU�WKH�¿UVW�WLPH�$,$�DQG�6&6�DUH�RIIHULQJ�D�SURJUDP�DSS�IRU�WKH�MRLQW�DQQXDO�PHHWLQJ���7KH�GHGLFDWHG�PHHWLQJ�DSS�LV�FRPSDWLEOH�ZLWK�DOO�iOS and Android devices. It also features a basic web version. The app features include:

1. )XOO�SURJUDP�LQIRUPDWLRQ�IRU�ERWK�RUJDQL]DWLRQV�DV�ZHOO�DV�DI¿OLDWHG�JURXSV2. Scheduling tools to create a customized agenda3. Exhibitor & exhibit hall information4. Opt-in registrant listing with in-app messaging functionality5. Twitter integration6. Venue and area maps7. All general information about the conference, as well as other features.

Advance registrants received an e-mail containing a link to download the app on their devices, and the URL for this link will be available in the Registration Area as well. The app will download the full program content only one time, but will update any changes whenever it LV�ODXQFKHG�LQ�DQ�DUHD�ZKHUH�WKH�GHYLFH�KDV�,QWHUQHW�DFFHVV��FHOOXODU�RU�ZL¿����8SGDWHV�ZLOO�EH�SXVKHG�RXW�WR�WKH�DSS�DV�QHHGHG�WKURXJKRXW�WKH�FRQIHUHQFH���,W�ZLOO�EH�IXOO\�IXQFWLRQDO��H[FHSW�IRU�PHVVDJLQJ�DQG�7ZLWWHU��HYHQ�LQ�DUHDV�RI�WKH�FRQIHUHQFH�KRWHO�ODFNLQJ�ZL¿�RU�FHOOXODU�coverage.

Speaker-Ready Room(TXLSPHQW�IRU�SUHYLHZLQJ�SUHVHQWDWLRQV�LV�DYDLODEOH�WR�DOO�VSHDNHUV�LQ�WKH�3R\GUDV�URRP�RQ�WKH�WKLUG�ÀRRU�RI�WKH�6KHUDWRQ�1HZ�2UOHDQV��This room will be open to presenters from 7:00 A.M. until 6:00 P.M. on January 9 and January 10, and 7:00 A.M. until 12:00 noon on January 11.

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SPecial eventS

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thurSday, January 8, 2015

Joint oPening night recePtion

7:00 P.m. to 9:00 P.m. armStrong ballroomThe 2015 SCS/AIA Joint Opening Night Reception will be held in the Armstrong Ballroom. Tickets are $30 ($24 for students) and in-clude hors d’oeuvres and one drink ticket. Tickets may be purchased at the door.

Performance of anne carSon’S Antigonick 8:00 P.m. to 10:00 P.m. grand ballroom dThe Society for Classical Studies is delighted to begin its annual meeting in New Orleans with a very special performance: $QWLJRQLFN, a version of AQWLJRQH by world-renowned poet/playwright Anne Carson ($Q�2UHVWHLD��$XWRELRJUDSK\�RI�5HG��,I�1RW��:LQWHU��)UDJPHQWV�RI�6DSSKR). Carson, assisted by her husband Robert Currie, will direct the reading. Professor Judith Butler will perform Kreon, and SCS thespians will play the other roles. The performance will begin at 8:00 p.m. on Thursday, January 8, 2015, and the public is welcome to attend at no charge.

CSWMG/WCC/LCC Joint oPening recePtion

10:00 P.m. to 12:00 a.m. balconieS iJK (new orleAns MArriott)The annual reception jointly hosted by the SCS Committee on the Status of Women and Minority Groups, the Women’s Classical Caucus, and the Lambda Classical Caucus will be held at the New Orleans Marriott. This year’s theme is COMICS, CLOWNS, and CARNIVAL!

friday, January 9, 2015

PreSidential Panel

5:00 P.m. to 7:00 P.m. grand ballroom dPresident Kathryn Gutzwiller has organized a session entitled “Ancient Perspectives on the Value of Literature: Utilitarian versus Aes-thetic”. See page 40 for the full session listing.

Performance of weAlth (SPonSored by the committee on ancient and modern Performance) 7:00 P.m. to 10:00 P.m. Waterbury ballroomThe 2015 CAMP play is :HDOWK, an adaptation of Aristophanes’ 3OXWXV, written by Karen Rosenbecker, and directed by Artemis Preeshl. With one foot in ancient Athens and the other in modern New Orleans, :HDOWK takes on the timeless topic of income inequality and shows us what happens when the poor are given a chance to remake their world. After the performance there will be a roundtable discussion with the creators of this production.

SATURDAY, JANUARY 10, 2015

Joint ScS/aia roundtable diScuSSion SeSSion

12:15 P.m. to 1:45 P.m. naPoleon ballroomThis year, together with the AIA, the SCS Program Committee is pleased to present a record number of topics at midday. Members of both societies will lead separate discussions at individual tables. Topics will include issues of intellectual and practical importance to classicists and archaeologists.

minority Student ScholarShiP fund-raiSing raffle

1:00 P.m. to 1:15 P.m. ScS diSPlay table, regiStration areaThe SCS Committee on Scholarships for Minority Students asks for your support of this important program by purchasing tickets for and attending this year’s IXQG�UDLVLQJ�UDIÀH�DW�WKH�-RLQW�$QQXDO�0HHWLQJ��7KH�UDIÀH�RI�ERRNV�DQG�ERRN�FHUWL¿FDWHV will take place this year at �����3�0��RQ�6DWXUGD\��-DQXDU\�����7LFNHWV�IRU�WKH�UDIÀH�DUH�����HDFK�RU�WKUHH�IRU�����DQG can be purchased at the time of advance regis-tration or onsite. You do not need to EH�SUHVHQW�DW�WKH�HYHQW�WR�ZLQ�WKH�UDIÀH�

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ScS PoSter SeSSion

2:00 P.m. to 4:00 P.m. naPoleon ballroomSession #54 is a poster session. The Program Committee has assigned a number of presentations to this format because it will give these SUHVHQWHUV�WKH�ÀH[LELOLW\�WR�GLVSOD\�DOO�RI�WKHLU�GDWD�VLPXOWDQHRXVO\�LQ�D�YDULHW\�RI�ZD\V��JUDSKLFDOO\�DQG�HOHFWURQLFDOO\�DV�ZHOO�DV�RUDOO\��and permit annual meeting registrants to identify those aspects of the presentations that are of greatest interest to them and then interact with presenters one-on-one or in small groups about those topics.

ScS Plenary SeSSion 5:00 P.m. to 6:45 P.m. grand ballroom dThe plenary session will feature the presentation of the SCS’s teaching awards, the Outreach Prize, and the Goodwin Awards of Merit. Also, Kathryn Gutzwiller will deliver her Presidential Address entitled “Fantasy and Metaphor in Meleager”. Copies of the Goodwin Prize books will be awarded as door prizes.

ScS PreSidential recePtion 6:45 P.m. to 7:45 P.m. grand ballroom eThe Board of Directors cordially invites all SCS members attending the 146th Annual Meeting to a reception honoring President Kathryn Gutzwiller and celebrating the new name of the Society on Saturday, January 10, immediately after the Plenary Session and Presidential Address. The Board encourages all members to attend the reception and meet those colleagues they may not have seen earlier in the meeting.

SUNDAY, JANUARY 11, 2015

buSineSS meeting of the aSSociation

11:00 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. oaKleyAll SCS members are encouraged to attend this session. After the transaction of necessary business, there will be time available for ques-tions and comments from members. The Executive Director’s report will be published in advance of the annual meeting.

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ScS Placement Service

Audubon room, 5th Floor, New Orleans MarriotHours

January 8 10:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M.January 9 7:30 A.M. to 5:00 P.M.January 10 7:30 A.M. to 5:00 P.M.January 11 7:30 A.M. to 10:30 A.M.

The registration fee for candidates is $20 for members and $55 for non-members; for institutions, $400. Candidates and institutional representatives must be registered for the Annual Meeting to use the SCS Placement Service facilities at the Annual Meeting. The Annual Meeting registration fee is separate from both societal membership dues and the SCS Placement Service registration fee. Registration VKRXOG�QRZ�WDNH�SODFH�RQOLQH�DW�SODFHPHQW�DSDFODVVLFV�RUJ��,W�LV�QR�ORQJHU�SRVVLEOH�WR�UHJLVWHU�LQ�WKH�3ODFHPHQW�6HUYLFH�2I¿FH�LWVHOI��

While many institutions will wish to conduct interviews in suites they have reserved, the SCS Placement Service also has available a limited number of meeting rooms for interviews. These interview rooms are assigned at the time that the interview appointments are scheduled. Institutions that have advertised positions and plan to conduct preliminary interviews are encouraged to notify all applicants prior to the Annual Meeting whether they do or do not intend to interview an individual in New Orleans. However, the SCS Placement 6HUYLFH�ZLOO�PDNH�WKH�DFWXDO�VFKHGXOH�RI�LQWHUYLHZV�WR�HQVXUH�WKDW�FDQGLGDWHV�GR�QRW�HQFRXQWHU�FRQÀLFWV�HLWKHU�ZLWK�RWKHU�LQWHU-views or with paper sessions. USRQ�DUULYDO�LQ�1HZ�2UOHDQV��FDQGLGDWHV�DQG�LQVWLWXWLRQDO�UHSUHVHQWDWLYHV�FDQ�YLVLW�WKH�3ODFHPHQW�2I¿FH�if they need information about the locations of prearranged interviews. In addition, if registrants encounter any last minute scheduling or ORJLVWLFDO�GLI¿FXOWLHV��WKH\�FDQ�FDOO�WKH�3ODFHPHQW�6HUYLFH�RI¿FH�GXULQJ�WKH�KRXUV�OLVWHG�DERYH�DW��������������

All Placement Service clients must have access to their online Placement Service Portal accounts throughout the convention. No public computer access will be provided by the Placement Service. Institutional representatives who have rented private suites MUST check in with Placement Service to provide Staff with their suite numbers.

The Placement Service is overseen by the SCS Placement Committee. The Committee encourages candidates and institutional represen-tatives to recommend improvements to the Service. In addition, Placement Service Staff can take messages from candidates or institu-WLRQDO�UHSUHVHQWDWLYHV�ZLVKLQJ�WR�PHHW�LQGLYLGXDOO\�ZLWK�&RPPLWWHH�PHPEHUV�LQ�1HZ�2UOHDQV�WR�GLVFXVV�VSHFL¿F�FRQFHUQV���)LQDOO\��DV�usual, in Summer 2015 the SCS will send a questionnaire to all candidates, which they may use to comment on the placement process.

Although the Society for Classical Studies is only an intermediary in the recruiting process and does not engage in the actual placement RI�PHPEHUV��WKH�'LUHFWRU�RI�WKH�3ODFHPHQW�2I¿FH�LV�UHDG\�WR�VHUYH�ERWK�LQVWLWXWLRQDO�UHSUHVHQWDWLYHV�DQG�FDQGLGDWHV�LQ�HYHU\�ZD\�SUDFWLFDO�during the course of the Annual Meeting. Communications on SCS Placement Service matters should be sent to Renie Plonski, Society for Classical Studies, University of Pennsylvania, 220 S. 40th Street, Suite 201E, Philadelphia, PA. 19104-3512. Telephone: (215) 898-4975; Fax: (215) 573-7874.

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1570 Baskin RoadMundelein, IL 60060Phone: 847.526.4344Fax: 847.526.2867

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Twenty Greek StoriesH. Paul Brown

xiii + 222 pp. (2014) 6” x 9” Paperback, ISBN 978-0-86516-822-0

Th ese selections adapted from ancient sources off er students of Hansen and Quinn, or any other introduc-tory Greek book, accessible and enjoyable reading in their fi rst year. Twenty Greek Stories presents readings paired to the grammar and vocabulary of each of the 20 units of Greek: An Intensive Course.

Ecclesiastical, Medieval, and Neo-Latin SentencesRichard Upsher Smith, Jr.

xxiii + 336 pp. (2014) 6” x 9” Paperback, ISBN 978-0-86516-798-8

Sententiae and Loci Immutati in the style of Wheelock’s Latin!Read theological, biblical, philosophical, and other texts while being introduced to some of the neologisms and new syntax of Ecclesiastical, Medieval, and Neo-Latin. Th orough notes make reading these selections possible and enjoyable for readers from any background.

Th e Th ebaid of Statius: Th e Women of LemnosPatrick Yaggy

xxviii + 246 pp. (2014) 6” x 9” Paperback, ISBN 978-0-86516-819-0

Th e high-interest story of Hypsipyle and the women of Lemnos (Th ebaid 5.1–637) makes the perfect intro-duction to Statius’s Th ebaid for advanced readers of Latin.

Th e Right Th ing to Do: Cicero’s De OfficiisG. B. Cobbold

xxiv + 289 pp. (2014) 5” x 7¾” Paperback, ISBN 978-0-86516-824-4

Cicero’s De Offi ciis is about making decisions: how should we distinguish between right and wrong, and how should we determine, in any set of circumstances, how to behave? Cicero’s essential message is clear: if we are always kind and considerate of other people, we cannot go wrong, but if we think only of ourselves, we will always go wrong.

Toga BeatsDaniel Harris-McCoy and Brendon Oshita

MP3 Audio, 30 tracks (2014)

Engage your students in learning Latin grammar with grammar set to catchy electronic music. Th ese songs make Latin, like a favorite song, stick in the student’s head. Found in the iPodius Agora. Try the fi rst track for free!

NEW from B-C 20% off all titles at booth 300

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1570 Baskin RoadMundelein, IL 60060Phone: 847.526.4344Fax: 847.526.2867

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Updated B-C FavoritesCicero: Pro Archia Poeta Oratio, 3rd EditionSteven M. Cerutt i

xxxi + 157 pp. (2014) 6” x 9” Paperback, ISBN 978-0-86516-805-3

Th is text features the full Latin text of Cicero’s Pro Archia Poeta Oratio with facing-page vocabulary and same-page notes. Th e new edition features eight passages from Quintilian on poetry.

Horace: Selected Odes and Satire 1.9, 2nd Edition RevisedRonnie Ancona

xxxix + 171 pp. (2014, 2nd Edition Revised) 6” x 9” Paperback, ISBN 978-0-86516-608-0

Th is reader includes Odes I.1, 5, 9, 11, 13, 22, 23, 24, 25, 37, 38; II.3, 7, 10, 14; III.1, 9, 13, 30; Satire I.9. Th e updated second edition features an updated bibliography and more visually appealing maps.

Ovid: Amores, Metamorphoses Selections, 3rd EditionPhyllis B. Katz and Charbra Adams Jestin

xxx + 212 pp. (2013) 6” x 9” Paperback, ISBN 978-0-86516-784-1

Th is bestseller now features 277 more lines of Ovid than the previous edition! Th e updated edition in-cludes Amores I.1, I.3, I.9, I.11, I.12, III.12, and III.15; Metamorphoses I.1–88, I.452–567, IV.55–166, VIII.183–235, VIII.616–723, X.1–85, and X.238–97.

Writing Passion: A Catullus Reader, 2nd EditionRonnie Ancona

xl + 264 pp. (2013) 6” x 9” Paperback, ISBN 978-0-86516-786-5Writing Passion Plus: ix + 22 pp. (2013) 6” x 9” Paperback, ISBN 978-0-86516-788-9

Writing Passion now features four more poems than the previous edition, which expand the elegiac se-lections about Lesbia. Includes Catullus 1–5, 7–8, 10–14a, 22, 30–31, 35–36, 40, 43–46, 49–51, 60, 64 (lines 50–253), 65, 68 (lines 1–40), 69–70, 72, 75–77, 83–87, 92, 96, 101, 107, 109, and 116.

For those who want a litt le more spice in their Catullus, Writing Passion Plus: A Catullus Reader Sup-plement provides poems 6, 16, 32, and 57 with introductions and same-page notes and vocabulary. Th e mature themes reveal the salacious nature of some of Catullus’s poems.

Watch for New Editions of These Popular B-C TextsCicero: De Amicitia SelectionsPatsy Rodden Ricks and Sheila K. Dickison

x + 73 pp. (2006) 6” x 9” Paperback, ISBN 978-0-86516-639-4

Cicero: Pro Caelio, 3rd EditionStephen Ciraolo

xxxi + 239 pp. (2010) 6” x 9” Paperback, ISBN 978-0-86516-559-5

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Latin for the New Millennium, Level 1Milena Minkova and Terence Tunberg

Student Text: xxxiv + 446 pp. (2008) 7¾” x 10” Hardbound, ISBN 978-0-86516-560-1Teacher’s Manual: xlix + 464 pp. (2008) 10” x 14” Spiral-bound, ISBN 978-0-86516-562-5

A Level 1 Workbook and Teacher’s Manual are also available.

Latin for the New Millennium, Level 2Milena Minkova and Terence Tunberg

Student Text: xxx + 578 pp. (2009) 7¾” x 10” Hardbound, ISBN 978-0-86516-563-2Teacher’s Manual: xxx + 538 pp. (2009) 10” x 14” Spiral-bound, ISBN 978-0-86516-565-6

A Level 2 Workbook and Teacher’s Manual are also available.

Latin for the New Millennium, College Exercise BookMilena Minkova

xiii + 241 pp. (2012) 6” x 9” Paperback, ISBN 978-0-86516-781-0

Teach the Full Legacy of Latin Literature

To say that Latin literature did not end with the Romans would be an understatement. In fact the Roman contribution to Latin, however fundamental, is a mere beginning. Th e amount of surviving Latin literature writt en in Europe since the

collapse of the Western Roman Empire in the late fi ft h century ce is almost inconceivably larger than the surviving corpus of literature left by the Romans themselves.

Th is heritage of post-Roman Latin literature was anything but a sterile idiom reserved for a few reclusive monks. Th e very pulse of western European civilization, as it developed through the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, moved primarily to the rhythms of Latin prose and poetry. Th e language of Caesar and Cicero performed new functions and came to be used in ways unimagined by the ancient Romans. Latin became the vehicle for sciences as refi ned as ballistics and hydro-dynamics. . . .

–Terence Tunberg, March 2009

For the rest of this essay on teaching post-antique Latin visit htt p://www.bolchazy.com/Assets/Bolchazy/extras/WhyPostAntiqueLatin.pdf

or see pp. xxvi–xxvii in LNM 2 and pp. 410–411 in LNM 3.

20

The Brill Dictionary of Ancient GreekFranco Montanari, Genoa

English Edition edited by Madeleine Goh and Chad Schroeder, under the auspices of the Center for Hellenic Studies

Advisory Editors: Gregory Nagy, Harvard, and Leonard Muellner, Brandeis

• May 2015

• ISBN 978 90 04 19318 5

• Hardback

• List price EUR 99 / US$ 125

The Brill Dictionary of Ancient Greek is the English translation of Franco Montanari’s Vocabolario della Lingua Greca. With an established reputation as the most important modern dictionary for Ancient Greek, it brings together 140,000 headwords taken from the literature, papyri, inscriptions and other sources of the archaic period up to the 6th Century CE, and occasionally beyond. The Brill Dictionary of Ancient Greek is an invaluable companion for the study of Classics and Ancient Greek, for beginning students and advanced scholars alike.

Translated and edited under the auspices of The Center for Hellenic Studies in Washington, DC, The Brill Dictionary of Ancient Greek is based on the completely revised 3rd Italian edition published in 2013.

Features- The principal parts of some 15,000 verbs

are listed directly following the entry and its etymology. For each of these forms, the occurrence in the ancient texts has been certif ied. When found only once, the location is cited.

- Nearly all entries include citations from the texts with careful mention of the source.

- The Dictionary is especially rich in personal names re-checked against the sources for the 3rd Italian edition, and in scientif ic terms, which have been categorized according to discipline.

- Each entry has a clear structure and typography making it easy to navigate.

“Franco Montanari is a giant in our field, and his Dictionary is a major leap forward for us….” - Professor Gregory Nagy, Harvard University

“For a number of years now, scholars at ease in Italian have benefitted enormously from the riches, layout, concision, and accuracy of Professor Montanari’s Vocabolario della Lingua Greca, with its added advantage of the inclusion of names. Hence classicists in general will welcome the English version of this very valuable resource.” - Professor Richard Janko, University of Michigan

Franco Montanari is Professor of Ancient Greek Literature at the University of Genoa (Italy), Director of the Rivista di Filologia e di Istruzione Classica, of the Centro Italiano dell’Année Philologique and of the Aristarchus project on line, and a member of numerous international research centers and associations. Apart from the Vocabolario della Lingua Greca he has published many other scientif ic works on ancient scholarship and grammar, archaic Greek epic poets and other Greek poets of the Classical and Hellenistic periods, including Brill’s Companion to Hesiod (2009).

21

Cambridge Classical Studies

Apuleius’ PlatonismThe Impersonation of Philosophy RICHARD FLETCHER

The Origin of Roman London LACEY M. WALLACE

Menander, New Comedy and the Visual ANTONIS K. PETRIDES

Performing Citizenship in Plato’s Laws LUCIA PRAUSCELLO

Playing Hesiod The ‘Myth of the Races’ in Classical AntiquityHELEN VAN NOORDEN

Art in the Hellenistic World An IntroductionANDREW STEWART

The Cambridge History of Painting in the Classical WorldEdited by J.J. POLLITT

The Pantheon From Antiquity to the PresentEdited by TOD A. MARDER AND MARK WILSON JONES

Campus Martius The Field of Mars in the Life of Ancient RomePAUL W. JACOBS, II AND

DIANE ATNALLY CONLIN

Causation and Creation in Late AntiquityEdited by ANNA MARMODORO AND BRIAN D. PRINCE

Collecting Early Christian Letters from the Apostle Paul to Late AntiquityEdited by BRONWEN NEIL AND PAULINE ALLEN

Cults and Rites in Ancient GreeceEssays on Religion and Society MICHAEL H. JAMESON, In collaboration with PAUL CARTLEDGE

Prepared for publication by ALLAIRE B. STALLSMITH AND

IRENE POLINSKAYA

With contributions by FRITZ GRAF

Fiscal Regimes and the Political Economy of Premodern StatesEdited by ANDREW MONSON AND WALTER SCHEIDEL

Globalisation and theRoman World World History, Connectivity and Material CultureEdited by MARTIN PITTS AND MIGUEL JOHN VERSLUYS

A History of PythagoreanismEdited by CARL A. HUFFMAN

Historical Agency and the ‘Great Man’ in Classical Greece SARAH BROWN FERRARIO

Homer on the Gods and Human VirtueCreating the Foundations of Classical Civilization PETER J. AHRENSDORF

Interpreting ProclusFrom Antiquity to the Renaissance Edited by STEPHEN GERSH

Greek Culture in the Roman World

Greek Culture in the Roman World Greek Narratives of the Roman Empire under the Severans Cassius Dio, Philostratus and HerodianADAM M. KEMEZIS

Man and Animal inSeveran Rome The Literary Imagination of Claudius AelianusSTEVEN D. SMITH

Reading Fiction with Lucian Fakes, Freaks and HyperrealityKAREN NÍ MHEALLAIGH

Cambridge Greek and Latin Classics

Ovid: Epistulae ex Ponto Book IEdited by GARTH TISSOL

Juvenal: Satire 6Edited by LINDSAY WATSON

AND PATRICIA WATSON

Lucretius: De Rerum Natura Book III Second EditionEdited by E. J. KENNEY

Tacitus: Agricola Edited by A. J. WOODMAN AND With C. S. KRAUS

Law and Power in the Making of the Roman Commonwealth LUIGI CAPOGROSSI COLOGNESI, Translated by LAURA KOPP

Learning Latin and Greek from Antiquity to the PresentEdited by ELIZABETH P. ARCHIBALD, WILLIAM BROCKLISS, AND JONATHAN GNOZA Yale Classical Studies

Libanius A Critical IntroductionEdited by LIEVE VAN HOOF

Livy’s Political Philosophy Power and Personality in Early RomeANN VASALY

Lucan’s Egyptian Civil WarJONATHAN TRACY

www.cambridge.org/classics@CambUP_Classics

Art in the Hellenistic World An IntroductionANDREW STEWART

Historical Agency and the ‘Great

22

Magistracy and the Historiography of the Roman Republic Politics in Prose

AYELET HAIMSON LUSHKOV

Myth, Literature, and the Creation of the Topography of ThebesDANIEL W. BERMAN

Ovid’s Early Poetry From his Single Heroides to his Remedia AmorisTHEA S. THORSEN

People and Spaces in Roman Military Bases PENELOPE M. ALLISON

Politics and the Street in Democratic AthensALEX GOTTESMAN

Pollution and Crisis in Greek TragedyFABIAN MEINEL

Porphyry’s Commentary on Ptolemy’s Harmonics A Greek Text and Annotated TranslationEdited and translated by ANDREW BARKER

Probabilities, Hypotheticals, and Counterfactuals inAncient Greek ThoughtEdited by VICTORIA WOHL

Reading LatinGrammar and Exercises Second Edition

PETER V. JONES AND KEITH C. SIDWELL

Reading LatinText and Vocabulary Second Edition

PETER V. JONES AND

KEITH C. SIDWELL

Roman Girlhood and the Fashioning of Femininity LAUREN CALDWELL

Roman Satire and the Old Comic Tradition JENNIFER L. FERRISS-HILL

Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries

Aenesidemus of Cnossus TestimoniaEdited and translated by ROBERTO POLITO

Stesichorus The PoemsEdited by M. DAVIES AND

P. J. FINGLASS

The Colloquia of the Hermeneumata PseudodositheanaVolume 2: Colloquium Harleianum, Colloquium Montepessulanum, Colloquium Celtis, and Fragments Edited by ELEANOR DICKEY

Hellenistic and Biblical GreekA Graduated ReaderB.H. MCLEAN

The Afterlife of the Roman City Architecture and Ceremony in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle AgesHENDRIK W. DEY

The Ancient Jews from Alexander to Muhammad SETH SCHWARTZ

Key Themes in Ancient History

The Birth of Critical Thinking in Republican RomeCLAUDIA MOATTI, Translated by JANET LLOYD, Foreword by MALCOLM SCHOFIELD

The Cambridge Companion to Aristotle’s Nicomachean EthicsEdited by RONALD POLANSKY Cambridge Companions to Philosophy

The Cambridge Companion to Greek ComedyEdited by MARTIN REVERMANN Cambridge Companions to Literature

The Cambridge Companion to Seneca Edited by SHADI BARTSCH AND ALESSANDRO SCHIESARO

Cambridge Companions to Literature

The Cambridge Companion to Roman Law Edited by DAVID JOHNSTON

The Cambridge Companion to the Age of Attila Edited by MICHAEL MAAS

Cambridge Companions to the Ancient World

The Demiurge in Ancient Thought Secondary Gods and Divine MediatorsCARL SÉAN O’BRIEN

The Greek Epic Cycle and its Ancient ReceptionA Companion Edited by MARCO FANTUZZI AND CHRISTOS TSAGALIS

Reading Greek

The Intellectual Revolution Selections from Euripides, Thucydides and PlatoSecond Edition

JOINT ASSOCIATION OF CLASSICAL TEACHERS’ GREEK COURSE

A World of HeroesSelections from Homer, Herodotus and Sophocles Second Edition

JOINT ASSOCIATION OF CLASSICAL TEACHERS’ GREEK COURSE

The Jewish-Greek Tradition in Antiquity and the Byzantine Empire Edited by JAMES K. AITKEN AND JAMES CARLETON PAGET

The Material Life of Roman Slaves SANDRA R. JOSHEL AND LAUREN HACKWORTH PETERSEN

The Metallurgy of Roman Silver CoinageFrom the Reform of Nero to the Reform of Trajan KEVIN BUTCHER AND

MATTHEW PONTING

The Pleasures of Reason in Plato, Aristotle, and the Hellenistic Hedonists JAMES WARREN

The Punic Mediterranean Identities and Identifi cation from Phoenician Settlement to Roman RuleEdited by JOSEPHINE CRAWLEY QUINN AND NICHOLAS C. VELLA

British School at Rome Studies

The Sublime Seneca Ethics, Literature, MetaphysicsERIK GUNDERSON

The World of Tacitus’ Dialogus de OratoribusAesthetics and Empire in Ancient Rome CHRISTOPHER S. VAN DEN BERG

Viewing Inscriptions in the Late Antique and Medieval World Edited by ANTONY EASTMOND

www.cambridge.org/classics@CambUP_Classics

23

LEADING CLASSICS JOURNALS FROM CAMBRIDGE

New to Cambridge in 2015

AntichthonAn internationally recognised journal of research into the ancient world, published for the Australasian Society for Classical Studies

Find out more at journals.cambridge.org/ann

journals.cambridge.org/classics

Cambridge University Press is proud to publish the journals of:The Australasian Society for Classical Studies – The Society for Libyan Studies

The British Institute for the Study of Iraq – The British Institute at Ankara – The British School at Athens The British School at Rome – The Classical Association – The Cambridge Philological Society

The Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies – The Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies

24

CS&A and Job-Seeking Teachers...a classic combination.

For more information, please visit us at www.carneysandoe.comor speak with Alex McLean,Classics Teacher Placement Counselor,at Booth #200

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Want to talk? Reach out to us.617.542.0260

Providing recruitment and placement services for independent schools worldwide since 1977.

25

new books in ancient & classical studies from�

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ȃ������¢ȱ��ȱ�����Ȃ�ȱ�� �Ȅ�љѓюџюяі

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26

S o c i e t y f o r c l a S S i c a l S t u d i e S � a n n u a l m e e t i n g

thurSday, January 8, 2015 Start End Event Hotel Room

10:00 AM 3:00 PM Meeting of the SCS Nominating Committee Sheraton ..............................................Oakley

12:00 PM 8:00 PM Registration Open Sheraton ...........Napoleon Ballroom Foyer

2:00 PM 6:30 PM Exhibit Hall Open Sheraton ...................... Napoleon Ballroom

3:00 PM 6:00 PM Meeting of the ASCSA Executive Committee Sheraton ...........................................Gallier A

3:30 PM 6:30 PM Meeting of the SCS Board of Directors Sheraton ................................. Grand Chenier

4:00 PM 6:00 PM Vergilian Society Board of Trustees Meeting Sheraton ...........................................Gallier B

5:00 PM 7:00 PM Reception for Alumni and Friends of the Intercollegiate Center for Classical Studies (ICCS) Sheraton ...............................................Cornet

5:00 PM 8:00 PM Women’s Classical Caucus Steering Committee Meeting Sheraton .................................Grand Couteau

8:00 PM 10:00 PM Live Reading of ANTIGONICK Sheraton ....................... Grand Ballroom D

9:00 PM 11:00 PM Reception Sponsored by the University of Toronto Department of Classics Sheraton ................................. Grand Chenier

10:00 PM 12:00 AM CSWMG/WCC/LCC Opening Night Reception Marriott ................................ Balconies IJK

27

friday, January 9, 2015 Start End Event Hotel Room

7:00 AM 8:00 AM Meeting of the SCS Committee on Minority Scholarships Sheraton ...........................................Gallier A 7:00 AM 8:30 AM Meeting of the $PSKRUD Editorial Board Marriott .............................................Studio 3 7:30 AM 3:30 PM Registration Open Sheraton ...........Napoleon Ballroom Foyer

FIRST SESSION FOR THE READING OF PAPERS 8:00 AM 10:30 AM Session 1: The Body in Question: Literature, Philosophy, and Cult Sheraton ................................. Grand Chenier 8:00 AM 10:30 AM Session 2: Ovidian Poetics, Ovidian Receptions Sheraton ..............................................Borgne 8:00 AM 10:30 AM Session 3: Law and Empire in the Roman World Sheraton ........................... Grand Ballroom E 8:00 AM 10:30 AM Session 4: Intrageneric Dialogues in Hellenistic and Imperial Epic Sheraton .........................................Bayside B 8:00 AM 10:30 AM Session 5: New Fragments of Sappho Sheraton ...........................Grand Ballroom D 8:00 AM 10:30 AM Session 6: What Can Early Modernity Do for Classics? Sheraton ...............................................Cornet 8:00 AM 10:30 AM Session 7: Polyvalence by Design: Anticipated Audience in Hellenistic and Augustan Poetry Sheraton ......................................Rhythms III 8:00 AM 10:30 AM Session 8: Practice and Personal Experience (Organized by the Society for Ancient Mediterranean Religions) Sheraton .................................Grand Couteau 8:00 AM 10:30 AM Session 9: Inscriptions and Literary Sources (Organized by the American Society of Greek and Latin Epigraphy) Sheraton .........................................Bayside C 8:00 AM 2:00 PM Meeting of the SCS Committee on the TLL Fellowship Marriott .............................................Studio 1 8:30 AM 10:00 AM Meeting of the SCS Committee on Education and the Joint Committee (with ACL) on the Classics in American Education Sheraton ..............................................Oakley 8:30 AM 10:00 AM Meeting of the SCS Committee on Placement Sheraton ............................................Rampart 9:30 AM 5:30 PM Exhibit Hall Open Sheraton ...................... Napoleon Ballroom 10:00 AM 12:00 PM Meeting of the SCS Development Committee Marriott .............................................Studio 2

SECOND SESSION FOR THE READING OF PAPERS 10:45 AM 12:45 PM Session 10: The Performance of Greek Poetry Sheraton .........................................Bayside C 10:45 AM 12:45 PM Session 11: Representation of Time in the Hellenistic and Roman World Sheraton ................................. Grand Chenier 10:45 AM 12:45 PM Session 12: Looking Both Ways: Dialogic Receptions in Practice Sheraton ..............................................Borgne 10:45 AM 12:45 PM Session 13: The Impact of Moses Finley Sheraton ........................... Grand Ballroom E 10:45 AM 12:45 PM Session 14: Aristotle (Organized by the Society for Ancient Greek Philosophy) Sheraton .........................................Bayside B 10:45 AM 12:45 PM Session 15: Medieval Latin Poetry (Organized by the Medieval Latin Studies Group) Sheraton ...............................................Cornet 10:45 AM 12:45 PM Session 16: Breastfeeding and Wet-Nursing in Antiquity (Organized by the Women’s Classical Caucus) Sheraton ......................................Rhythms III 10:45 AM 12:45 PM Session 17: The Matter of Thebes (Organized by the American Classical League) Sheraton .................................Grand Couteau 11:00 AM 12:00 PM Meeting of the Chairs of PhD and MA Granting Institutions Marriott .............................................Studio 3 12:00 PM 1:30 PM Meeting of the American Friends of Herculaneum Sheraton ..............................................Oakley 12:30 PM 3:00 PM Meeting of the SCS Finance Committee Sheraton ....................................................821 12:45 PM 1:45 PM Meeting of the SCS Committee on Ancient History Sheraton ............................................Rampart

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THIRD SESSION FOR THE READING OF PAPERS 1:45 PM 4:45 PM Session 18: Hellenistic and Neoteric Intertexts Sheraton ......................................Rhythms III 1:45 PM 4:45 PM Session 19: Philosophical Poetics Sheraton .........................................Bayside B 1:45 PM 4:45 PM Session 20: Religion, Ritual, and Identity Sheraton .................................Grand Couteau 1:45 PM 4:45 PM Session 21: Empire and Ideology in the Roman World Sheraton .........................................Bayside C 1:45 PM 4:45 PM Session 22: Voice and Sound in Classical Greece Sheraton ...............................................Cornet 1:45 PM 4:45 PM Session 23: Cognitive Classics: New Theoretical Models for Approaching the Ancient World Sheraton ..............................................Borgne 1:45 PM 4:45 PM Session 24: Writing outside the Box: Communicating Classical Studies to Wider Audiences (Organized by the SCS Outreach Committee) Sheraton ...........................Grand Ballroom D 1:45 PM 4:45 PM Session 25: Ancient Literacy Reprised (Seminar: Advance Registration Required) Marriott .........................................Balcony K 1:45 PM 4:45 PM Session 26: The Other Side of Victory: War Losses in the Ancient World Sheraton ........................... Grand Ballroom E 1:45 PM 4:45 PM Session 27: Humoerotica (Organized by the Lambda Classical Caucus) Sheraton ................................. Grand Chenier 2:30 PM 4:00 PM Meeting of the SCS Committee on Translations of Classical Authors Marriott .............................................Studio 1 3:00 PM 4:00 PM Meeting of Liberal Arts College Chairs Marriott .............................................Studio 2 3:00 PM 5:00 PM Meeting of the SCS Committee on the Status of Women and Minority Groups Sheraton ............................................Rampart 3:00 PM 5:00 PM Expanding College Classics Opportunities Committee Sheraton ......................................Estherwood 3:30 PM 5:30 PM Meeting of the ASCSA Managing Committee Marriott .......................................Balconies IJ 4:30 PM 5:00 PM General Membership Meeting of the Vergilian Society Sheraton ...........................................Gallier A 5:00 PM 6:00 PM Meeting of the Society for Ancient Mediterranean Religions Marriott .............................................Studio 3 5:00 PM 6:00 PM Journal Editors’ Happy Hour Sheraton ..............................................Oakley 5:00 PM 6:00 PM Reception Sponsored by the Vergilian Society Sheraton ...........................................Gallier B 5:00 PM 7:00 PM SCS PRESIDENTIAL PANEL: Ancient Perspectives on the Value of Literature: Utilitarian versus Aesthetic Sheraton ....................... Grand Ballroom D 5:00 PM 7:30 PM Meeting of the Advisory Council of the American Academy in Rome Sheraton ...............................................Cornet 6:00 PM 8:00 PM Reception Sponsored by the Department of Classics, University of Texas at Austin Sheraton .................................Grand Couteau 7:00 PM 8:00 PM Lambda Classical Caucus/Women’s Classical Caucus Graduate Students Cocktail Hour Offsite Claire’s Pour House, 233 Decatur Street 7:00 PM 10:00 PM SCS PLAY (Wealth) Sheraton ....................Waterbury Ballroom 7:30 PM 10:00 PM Reception for the INSTAP Study Center for East Crete Sheraton .........................................Bayside B 8:00 PM 10:00 PM Meeting of the American Society of Papyrologists Board of Directors Sheraton ....................................................821 8:00 PM 11:00 PM Reception Sponsored by the Center for Ancient Studies, the Department of Classics, and the Institute for the Study of the Ancient World of New York University Marriott ...........................................Balcony I 9:00 PM 11:00 PM Reception Sponsored by the Department of Classical Studies, Duke University and the Department of Classics, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Marriott .........................................Balcony K 9:00 PM 11:00 PM Reception Sponsored by the Departments of Classics at Columbia University and Princeton University Sheraton ......................................Rhythms III

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Friday, January 9, 2015(All sessions will take place at the Sheraton New Orleans unless otherwise noted.)

FIRST SESSION FOR THE READING OF PAPERS8:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. Grand ChenierSession #1The Body in Question: Literature, Philosophy, and Cult

Julie Laskaris, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�5LFKPRQG, Presider

7KH�KXPDQ�ERG\�LV�UHFRJQL]HG�DV�D�SRWHQW�DQG�KLJKO\�YDULDEOH�VLJQL¿HU�DFURVV�PXOWLSOH�GLVFXUVLYH�DQG�FRQFHSWXDO�]RQHV�LQ�ZD\V�WKDW�FRQWLQXH�WR�DWWUDFW�WKH�DWWHQWLRQ�RI�VFKRODUV�IURP�PDQ\�VXE¿HOGV��7KHVH�SDSHUV�H[SORUH�VL[�IDFHWV�RI�VRPDWLF�LPDJHU\�DQG�V\PEROLVP�LQ�*UHHN�DQG�5R-PDQ�SRHWU\��KLVWRULRJUDSK\��SKLORVRSKLFDO�HSLVWHPRORJ\�DQG�DHVWKHWLFV��DQG�UHOLJLRXV�SUDFWLFH�IURP�WKH�FODVVLFDO�WR�WKH�ODWH�DQWLTXH�SHULRGV��

1. Goran Vidovic, &RUQHOO�8QLYHUVLW\� Physiology of Matricide: Revenge and Metabolism Imagery in Aeschylus’ &KRHSKRURH�(20 mins.)

2. Thomas Cirillo, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�6RXWKHUQ�&DOLIRUQLD Ethiopian Blackness: Aristotelian Commentators on “Affective Qualities” and Racial Characteristics (20 mins.)

3. Paul Hay, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�7H[DV�DW�$XVWLQ

Body Horror and Biopolitics in Livy’s Third Decade (20 mins.)4. Mali Skotheim, 3ULQFHWRQ�8QLYHUVLW\�

Apollonius the Pantomime: Silence and Dance in Philostratus’ /LIH�RI�$SROORQLXV�RI�7\DQD (20 mins.)5. Ursula M. Poole, &ROXPELD�8QLYHUVLW\�

6RPDHVWKHWLFV�DQG�WKH�6XEOLPH��7KH�5KHWRULF�RI�WKH�µ&OLQLFDO�%RG\¶�,Q�/RQJLQXV¶�Ȇİȡ�ȥȠȣȢ�����PLQV��6. Tom Hawkins, 7KH�2KLR�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\

The Gilded Maggot: The Disgusting Beauty of Christian Ascetic Bodies (20 mins.)

8:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. BorgneSession #2Ovidian Poetics, Ovidian Receptions

Andrew Feldherr, 3ULQFHWRQ�8QLYHUVLW\, Presider

,QFUHDVHG�XQGHUVWDQGLQJ�RI�2YLG�QRW�RQO\�DV�D�SRHW�RI�JUHDW�DFFRPSOLVKPHQW�DQG�GLYHUVLW\��EXW�DV�WKH�FHQWHU�RI�DQ�LPDJLQDWLYH�WUDGL-WLRQ�WKDW�H[WHQGV�IURP�HDUOLHU�DQWLTXLW\�GRZQ�WR�WKH�SUHVHQW�GD\��KDV�EHHQ�D�VLJQL¿FDQW�DFKLHYHPHQW�RI�UHFHQW�VFKRODUVKLS��7KHVH�¿YH�SDSHUV�SUHVHQW�QHZ�SHUVSHFWLYHV�RQ�WKDW�WUDGLWLRQ�WKURXJK�DQ�H[DPLQDWLRQ�RI�2YLG¶V�RZQ�HQJDJHPHQW�ZLWK�WKH�OLWHUDU\�DQG�PDWHULDO�SDVW�DQG�SUHVHQW��DQG�RI�VRPH�XQH[SHFWHG�ZD\V�LQ�ZKLFK�ODWHU�DUWLVWV�KDYH�IROORZHG�2YLG¶V�OHDG�

1. Sergios Paschalis, +DUYDUG�8QLYHUVLW\ Conjugal Reunions: Ovid’s Orpheus and Eurydice and Euripides’ $OFHVWLV (20 mins.)

2. Leon Grek, 3ULQFHWRQ�8QLYHUVLW\ 5RPDQDH�VSDWLXP�8UELV: Ovidian Narrative and Roman Space in the )DVWL�(20 mins.)

3. Carrie Mowbray, 6PLWK�&ROOHJH $PEHU�7HDUV�DQG�6ZDQ�6RQJV��2YLG�DQG�3RHWLF�$XWKRULW\�LQ�/XFLDQ¶V�ਹȜȑțIJȡȠȣ�����PLQV��

4. Luke Roman, 0HPRULDO�8QLYHUVLW\ +XPDQLVW KRUWL: The Poetics of Innovation in Giovanni Pontano’s 'H�KRUWLV�+HVSHULGXP (20 mins.)

5. Benjamin Eldon Stevens, %U\Q�0DZU�&ROOHJH Daphne’s Posthuman Bodies: Reading Ovid’s 0HWDPRUSKRVHV as Science Fiction (20 mins.)

8:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. Grand Ballroom ESession #3Law and Empire in the Roman World

Clifford Ando, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&KLFDJR, Presider

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PDQ�KLVWRULDQV�� 7KHVH�¿YH�SDSHUV�SUHVHQW�QHZ�SHUVSHFWLYHV�RQ�WKH�UROH�RI�ODZ��OHJDO�SURFHVVHV�DQG�DJHQF\�LQ�5RPH�DQG�LQ�WKH�JRYHUQ-

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1. Martin Reznick, 1HZ�<RUN�8QLYHUVLW\ The Right to a Leisurely Trial? Strategy, Signaling, and Speed in 3��2[\� XLII (20 mins.)

2. Emily Master, 3ULQFHWRQ�8QLYHUVLW\ Lex or OHJHV? Augustus’ Judiciary Reforms (20 mins.)

3. Charles Bartlett, +DUYDUG�8QLYHUVLW\ The OH[�5XSLOLD and the Role of Provincial Administration in Roman Legal History (20 mins.)

4. Mary Deminion, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�:HVWHUQ�2QWDULR

Empire and Agency: Women and the Law in the Eastern Roman Provinces (20 mins.)5. David M. Ratzan, 1HZ�<RUN�8QLYHUVLW\

Ulpian and the Criminalization of Divination (20 mins.)

8:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. Bayside BSession #4Intrageneric Dialogues in Hellenistic and Imperial Epic

James Clauss, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�:DVKLQJWRQ, Presider

%HFDXVH�VR�PDQ\�*UHHN�DQG�5RPDQ�HSLFV�KDYH�EHHQ�ORVW��PRGHUQ�FRQFHSWLRQV�RI�WKH�JHQUH�WHQG�WR�EH�GRPLQDWHG�E\�+RPHU�DQG�KLV�PRVW�FHOHEUDWHG�IROORZHUV��%XW�WKH�7KHEDQ�DQG�$UJRQDXWLF�VDJDV�DV�ZHOO�KDYH�OHIW�WKHLU�PDUN�ERWK�LQ�WKH�IRUP�RI�D�IHZ�SRHPV�GHYRWHG�WR�WKRVH�WKHPHV�DQG�LQ�UHDFWLRQV�WR�WKHP�LQ�HSLFV�RQ�WKH�7URMDQ�:DU�DQG�RWKHU�P\WKLF�F\FOHV��HYHQ�DV�WKH�JHQHULF�FRGHV�RI�+RPHULF�HSLF�DUH�UHYLVHG�LQ�WKRVH�SRHPV��7KHVH�¿YH�SDSHUV�GLVFRYHU�QHZ�HYLGHQFH�RI�H[FKDQJHV�DPRQJ�WKHVH�WUDGLWLRQV�LQ�HSLF�RI�WKH�+HOOHQLV-WLF�DQG�,PSHULDO�SHULRGV�

1. Michael Haslam, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DOLIRUQLD��/RV�$QJHOHV Argeia and Thersander in Antimachos’ 7KHEDLG" (20 mins.)

2. Carolyn MacDonald, 6WDQIRUG�8QLYHUVLW\ Coast of 2XWRSLD: the Argo in the Tyrrhenian Sea (20 mins.)

3. Stefano Rebeggiani, 1HZ�<RUN�8QLYHUVLW\ 1RPHQ�(FKLRQLXP: Theban Narratives in Vergil’s $HQHLG (20 mins.)

4. Joshua Fincher, <DOH�8QLYHUVLW\ Aeacus’ Heroism and Homeric Reception in Nonnus’ 'LRQ\VLDFD (20 mins.)

5. Nicholas Kauffman, 7KH -RKQV�+RSNLQV�8QLYHUVLW\ The Aesthetics of Slaughter in Quintus Smyrnaeus’ 3RVWKRPHULFD�(20 mins.)

8:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. Grand Ballroom DSession #5New Fragments of Sappho

Andre Lardinois, 5DGERXG�8QLYHUVLW\�1LMPHJHQ, Organizer

5HFHQWO\�D�QHZ�VHW�RI�SDS\UL�ZLWK�IUDJPHQWV�RI�6DSSKR�KDV�EHHQ�GLVFRYHUHG��7KH\�SUHVHUYH�¿YH�VWDQ]DV�RI�D�FRPSOHWHO\�QHZ�SRHP��%URWKHUV�SRHP���SDUWV�RI�WKUHH�RWKHU�QHZ�SRHPV��.\SULV�SRHP��IU����D�DQG�WKH�SRHP�WKDW�SUHFHGHG�IU������DQG�DGG�VXEVWDQWLDO�QHZ�UHDGLQJV�WR�IUDJPHQWV��������������DQG�����7KH�SXUSRVH�RI�WKLV�SDQHO�LV�WR�LQWURGXFH�WKLV�QHZ�PDWHULDO�DQG�WR�VWDUW�WKH�GLVFXVVLRQ�RI�LWV�VLJQL¿FDQFH�ERWK�IRU�RXU�XQGHUVWDQGLQJ�RI�6DSSKR��KHU�UHFHSWLRQ�LQ�/DWLQ�OLWHUDWXUH��DQG�WKH�SUHVHQWDWLRQ�RI�KHU�SRHWU\�WR�WKH�ODUJHU�SXEOLF�

Andre Lardinois, 5DGERXG�8QLYHUVLW\�1LMPHJHQIntroduction (10 mins.)

1. Dirk Obbink, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�2[IRUG

Provenance, Authenticity, and Text of the New Sappho Papyri (25 mins.)2. Joel Lidov, &LW\�8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1HZ�<RUN�

(S)he Do the Polis in Different Voices (25 mins.)3. Eva Stehle, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�0DU\ODQG

Sappho and Her Brothers (25 mins.)4. Llewelyn Morgan, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�2[IRUG

The Reception of the New Sappho in Latin Literature (25 mins.)

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5. Diane Rayor, *UDQG�9DOOH\�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\ Reimagining the Fragments of Sappho (25 mins.)

General discussion (15 mins.)

8:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. Cornet Session #6What Can Early Modernity Do for Classics?

Ariane Schwartz, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DOLIRUQLD��/RV�$QJHOHV and Pramit Chaudhuri, 'DUWPRXWK�&ROOHJH, Organizers

7KLV�SDQHO��FR�VSRQVRUHG�E\�WKH�Catalogus Translationum et Commentariorum�SURMHFW��DLPV�WR�SUHVHQW�WR�D�ZLGH�DXGLHQFH�RI�FODVVL-FLVWV�D�VDPSOH�RI�WKH�DUJXPHQWV�DQG�RSSRUWXQLWLHV�IRU�ZRUNLQJ�LQ�HDUO\�PRGHUQ�UHFHSWLRQ�VWXGLHV��DQG�WKH�SRWHQWLDO�PXWXDO�EHQH¿WV�DULVLQJ�IURP�FORVHU�HQJDJHPHQW�ZLWK�WKH�¿HOG��7KH�¿YH�SDQHOLVWV�H[SORUH�GLIIHUHQW�IRUPV�RI�FRQWDFW�EHWZHHQ�DQWLTXLW\�DQG�WKH�HDUO\�PRGHUQ�ZRUOG�IURP�SKLORORJ\�WR�WUDQVODWLRQ��DQG�IURP�DUFKLYDO�UHVHDUFK�WR�WKH�PDSSLQJ�RI�LQWHOOHFWXDO�QHWZRUNV��7KH�SDQHO�RSHQV�D�FRQYHUVDWLRQ�WR�EH�FRQWLQXHG�IURP������RQZDUGV�XQGHU�WKH�DXVSLFHV�RI�WKH�QHZ�6RFLHW\�IRU�(DUO\�0RGHUQ�&ODVVLFDO�5HFHSWLRQ��6(0-

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Ariane Schwartz, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DOLIRUQLD��/RV�$QJHOHV Introduction (5 mins.)

1. Christopher S. Celenza��7KH�-RKQV�+RSNLQV�8QLYHUVLW\ What Kind of Language Did Ancient Romans Speak? A Fifteenth-Century Debate (20 mins.)

2. Federica Ciccolella, 7H[DV�$0�8QLYHUVLW\ Exploring the Library of a 16th-Century Cretan Teacher (20 mins.)

3. James Hankins, +DUYDUG 8QLYHUVLW\� Classical and Neo-Latin Philology: Separated at Birth? (20 mins.)

4. Stephen Hinds, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�:DVKLQJWRQ

Poetry between Latin and the Vernacular: Literature and Literalism in the Classical Tradition (20 mins.)5. Giovanna Ceserani and Thea DeArmond, 6WDQIRUG 8QLYHUVLW\�

Early Modern Material Pasts: Architects, Proto-Archaeologists, and the Power of Images in the Eighteenth Century (20 mins.)

James J. O’Donnell, *HRUJHWRZQ 8QLYHUVLW\�Respondent (10 mins.)

General discussion (15 mins.)

8:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. Rhythms IIISession #7Polyvalence by Design: Anticipated Audience in Hellenistic and Augustan Poetry

Jeffrey Hunt and Alden Smith, %D\ORU�8QLYHUVLW\, Organizers

1. Jason Nethercut, .QR[�&ROOHJH Polyeideia and the Intended Audience of Lucretius’ 'H�5HUXP�1DWXUD (15 mins.)

2. Peter Knox, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&RORUDGR The Audience for Elegy: Inferences from Pompeii (15 mins.)

3. Kristin Mann, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DOLIRUQLD��/RV�$QJHOHV Dual Audience in Phaedrus (15 mins.)

4. Barbara Weinlich, (FNHUG�&ROOHJH &,/���������7UDFLQJ�/RYH�(OHJ\¶V�9DULRXV�5HDGHUVKLSV�LQ�D�3RPSHLDQ�*UDI¿WR�����PLQV��

5. Angeline Chiu, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�9HUPRQW Unintended Audiences: Ovid and the Tomitans in ([�3RQWR�4.13 and 4.14 (15 mins.)

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8:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. Grand CouteauSession #8Practice and Personal ExperienceOrganized by the Society for Ancient Mediterranean Religions

Jeffrey Brodd, &DOLIRUQLD�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\��6DFUDPHQWR�and Nancy Evans, :KHDWRQ�&ROOHJH, Organizers

7KH�UHOLJLRXV�H[SHULHQFH�RI�LQGLYLGXDOV�LQ�WKH�DQFLHQW�ZRUOG��ZKLFK�SUHYLRXVO\�WRRN�D�EDFN�VHDW�WR�VWXGLHV�HPSKDVL]LQJ�VWDWH�UHOLJLRQ��LV�FRPLQJ�WR�WKH�IRUH�� ,QVWHDG�RI�GLVUHJDUGLQJ�VXEMHFWLYH�H[SHULHQFH�RU�SHUVRQDO�UHOLJLRVLW\��VFKRODUV�KDYH�EHJXQ�WR�H[SORUH�WKH�ZRUOG�RI�LQGLYLGXDOV¶�OLYHG�SUDFWLFHV�� 7KLV�VHVVLRQ�ZLOO�H[DPLQH�GLIIHUHQW�DVSHFWV�RI�SHUVRQDO�H[SHULHQFH�DQG�RU�SUDFWLFH�LQ�WKH�UHOLJLRQV�RI�WKH�DQFLHQW�0HGLWHUUDQHDQ�ZRUOG�� 6XFK�DVSHFWV�PLJKW�LQFOXGH��EXW�DUH�QRW�OLPLWHG�WR���SLOJULPDJH��KHDOLQJ�SUDFWLFHV��ULWHV�DFFRPSDQ\-LQJ�ELUWK�DQG�GHDWK��KRXVHKROG�SUDFWLFHV��PHWKRGRORJLFDO�FKDOOHQJHV�WR�VWXG\LQJ�SHUVRQDO�H[SHULHQFH��DQG�WKH�SRVVLELOLW\�RI�VWXG\LQJ�EHOLHI�WKURXJK�VXFK�SUDFWLFHV�

Nancy Evans, :KHDWRQ�&ROOHJHIntroduction (5 mins.)

1. Kenneth Yu, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&KLFDJR� Durkheim, Weber, and Some Problems in the Recent Turn toward the Individual in Ancient Greek Religion (20 mins.)

2. Robyn Walsh, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�0LDPL Methodological Challenges of Studying Personal Experience in Early Christianity (20 mins.)

3. Debby Sneed, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DOLIRUQLD��/RV�$QJHOHV Cybele and Attis in Domestic Cult at Olynthos: Evidence for Flexibility in Household Ritual (20 mins.)

4. Jessica Lamont, 7KH�-RKQV�+RSNLQV�8QLYHUVLW\ Incubation and Individual Experience in Sanctuaries of Asklepios (20 mins.)

5. Steven Muir, &RQFRUGLD�8QLYHUVLW\�RI�$OEHUWD

Vicarious Religious Healing in the Greco-Roman World (20 mins.)

General discussion (30 mins.)

8:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. Bayside CSession #9Inscriptions and Literary SourcesOrganized by the American Society of Greek and Latin Epigraphy

Paul A. Iversen, &DVH�:HVWHUQ�5HVHUYH�8QLYHUVLW\, Organizer

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Paul A. Iversen, &DVH�:HVWHUQ�5HVHUYH�8QLYHUVLW\Introduction (10 mins.)

1. Cameron Pearson, 7KH�*UDGXDWH�&HQWHU� &LW\�8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1HZ�<RUN Herodotus 1.64.3 and Alkmeonides’ Dedications ,* I^3 597 and 1469: A Case for Alkmaionid Exile (20 mins.)

2. Elizabeth Kosmetatou, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�,OOLQRLV�6SULQJ¿HOG

An Unlikely Muse: Temple Inventories, Their Readers, and Literary Epigram (20 mins.)3. Jelle Stoop, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�6\GQH\

2SLQLRQV�DERXW�+RQRUL¿F�6WDWXHV��7KH�&DVH�RI�'LRQ�YV��5KRGLDQV�����PLQV��4. Jeremy LaBuff, 1RUWKHUQ�$UL]RQD�8QLYHUVLW\

Pride of Place: Remembering Herodotos in Late Hellenistic Halikarnassos (20 mins.)5. Patricia A. Butz, 7KH�6DYDQQDK�&ROOHJH�RI�$UW�DQG�'HVLJQ

The Pharos of Alexandria: At the Interface between Non-Extant Inscription and Other Written Evidence (20 mins.)

General discussion (40 mins.)

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SECOND SESSION FOR THE READING OF PAPERS10:45 a.m. - 12:45 p.m. Bayside CSession #10The Performance of Greek Poetry

Egbert Bakker, <DOH�8QLYHUVLW\, Presider

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1. Annette Teffeteller, &RQFRUGLD�8QLYHUVLW\ The Songs of the Deliades: Multilingualism in Ritual Contexts (20 mins.)

2. Claas Lattmann, (PRU\�8QLYHUVLW\�.LHO�8QLYHUVLW\��&$8� Between Athens and Delphi: The Pragmatics of the Delphic Hymns (20 mins.)

3. Jonathan Ready, ,QGLDQD�8QLYHUVLW\ On the “Scribe as Performer” and the Homeric Text (20 mins.)

4. Lawrence Kowerski, +XQWHU�&ROOHJH��&LW\�8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1HZ�<RUN Composing Archaic Greek Elegy in the Roman Empire: 7KHRJQLGHD 1-18 (20 mins.)

10:45 a.m. - 12:45 p.m. Grand Chenier Session #11Representation of Time in the Hellenistic and Roman World

Robert Germany, +DYHUIRUG�&ROOHJH, Organizer

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Robert Germany, +DYHUIRUG�&ROOHJHIntroduction (5 mins.)

1. Alexander Jones, ,QVWLWXWH�IRU�WKH�6WXG\�RI�WKH�$QFLHQW�:RUOG, 1HZ�<RUN�8QLYHUVLW\ The Greco-Roman Sundial as Virtuoso Greek Mathematics (25 mins.)

2. Kassandra Jackson, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&KLFDJR

A Doctor on the Clock: The Roles of Clocks and Hours in Galen’s Medical Treatises (25 mins.)3. Barbara Sattler, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�6W��$QGUHZV

&KURQRV�DV�$OO�HQFRPSDVVLQJ�±�3ODWR¶V�8QL¿FDWLRQ�RI�7LPH�����PLQV��4. Robert Germany, +DYHUIRUG�&ROOHJH

The Unity of Time in Plautus’ &DSWLYL (25 mins.)

General discussion (15 mins.)

10:45 a.m. - 12:45 p.m. BorgneSession #12Looking Both Ways: Dialogic Receptions in Practice

Katherine Wasdin, 7KH�*HRUJH�:DVKLQJWRQ�8QLYHUVLW\ and Caroline Stark, +RZDUG�8QLYHUVLW\, Organizers

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Caroline Stark, +RZDUG�8QLYHUVLW\ Introduction (10 mins.)

n e W o r l e a n S , l o u i S i a n a J a n u a ry 8 - 11 , 2 0 1 5

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1. John F. Miller, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�9LUJLQLD

From Botticelli to Ovid’s )ORUD�(20 mins.)2. Genevieve Gessert, +RRG�&ROOHJH

$SSURSULDWLRQ�DQG�5HÀHFWLRQ��7KH�$XJXVWDQ�$JH�LQ�WKH�/LJKW�RI�,WDOLDQ�)DVFLVP�����PLQV��3. Corinne O. Pache, 7ULQLW\ 8QLYHUVLW\�

Beasting It – Homeric Similes on the Bayou (20 mins.)4. Martin Winkler, *HRUJH�0DVRQ 8QLYHUVLW\�

Cinemetamorphosis: Toward a Cinematic Theory of Classical Narrative (20 mins.)

Katherine Wasdin, 7KH�*HRUJH�:DVKLQJWRQ�8QLYHUVLW\ Respondent (10 mins.)

General discussion (20 mins.)

10:45 a.m. - 12:45 p.m. Grand Ballroom ESession #13The Impact of Moses Finley

Richard Talbert, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1RUWK�&DUROLQD�DW�&KDSHO�+LOO, Organizer

7KH������FHQWHQDU\�RI��6LU��0RVHV�)LQOH\¶V�ELUWK�KDV�UH�HQHUJL]HG�UHVHDUFK�LQWR�KLV�H[WUDRUGLQDU\�FDUHHU�DQG�LQYROYHPHQWV��DV�ZHOO�DV�VWLPXODWLQJ�IUHVK�HYDOXDWLRQ�RI�KLV�FRQWURYHUVLDO�DSSURDFKHV�DQG�ODVWLQJ�LPSDFW�DV�DQ�DQFLHQW�KLVWRULDQ�� ,Q�WKLV�VHVVLRQ�KH�DSSHDUV�LQ�KLV�RZQ�GLVWLQFWLYH�YRLFH�RQO\�PRQWKV�EHIRUH�KLV�GHDWK���������EHLQJ�LQWHUYLHZHG�DERXW�DOO�WKHVH�DVSHFWV�E\�.HLWK�+RSNLQV�� )ROORZLQJ�WKH�VFUHHQLQJ�RI�WKLV�XQLTXH�YLGHR��)UHG�1DLGHQ�UHÀHFWV�RQ�NH\�GLPHQVLRQV�RI�)LQOH\¶V�OLIH�DQG�DFWLYLWLHV�LQ�1HZ�<RUN�WKURXJK�WKH�PLG�����V��DQG�'RURWK\�7KRPSVRQ�GRHV�WKH�VDPH�IRU�WKH�VXEVHTXHQW�SHULRG�ZKHQ�KH�ZDV�HVWDEOLVKHG�LQ�&DPEULGJH��(QJODQG�

Richard Talbert, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1RUWK�&DUROLQD�DW�&KDSHO�+LOOIntroduction (10 mins.)

1. Keith Hopkins Interviews Sir Moses Finley (video, 35 mins.)2. Fred Naiden, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1RUWK�&DUROLQD�DW�&KDSHO�+LOO

Finley in America (20 mins.)3. Dorothy Thompson, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DPEULGJH

Finley in Britain (20 mins.)

General discussion (35 mins.)

10:45 a.m. - 12:45 p.m. Bayside BSession #14AristotleOrganized by the Society for Ancient Greek Philosophy

Kirk Sanders, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�,OOLQRLV, Organizer

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1. Jerry Green, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�7H[DV�DW�$XVWLQ

6HOI�/RYH�DQG�6HOI�6XI¿FLHQF\�LQ�WKH�$ULVWRWHOLDQ�(WKLFV�����PLQV��2. Jay Elliott, %DUG�&ROOHJH

Virtue and External Goods in Aristotle (25 mins.)3. John Thorp, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�:HVWHUQ�2QWDULR

Aristotle and the Physiology of Sense Organs (25 mins.)

General discussion (40 mins.)

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10:45 a.m. - 12:45 p.m. CornetSession #15Medieval Latin PoetryOrganized by the Medieval Latin Studies Group

Bret Mulligan, +DYHUIRUG�&ROOHJH, Organizer

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VWUXFWLRQ�RI�LGHQWLW\�²WKH�SDQHOLVWV�LOOXPLQDWH�IRXU�LQVWDQFHV�RI�FODVVLFDO�UHFHSWLRQ�

1. Joshua J. Hartman, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�:DVKLQJWRQ

,SVH�VHQDWRUXP�PHPLQLW�FODULVVLPXV�RUGR: Memory, Identity, and Spatial Polemic in Prudentius’ &RQWUD�6\PPDFKXP (20 mins.)

2. Robert Babcock, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1RUWK�&DUROLQD�DW�&KDSHO�+LOO�and Francis Newton, 'XNH�8QLYHUVLW\ Tibullus and Charlemagne: A Mini-Cycle of Poems from the King’s Court Modeled upon the &RUSXV�7LEXOOLDQXP (20 mins.)

3. Eb Joseph Daniels, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�7RURQWR

Navigating the Gaze in the Paderborn Epic (20 mins.)4. Frank Coulson, 7KH�2KLR�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\�

Literary Criticism in the Vulgate Commentary on Ovid’s 0HWDPRUSKRVHV (20 mins.)

General discussion (40 mins.)

10:45 a.m. - 12:45 p.m. Rhythms IIISession #16Breastfeeding and Wet-Nursing in AntiquityOrganized by the Women’s Classical CaucusC. W. Marshall, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�%ULWLVK�&ROXPELD, Organizer

1XUVLQJ�DQG�EUHDVWIHHGLQJ�DUH�WLHG�WR�LVVXHV�RI�PRWKHUKRRG�PRUH�WLJKWO\�WRGD\�WKDQ�LQ�DQWLTXLW\��DQG�DQ�H[DPLQDWLRQ�RI�DQFLHQW QXUVLQJ�LQIRUPV�RWKHU�GLVFXVVLRQV�RI�WKH�SODFH�RI�ZRPHQ�LQ�*UHHFH�DQG�5RPH��7KHVH�IRXU�SDSHUV�H[SORUH�OLWHUDU\�DQG�KLVWRULFDO�DW-WHVWDWLRQV�RI�WKHVH�SUDFWLFHV��RIIHULQJ�QHZ�XQGHUVWDQGLQJV�RI�DQ�HYHU\GD\�KXPDQ�DFWLYLW\�WKDW�LV�XQGHU�examined in VFKRODUVKLS��:LWK�H[DPSOHV�IURP�$WKHQLDQ�WUDJHG\��3WROHPDLF�(J\SW��5RPH��DQG�WKH�DPSKLWKHDWUH�DW�&DUWKDJH��WKH�GLDFKURQLF�SURJUHVVLRQ�ZLOO�SURYLGH�VQDSVKRWV�RI�D�VKLIWLQJ�VWRU\�WKDW�LV�RQO\�EHJLQQLQJ�WR�EH WROG.

1. Catalina Popescu, 7H[DV�7HFK�8QLYHUVLW\ Clytemnestra’s Breast as a Receptacle of Memory in Aeschylus’ /LEDWLRQ�%HDUHUV�(20 mins.)

2. Maryline Parca, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�6DQ�'LHJR

The Wet-Nurses of Ptolemaic and Roman Egypt (20 mins.)3. Tara Mulder, %URZQ�8QLYHUVLW\

Adult Breastfeeding in Ancient Rome (20 mins.)4. Stamatia Dova, +HOOHQLF�&ROOHJH

Lactation Cessation and the Realities of Martyrdom in the Passion of Saint Perpetua (20 mins.)

General discussion (40 mins.)

10:45 a.m. - 12:45 p.m. Grand CouteauSession #17The Matter of ThebesOrganized by the American Classical League

Mary C. English, 0RQWFODLU�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\ and Anne Mahoney, 7XIWV�8QLYHUVLW\, Organizers

$WKHQLDQ�WUDJHG\�FDVWV�7KHEHV�DV�DQ�DQWL�$WKHQV��ZKHUH�SHUYHUWHG�UHODWLRQVKLSV�ZLWKLQ�WKH�IDPLO\�SXW�WKH�HQWLUH�SROLV�DW�ULVN�� 2HGLSXV�NLOOV�KLV�IDWKHU��(WHRFOHV�DQG�3RO\QHLFHV�NLOO�HDFK�RWKHU��+HUDFOHV�NLOOV�KLV�VRQV��DQG�VR�RQ�� 2XWVLGH�$WKHQV��RU�RXWVLGH�WUDJHG\��7KHEHV�PD\�EH�WKH�WRSV\�WXUY\�ZRQGHUODQG�RI�3ODXWXV¶V�Amphitruo��PD\�EH�JUDIWHG�LQWR�,WKDFD�RQ�WKH�EDFN�RI�2G\VVHXV¶V�VRQ��RU�PD\�EHFRPH�D�V\PERO�RI�DOO�WKDW�FDQ�JR�ZURQJ�LQ�D�IDPLO\�� :H�H[SORUH�WKH�PHDQLQJV�RI�7KHEHV�LQ�WUDJHG\��FRPHG\��HSLF��DQG�PRGHUQ�¿FWLRQ�

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1. Patrick Lambdin, ,QGHSHQGHQW�6FKRODU Eteocles and the Sound of Silence (20 mins.)

2. Dustin Dixon, %RVWRQ�8QLYHUVLW\ The Comic and the Tragic Birth of Heracles (20 mins.)

3. Ella Haselswerdt, 3ULQFHWRQ�8QLYHUVLW\ A Theban Odyssey: Family, Identity, and Finitude in the Epic Cycle (20 mins.)

4. Michele Valerie Ronnick, :D\QH�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\ A Look at Thebes’s Place in American Fiction (1962-2010) (20 mins.)

General discussion (20 mins.)

THIRD SESSION FOR THE READING OF PAPERS1:45 p.m. - 4:45 p.m. Rhythms IIISession #18Hellenistic and Neoteric Intertexts

Richard F. Thomas, +DUYDUG�8QLYHUVLW\, Presider

+HOOHQLVWLF�DQG�1HRWHULF�3RHWU\�KDYH�ORQJ�EHHQ�XQGHUVWRRG�DV�K\EULG�DQG�FRPSOLFDWHG�IRUPV�RI�SRHWU\�WKDW�DUH�RQ�WKH�RQH�KDQG�RE-

VHVVHG�ZLWK�WKH�SRHWU\�RI�WKH�SDVW�DQG�RQ�WKH�RWKHU�LQFUHGLEO\�LQYHQWLYH�DQG�IUHH�ZKHHOLQJ�� 7KH�VL[�SUHVHQWDWLRQV�LQ�WKLV�VHFWLRQ�ORRN�DW�WKH�FRPSOLFDWHG�DUUD\�RI�FXOWXUDO�DQG�OLWHUDU\�LQWHUWH[WV�WKDW�PDGH�WKHVH�YLEUDQW�SHULRGV�RI�SRHWLF�SURGXFWLRQ�VR�LQWHUHVWLQJ�

1. Vanessa Cazzato, 5DGERXG�8QLYHUVLW\�1LMPHJHQ

Hipponax’ Poetic Initiation and Herodas’ ‘Dream’ (20 mins.)2. Leanna Boychenko, :KLWPDQ�&ROOHJH

Prenatal Power in Callimachus’ +\PQ�WR�'HORV and the Mendes Stela (20 mins.)3. Matthew Chaldekas, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�6RXWKHUQ�&DOLIRUQLD

7KH�*RDWKHUG�DQG�WKH�:LQQRZLQJ�6KRYHO��,QWHUSUHWDWLRQ�DQG�6LJQL¿FDWLRQ�LQ�7KHRFULWXV¶�6HYHQWK�,G\OO (20 mins.)4. Nita Krevans, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�0LQQHVRWD

Theocritus and Fan Fiction��,G\OOV 8 and 9 (20 mins.)5. Charles Campbell, 0LDPL�8QLYHUVLW\�

Salty Sequences in Catullus and Meleager (20 mins.)6. Aaron Kachuck, 3ULQFHWRQ�8QLYHUVLW\

Vergil’s 1RPLQD�)OH[D: Tityrus, Amaryllis, Meliboeus (20 mins.)

1:45 p.m. - 4:45 p.m. Bayside BSession #19Philosophical Poetics

David Sider, 1HZ�<RUN�8QLYHUVLW\, Presider

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1. Samuel Flores, .DODPD]RR�&ROOHJH Philosophy as a Reinterpretation of Poetry in Plato’s 5HSXEOLF (20 mins.)

2. Katherine Lu Hsu, %URRNO\Q�&ROOHJH��7KH�&LW\�8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1HZ�<RUN Between Hesiod and the Sophists: Prodicus’ Heracles at the Crossroads (20 mins.)

3. James Andrews, 2KLR�8QLYHUVLW\ Plato’s 3URWDJRUDV as a Comedy of Pleasure (20 mins.)

4. Clifford Robinson, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�WKH�6FLHQFHV�LQ�3KLODGHOSKLD

“Since We Are Two Alone:” Profaning the SDWULRV�QRPRV in Plato’s 0HQH[HQXV (20 mins.)5. Phillip Horky, 'XUKDP�8QLYHUVLW\

Where Is the Good? The Place of Agathon in the 6\PSRVLXP (20 mins.)

S o c i e t y f o r c l a S S i c a l S t u d i e S � a n n u a l m e e t i n g

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6. Kate Meng Brassel, &ROXPELD�8QLYHUVLW\ Persius, 6DWLUHV�4 and 5: Pedagogy and the Failure of Philosophy (20 mins.)

1:45 p.m. - 4:45 p.m. Grand CouteauSession #20Religion, Ritual, and Identity

James Rives, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1RUWK�&DUROLQD�DW�&KDSHO�+LOO, Presider

$IWHU�\HDUV�RI�D�SHUKDSV�REVHVVLYH�IRFXV�RQ�WKH�UHOLJLRQ�RI�SROLV��VFKRODUV�KDYH�EHJXQ�RQFH�DJDLQ�WR�ORRN�DW�WKH�UROH�RI�WKH�LQGLYLGXDO�LQ�*UHHN�DQG�5RPDQ�UHOLJLRXV�OLIH�DQG�LQ�GLIIHUHQW�PRGHOV�RI�VRFLDO�LQWHUDFWLRQ�LQ�UHOLJLRXV�FXOW�� 7KHVH�¿YH�SDSHUV�IRFXV�LQ�YHU\�GLIIHUHQW�ZD\V�RQ�WKH�SULYDWH�DQG�DVVRFLDWLYH�UROHV�WKDW�UHOLJLRXV�DQG�PDJLFDO�DFWLYLWLHV�SOD\HG�LQ�WKH�OLYHV�RI�WKH�*UHHNV�DQG�5RPDQV�

1. Paul Iversen, &DVH�:HVWHUQ�5HVHUYH�8QLYHUVLW\ The Heloreia Festival at Halaisa Archonideia, Tauromenion, and Syracuse (20 mins.)

2. Andreas Bendlin, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�7RURQWR

Curses, Class, and Gender: Psychological and Demographic Aspects of Roman “Magic” (20 mins.)3. Zsuzsanna Varhelyi, %RVWRQ�8QLYHUVLW\

A New Paradigm for Roman Imperial Priesthoods? Reconsidering the Religious Elements in Associative Life in Early Imperial Italy (20 mins.)

4. Lora Holland, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1RUWK�&DUROLQD�DW�$VKHYLOOH A New Latin Inscription from Cetamura del Chianti: Private Ritual at a Sacred Well (20 mins.)

5. Roshan Abraham, :DVKLQJWRQ�8QLYHUVLW\�LQ�6DLQW�/RXLV 3KLORVWUDWXV��3URJQǀVLV��DQG�WKH�$OWHUQDWLYHV�WR�'LYLQDWLRQ�����PLQV��

1:45 p.m. - 4:45 p.m. Bayside CSession #21Empire and Ideology in the Roman World

Emma Dench, +DUYDUG�8QLYHUVLW\, Presider

,Q�UHFHQW�\HDUV��WKH�EHOLHI�V\VWHPV�WKDW�XSKHOG�5RPDQ�PRQDUFK\�DQG�HPSLUH�KDYH�EHHQ�WKH�IRFXV�RI�LQFUHDVLQJ�VFKRODUO\�DWWHQWLRQ�� 7KHVH�VL[�SDSHUV�H[SORUH�WKH�HWKLFV�DQG�LGHDOV�RI�PRQDUFK\�DQG�HPSLUH�DV�ZHOO�DV�WKH�PXOWLSOH�DJHQFLHV�LQYROYHG�LQ�SURPRWLQJ�DQG�FRPPXQLFDWLQJ

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1. Lekha Shupeck, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1RUWK�&DUROLQD�DW�&KDSHO�+LOO Roman Senatorial Reactions to the Extortion and Abuse of Provincials and Foreigners before 149 B.C.E. (20 mins.)

2. Larisa Masri, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&KLFDJR

Rome and the “Immortal Gods”: An Ideology for Empire (20 mins.)3. Amy Russell, 'XUKDP�8QLYHUVLW\

3D[, the Senate, and Augustus in 13 BCE: A New Look at the $UD�3DFLV�$XJXVWDH (20 mins.)4. Thomas Keith, /R\ROD�8QLYHUVLW\�&KLFDJR

Crinagoras of Mytilene and the Construction of Empire in Greek Epigrams of the Augustan Period (20 mins.)5. David Schwei, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&LQFLQQDWL

Who Controls the Imperial Mint at Rome? An Epigraphic Perspective on Bureaucrats (20 mins.)6. Cynthia Bannon, ,QGLDQD�8QLYHUVLW\

Regulating and ‘Romanizing’ the Environment (20 mins.)

1:45 p.m. - 4:45 p.m. CornetSession #22Voice and Sound in Classical Greece

Sarah Nooter, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&KLFDJR, Organizer

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1. Timothy Power, 5XWJHUV��7KH�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1HZ�-HUVH\ Choral Whispers (20 mins.)

2. Pauline A. LeVen, <DOH�8QLYHUVLW\ Mythologies of the Voice: Plato’s Cicadas and the Nature of the Voice (20 mins.)

3. Sarah Nooter, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&KLFDJR

Choral Ventriloquism in Aeschylus’ $JDPHPQRQ (20 mins.)4. Emily Allen-Hornblower, 5XWJHUV��7KH�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1HZ�-HUVH\�

Acoustic Ironies in Euripides’ 7URMDQ�:RPHQ (20 mins.)5. Owen Goslin, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1RUWK�&DUROLQD�DW�&KDSHO�+LOO

“The Deep-Voiced Lord of Thunder”: Thunder and the Poetic Voice in Pindar (20 mins.)

General discussion (30 mins.)

1:45 p.m. - 4:45 p.m. BorgneSession #23Cognitive Classics: New Theoretical Models for Approaching the Ancient World

Peter Meineck, 1HZ�<RUN�8QLYHUVLW\��Organizer

1. William Short, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�7H[DV�DW�6DQ�$QWRQLR

Why a Mind Is Necessary for Classical Studies (30 mins.)2. Garrett Fagan,�7KH�3HQQV\OYDQLD�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\

Crowds in the Corcyraean Stasis (30 mins.)3. Jacob Mackey, 4XHHQV�&ROOHJH��&LW\�8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1HZ�<RUN

The Cognitive Structure of Roman Ritual Practice (30 mins.)4. Jennifer Devereaux, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�6RXWKHUQ�&DOLIRUQLD

Embodied Historiography: Models for Reasoning in Tacitus’ Annals (30 mins.)5. Peter Meineck, 1HZ�<RUN�8QLYHUVLW\

The Affective Sciences and Greek Drama (30 mins.)

Ineke Sluiter, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�/HLGHQRespondent (5 mins.)

General discussion (25 mins.)

1:45 p.m. - 4:45 p.m. Grand Ballroom DSession #24Writing outside the Box: Communicating Classical Studies to Wider AudiencesOrganized by the Outreach Committee

Judith P. Hallett, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�0DU\ODQG, Organizer

)LYH�SDQHOLVWV�ZKR�ZULWH�DERXW�FODVVLFDO�VWXGLHV�LQ�GLIIHUHQW�JHQUHV��¿FWLRQ��SRHWU\��KLVWRU\��PHPRLU��UHYLHZV��EORJV��DQG�YHQXHV��SRSX-

ODU�SUHVVHV��MRXUQDOV�DLPHG�DW�EURDG�DXGLHQFHV��WKH�LQWHUQHW��ZLOO�VSHDN�DERXW�WKHLU�ZRUN��$OO�KDYH�FODVVLFDO�WUDLQLQJ�RI�GLIIHUHQW�NLQGV��DQG�WHDFK�DW�TXLWH�GLIIHUHQW�NLQGV�RI�LQVWLWXWLRQV��$OO�VHHN�WR�DWWUDFW�UHDGHUV�ZKR�DUH�QRW�SURIHVVLRQDO�FODVVLFDO�VFKRODUV��7KH\�ZLOO�GLVFXVV�KRZ�DQG�ZK\�WKH\�KDYH�FKRVHQ�WKLV�SDWK��UHÀHFWLQJ�RQ�WKHLU�LQWHOOHFWXDO�DQG�SURIHVVLRQDO�FKDOOHQJHV�DV�ZHOO�DV�WKHLU�VXFFHVVHV��RIIHULQJ�DGYLFH�WR�RWKHUV�ZKR�PLJKW�FRQVLGHU�IROORZLQJ�WKHLU�LPSRUWDQW�PRGHO�

1. Carol Gilligan, 1HZ�<RUN�8QLYHUVLW\ Classics in a Different Voice (20 mins.) Questions (10 mins.)

2. James Romm, %DUG�&ROOHJH Modern Ancient History (20 mins.) Questions (10 mins.)

3. Jane Alison, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�9LUJLQLD

The Art of Love/The Love of Art (20 mins.) Questions (10 mins.)

S o c i e t y f o r c l a S S i c a l S t u d i e S � a n n u a l m e e t i n g

39

4. Carl Phillips, :DVKLQJWRQ�8QLYHUVLW\�LQ�6DLQW�/RXLV Classics and the 21st-Century Poem (20 mins.) Questions (10 mins.)

5. Emily Wilson, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�3HQQV\OYDQLD

Audiences Beyond the Box: Presenting Classics to Orchestra and Balcony (20 mins.) Questions (10 mins.)

6. Mary-Kay Gamel, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DOLIRUQLD��6DQWD�&UX] Response (10 mins.)

General discussion (20 mins.)

1:45 p.m. - 4:45 p.m. New Orleans Marriott, Balcony KSession #25Ancient Literacy Reprised (Seminar – Advance Registration Required)

William Johnson, 'XNH�8QLYHUVLW\, and Stephanie Frampton, 0DVVDFKXVHWWV�,QVWLWXWH�RI�7HFKQRORJ\, Organizers

�����PDUNV�WKH�WZHQW\�¿IWK�DQQLYHUVDU\�RI�:LOOLDP�+DUULV¶V�Ancient Literacy,�D�ZDWHUVKHG�ERRN�WKDW�KHOSHG�WR�VHW�WKH�JURXQGZRUN�IRU�D�ULVLQJ�ZDYH�RI�VFKRODUO\�LQWHUHVW�LQ�UHDGLQJ�DQG�ZULWLQJ�LQ�DQFLHQW�*UHHFH�DQG�5RPH��7KLV�FROOHFWLRQ�RI�QHZ�ZRUN�E\�VFKRODUV�DFURVV�WKH�&ODVVLFV�UHYLVLWV�DQG�LQWHUURJDWHV�VRPH�RI�+DUULV¶V�RULJLQDO�WKHPHV��LQ�FRQYHUVDWLRQ�ZLWK�+DUULV�KLPVHOI��,Q�WKLV�HQFRXQWHU�ZH�DLP�FROOHFWLYHO\�WR�UHYLHZ�WKH�VWDWH�RI�DQFLHQW�OLWHUDF\�VWXGLHV�DQG�WR�PRGHO�QHZ�SRVVLELOLWLHV�IRU�HQJDJHPHQW�ZLWK�WKH�HYLGHQFH�DQG�WKH�TXHVWLRQV�SRVHG�E\�Ancient Literacy�DFURVV�GLVFLSOLQHV�

Stephanie Frampton, 0DVVDFKXVHWWV�,QVWLWXWH�RI�7HFKQRORJ\Introduction (10 mins.)

1. Gregory Woolf, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�6W��$QGUHZV Ancient Illiteracy (10 mins.)

2. Raffaella Cribiore, 1HZ�<RUN�8QLYHUVLW\ A Further Look at Literacy and Education in Greek and Roman Egypt (10 mins.)

3. Sean Gurd, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�0LVVRXUL Incompletion, Revision, and the Ethics of Reading: Cicero on Appropriate Action (10 mins.)

William Harris, &ROXPELD�8QLYHUVLW\Respondent (20 mins.)

General discussion (40 mins.)

1:45 p.m. - 4:45 p.m. Grand Ballroom ESession #26The Other Side of Victory: War Losses in the Ancient World

Jessica H. Clark, )ORULGD�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\, and Brian Turner, 3RUWODQG�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\, Organizers

7KLV�SDQHO�FRQVLGHUV�KRZ�YDULRXV�DQFLHQW�0HGLWHUUDQHDQ�VRFLHWLHV�DGGUHVVHG�±�RU�IDLOHG�WR�DGGUHVV�±�WKH�XQLYHUVDO�SUREOHP�RI�IDLOXUH�DQG�ORVV�LQ�ZDU��7KH�SDQHOLVWV�H[DPLQH�QRW�RQO\�KRZ�OHDGHUV�PDQDJHG�WKH�SROLWLFDO�FRQVHTXHQFHV�RI�PLOLWDU\�GHIHDWV��EXW�DOVR�WKH�FKDO-OHQJHV�IDFLQJ�GHIHDWHG�VROGLHUV�DQG�FLYLOLDQV��ZKR�LQ�PDQ\�FDVHV�ZHUH�OHIW�WR�QHJRWLDWH�WKH�PHDQLQJ�RI�GHIHDW�IRU�WKHPVHOYHV�DQG�IRU�WKHLU�VRFLHWLHV���)RFXVLQJ�RQ�WKH�FRQQHFWLRQV�EHWZHHQ�ZDU�DQG�VRFLHW\��H[SHULHQFH�DQG�UHSUHVHQWDWLRQ��KLVWRU\�DQG�PHPRU\��WKH�SDSHUV�FRQWULEXWH�WR�RXU�JURZLQJ�DSSUHFLDWLRQ�RI�WKH�VLJQL¿FDQFH�RI�ZDU�ORVVHV�ERWK�ZLWKLQ�DQG�EH\RQG�WKH�VWXG\�RI�DQFLHQW�ZDUIDUH�

1. Max L. Goldman, 9DQGHUELOW�8QLYHUVLW\ Demosthenes (SLWDSKLRV (60), Chaeronea and the Rhetoric of Defeat (15 mins.)

2. John Hyland, &KULVWRSKHU�1HZSRUW�8QLYHUVLW\ Achaemenid Soldiers, Alexander’s Conquest, and the Experience of Defeat (15 mins.)

3. Paul Johstono, 7KH�&LWDGHO “No Strength to Stand”: Defeat at Panion, the Macedonian Class, and Ptolemaic Decline (15 mins.)

4. Amy Richlin, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DOLIRUQLD��/RV�$QJHOHV The Sale of Captives on the Comic Stage: Communal Memory in the 200s BC (15 mins.)

n e W o r l e a n S , l o u i S i a n a J a n u a ry 8 - 11 , 2 0 1 5

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5. Craig Caldwell, $SSDODFKLDQ�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\ Remembering the ‘Greatest Shame’: Roman, Persian, and Christian Responses to the Emperor Valerian as Prisoner of War (15 mins.)

Nathan Rosenstein, 7KH�2KLR�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\�Respondent (15 mins.)

General discussion (30 mins.)

1:45 p.m. - 4:45 p.m. Grand ChenierSession #27HumoeroticaOrganized by the Lambda Classical Caucus

Ruby Blondell and Kathryn Topper, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�:DVKLQJWRQ, Organizers

+XPRU�DQG�VH[�ZHUH�WLJKWO\�LQWHUWZLQHG�LQ�WKH�DQFLHQW�ZRUOG��DV�WKH\�DUH�WRGD\��DQG�WKLV�SDQHO�H[DPLQHV�VRPH�RI�WKH�PDQ\�PDQLIHV-WDWLRQV�RI�WKHLU�UHODWLRQVKLS�LQ�WKH�OLWHUDU\��YLVXDO��DQG�DUFKLWHFWXUDO�UHFRUGV�RI�*UHHFH�DQG�5RPH��)RFXVLQJ�RQ�HYLGHQFH�IURP�YDULRXV�JHQUHV�DQG�PHGLD��SDQHOLVWV�FRQVLGHU�LVVXHV�UDQJLQJ�IURP�WKH�SHUIRUPDWLYH�IXQFWLRQ�RI�VH[XDO�KXPRU�WR�WKH�XVHV��DQG�SHULOV��RI�PRGHUQ�WKHRU\�LQ�XQGHUVWDQGLQJ�DQFLHQW�VH[�DQG�ODXJKWHU�

Kathryn Topper, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�:DVKLQJWRQ, OrganizerIntroduction (5 mins.)

1. Marina Haworth, 1RUWK�+HQQHSLQ�&RPPXQLW\�&ROOHJH 7KH�:RO¿VK�/RYHU��7KH�'RJ�DV�D�&RPLF�0HWDSKRU�LQ�+RPRHURWLF�6\PSRVLXP�3RWWHU\�����PLQV��

2. Deborah Kamen, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�:DVKLQJWRQ

The Consequences of Laughter in Aeschines’ $JDLQVW�7LPDUFKRV�(20 mins.)3. David Fredrick, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�$UNDQVDV

Or Are You Just Happy to See Me? Hermaphrodites, Invagination, and Kinaesthetic Humor in Pompeian Houses (20 mins.)4. Eugene O’Connor, 7KH�2KLR�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\�

Who Loves You, Baby? Martial as Priapic Seducer in the (SLJUDPV (20 mins.)5. Sandra Boehringer, 8QLYHUVLWp�GH�6WUDVERXUJ

Not a Freak but a Jack-in-the-Box: Philaenis in Martial, (SLJUDP 7.67 (20 mins.)

Ruby Blondell, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�:DVKLQJWRQRespondent (5 mins.)

General discussion (15 mins.)

5:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m. Grand Ballroom DPresidential PanelAncient Perspectives on the Value of Literature: Utilitarian versus Aesthetic

Kathryn Gutzwiller, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&LQFLQQDWL, Presiding

1. Andrew Ford, 3ULQFHWRQ�8QLYHUVLW\ Debates about the Value of Literature from Homer to Aristotle (20 mins.)

2. Stephen Halliwell, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�6W��$QGUHZV Literature and the Irreducible Problem of Value (20 mins.)

3. James I. Porter, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DOLIRUQLD��,UYLQH The Utility of the Aesthetic and the Aesthetics of Life (20 mins.)

4. Joy Connolly, 1HZ�<RUN�8QLYHUVLW\ Reading like a Roman Rhetorician (20 mins.)

S o c i e t y f o r c l a S S i c a l S t u d i e S � a n n u a l m e e t i n g

41

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45

Society for Classical Studies

Acknowledgment of Annual Giving Contributions

2013-2014

FOUNDED IN 1 8 6 9 A S THE AMER ICAN PH I LOLOG ICAL AS SOC IAT ION

FOUNDED IN 1869 AS THE AMERICAN PHILOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION

FOUNDED IN 1869 AS THE AMERICAN PHILOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION

46

Society for Classical StudiesThe Society for Classical Studies salutes its members and friends who made contributions to the Annual Giving Campaign during the last ¿VFDO�\HDU��-XO\������-XQH���������'RQRUV�ZKR�PDGH�JLIWV�DIWHU�-XQH�ZLOO�EH�UHFRJQL]HG�LQ�WKH������$QQXDO�0HHWLQJ�3URJUDP.

0HPEHUV�UHVSRQGHG�ZLWK�JHQHURVLW\�WR�WKH�6RFLHW\¶V�DQQXDO�JLYLQJ�DSSHDOV�GXULQJ�WKH�¿VFDO�\HDU�WKDW�HQGHG�RQ�-XQH������������)RXU�KXQGUHG�¿YH�������GRQRUV��UHSUHVHQWLQJ�RYHU�����RI�DOO�LQGLYLGXDO�PHPEHUV��FRQWULEXWHG����������PHHWLQJ�WKH�'HYHORSPHQW�&RPPLWWHH¶V�JRDO�IRU�participation by members and exceeding its goal of raising $60,000 during the year. The Committee had chosen these goals because they represented the levels of giving enjoyed by the Society before the beginning of the Gateway Campaign for Classics in 2005. We are very grateful that members are supporting Annual Giving at this rate and hope that eventually a third of the membership will do so as was the case with the Gateway Campaign between 2006 and 2012.

Contributions to the Annual Giving Campaign are critical to our yearly operations. The donations cover costs which cannot be met by membership fees alone and are applied to the annual meeting and placement service, and, when designated by donors, programs such DV�WKH�$PHULFDQ�2I¿FH�RI�O¶$QQpH�SKLORORJLTXH and the TLL Fellowship. Annual Giving donations also provide more resources for the ambitious goals established during our recent strategic planning process, including our efforts to advocate for classics and all the students DQG�WHDFKHUV�LQ�WKH�¿HOG�DQG�WR�VKDUH�RXU�HQWKXVLDVP�IRU�RXU�GLVFLSOLQH���:H�XUJH�\RX�WR�MRLQ�ODVW�\HDU¶V�GRQRUV�E\�UHWXUQLQJ�\RXU�)DOO�2014 annual giving appeal response card or by making a contribution through our secure web site: https://app.etapestry.com/hosted/AmericanPhilologicalAssociat/APAGiving.html. Donation and pledge cards are available at the Society’s display table in the registration area.

The members listed below made contributions to the Society in one or more of the following ways: (1) online at the URL above, (2) in response to the Fall 2013 annual giving appeal, (3) along with payment of dues for 2014, (4) along with payment of registration fees for the 2014 annual meeting, or (5) in response to the Spring 2014 appeal. The Fall and Spring annual giving appeals continued our recent practice of permitting members making donations of $250 or more to use their gifts to honor a revered teacher. In addition, because the Committee ZDQWHG�WR�HQFRXUDJH�GRQDWLRQV�IURP�PHPEHUV�ZKR�KDG�QHYHU�PDGH�RQH�EHIRUH��¿UVW�WLPH�GRQRUV�ZHUH�DOVR�DEOH�WR�KRQRU�D�WHDFKHU�SURYLGHG�that they made a gift of $30 or more. Please note that not all qualifying donors chose to make such a designation.

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Anonymous (42)Anonymous LQ�KRQRU�RI�'DYLG�'��0XOUR\Karen Acton Jana Adamitis Elizabeth Adkins Evelyn Adkins Sara Ahbel-Rappe Charles F. Ahern LQ�KRQRU�RI�-RKQ�:��+RZDUG��6�-�Peter Aicher�LQ�KRQRU�RI�3HWHU�0��6PLWKVirginia Simpson Aisner LQ�KRQRU�RI�.DWKHULQH�*HIIFNHQEmily Albu Z. Philip Ambrose Ronnie Ancona Diane C. Warne Anderson Michael Arnush Jacqueline Arthur-Montagne LQ�KRQRU�RI�3DYORV�6I\URHURVAntonios Augoustakis John Norman Austin Harry C. Avery

Albert Baca Roger S. Bagnall Emily Baragwanath Yelena Baraz Michael Barich The Barrington Foundation, Inc. Edgar F. Beall

5HEHFFD�%HQH¿HO�Luci Berkowitz Anja Bettenworth Charles Rowan Beye Michael Bigg Thomas J. Biggs Bruce Karl Braswell and Margarethe Billerbeck Adam D. Blistein Ruby Blondell H. Christian Blood LQ�KRQRU�RI�0DU\�.D\�*DPHOMary T. Boatwright LQ�KRQRU�RI�/DZUHQFH�5LFKDUGVRQ�-U�John P. Bodel LQ�KRQRU�RI�-RKQ�'¶$UPV�DQG�'DYLG�2��5RVV��-U�Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers Eugene Borza Phebe Lowell Bowditch Barbara Weiden Boyd LQ�KRQRU�RI�0DU\�5��/HINRZLW]Keith Bradley Antoinette Brazouski Frederick Brenk Ward W. Briggs Edwin Louis Brown Christopher M. Brunelle Christer Bruun Nancy Lynn Burgeson Peter Hart Burian Shannon Byrne

The 2013-2014 Annual Giving Donor Report includes those donors who PDGH�JLIWV�GXULQJ�WKH������¿VFDO�\HDU��-XO\�����������-XQH����������

47

The 2013-2014 Annual Giving Donor Report includes those donors who PDGH�JLIWV�GXULQJ�WKH������¿VFDO�\HDU��-XO\�����������-XQH����������

Robert W. Cape Edwin Carawan LQ�KRQRU�RI�*HRUJH�$��.HQQHG\Lisa Carson Ruth Rothaus Caston Christopher Louis Caterine Orlando Cerasuolo Robert Chenault Keyne Cheshire LQ�KRQRU�RI�:LOOLDP�+��5DFHCharles Chiasson Matthew R. Christ Joel Perry Christensen John Paul Christy Jennifer Clarke-Kosak James Joseph Clauss Jenny Strauss Clay Dee L. Clayman LQ�KRQRU�RI�7DPDUD�*UHHQ�DQG�-RHO�/LGRYBarbara L. Clayton Graham Claytor Peter Cohee Marianthe Colakis Ann R. Raia Colaneri Susan Guettel Cole Kathleen M. Coleman LQ�KRQRU�RI�0DULVD�0H]]DERWWDJoy Connolly W. Robert Connor Guy L. Cooper Owen C. Cramer Raffaella Cribiore LQ�KRQRU�RI�2UVROLQD�0RQWHYHFFKLDeborah Cromley Parker Croshaw Monessa Cummins Paolo Custodi

Stephen G. Daitz Mark Damen James H. Dee Denise Demetriou Carolyn J. Dewald Umit Singh Dhuga T. Keith Dix and Naomi J. Norman Juana Celia Djelal Lillian Doherty Fanny Dolansky Therese Dougherty Melissa Barden Dowling Janet Downie Eric Dugdale

Jennifer Ebbeler Lowell Edmunds LQ�KRQRU�RI�5LFKDUG�:LOOLDP�*DOEUDLWKWalter Englert Mary English Kendra Eshleman Harry B. Evans LQ�KRQRU�RI�/DZUHQFH�5LFKDUGVRQ�-U�

Denis C. Feeney Anne Feltovich Christelle Fischer-Bovet Elizabeth Fisher Harriet Flower Edwin Floyd Helene P. Foley Alexander Forte William Fortenbaugh Benjamin Fortson Andrew Foster Stephanie A Frampton Bruce W. Frier Brent M. Froberg

Michael Gagarin Ralph Gallucci Mary-Kay Gamel LQ�KRQRU�RI�1HG�6SRIIRUGEdgar Adrian Garcia Katherine A. Geffcken LQ�KRQRU�RI�/LO\�5RVV�7D\ORUJon Christopher Geissmann Charles George Edward George Mary-Louise Glanville Gill Daniel J. Gillis Barbara K. Gold Sander M. Goldberg A. Deborah Goldstein Philippa Goold Peter Green Justina Gregory )UHGHULFN�7��*ULI¿WKV�Anne H. Groton Erich S. Gruen Kathryn J. Gutzwiller

Wolfgang Haase LQ�KRQRU�RI�)ULHGULFK�6ROPVHQAdele Haft Daniel Harris-McCoy LQ�KRQRU�RI�5DOSK�0��5RVHQRebecca Harrison Paul B. Harvey, Jr. LQ�KRQRU�RI�(PLOLR�*DEEDUrsula Heibges Julia Hejduk Jeffrey Henderson LQ�KRQRU�RI�:LOOLDP�(��0F&XOORKKevin Herbert Judson Herrman Ralph Hexter Stephen Hinds Regina Hoeschele Patrick P. Hogan Alexander Hollmann Brooke Holmes Joseph Samuel Houser Jared Hudson

2013-2014 Annual Giving Acknowledgments

48

The 2013-2014 Annual Giving Donor Report includes those donors who PDGH�JLIWV�GXULQJ�WKH������¿VFDO�\HDU��-XO\�����������-XQH����������

Margaret Imber Stanley Iverson

John Jacobs Howard Jacobson Fred Jenkins LQ�KRQRU�RI�'DYLG�)��%ULJKWPatricia Johnson Patricia Johnston Sarah Iles Johnston LQ�KRQRU�RI�2OLYHU�&��3KLOOLSVGregory Jones

Stacie Kadleck Walter Kaegi LQ�KRQRU�RI�*HRUJH�$��.HQQHG\Christine Kalke Robert Kane Elias Kapetanopoulos Peter Karavites Robert A. Kaster LQ�KRQRU�RI�3HWHU�:KLWHJoshua T. Katz LQ�KRQRU�RI�&DOYHUW�:DWNLQVDavid Kaufman Madeleine S. Kaufman Catherine Keane Dennis Kehoe Elizabeth E. Keitel LQ�KRQRU�RI�'RXJODV�<RXQJGeorge A. Kennedy James Ker Robert Cary Ketterer Stephen Kidd Jinyo Kim Rachel Kitzinger John J. Klopacz Ludwig Koenen Ann Koloski-Ostrow David Konstan E. Christian Kopff Adam Kozak Ann Lill Kuttner

Danielle LaLonde Susan Lape Donald Lateiner LQ�KRQRU�RI�+DQV�3HWHU�6WDKOEleanor Winsor Leach Douglas Leedy LQ�KRQRU�RI�(OUR\�/��%XQG\Mary R. Lefkowitz Valdis Leinieks Lydia Lenaghan John R. Lenz Alexander Lessie Olga Levaniouk Daniel B. Levine Joel B. Lidov Robert Lloyd Michele Lowrie Paul Ludwig Trevor Luke

Kelly A. Macfarlane and Christopher S. Mackay Emily Mackil Anthony David Macro LQ�KRQRU�RI�-DPHV�:��3RXOWQH\

John F. Makowski Ilaria Marchesi Christopher Marchetti John Marincola LQ�KRQRU�RI�*LOEHUW�3��5RVHAnnalisa Marzano Rudolph Masciantonio Donald J. Mastronarde Robert Matera John F. Matthews James M. May Tyler Mayo T. Davina McClain Laura McClure William E. McCulloh Matthew M. McGowan Fred Mench Ann Norris Michelini John F. Miller LQ�KRQRU�RI�5REHUW�0XUUD\Paul Allen Miller Kathryn Milne Tim Moore Kathryn Morgan Sally Weissinger Morris Alexander Mourelatos Carrie Mowbray Hans-Friedrich Mueller LQ�KRQRU�RI�*DUHWK�6FKPHOLQJMelissa Mueller Sheila Murnaghan David J. Murphy Irene Murphy Jackie Murray Karen Sara Myers

Michael Nerdahl Nigel Nicholson Stephen Albert Nimis Ted [C.E.V.] Edwin Nixon John D. Noonan Pauline Nugent

James J. O’Donnell Eric Orlin William Martin Owens

Vassiliki Panoussi Grant Parker Martha J. Payne Charles Pazdernik Phoebe Peacock Lee T. Pearcy Joyce K. Penniston Ronald Perez Judith B. Perkins George E. Pesely Edward Phillips Harm Pinkster Amy Pistone Julian G. Plante Emil Polak

49

The 2013-2014 Annual Giving Donor Report includes those donors who PDGH�JLIWV�GXULQJ�WKH������¿VFDO�\HDU��-XO\�����������-XQH����������

Karla F.L. Pollmann David H. Porter LQ�KRQRU�RI�'HQLV�)HHQH\Alex Purves Michael C. J. Putnam

'HERUDK�%RHGHNHU�DQG�.XUW�$��5DDÀDXE�Nancy S. Rabinowitz Teresa Ramsby John T. Ramsey Stacie Raucci Diane J. Rayor Kenneth J. Reckford Amy Richlin LQ�KRQRU�RI�7KDOLD�3DQGLULAlice S. Riginos Karl Ritval Deborah H. Roberts Matthew Benedict Roller Ralph M. Rosen Patricia A. Rosenmeyer Nathan Rosenstein John C. Rouman James Ruebel S. Dominic Ruegg Nicholas Rupert Peter M. Russo LQ�KRQRU�RI�$QQD�%HQMDPLQJeffrey Rusten

Hugh Sackett Dylan Sailor Michele Salzman LQ�KRQRU�RI�$UOHQH�)URPFKXFN�)HLOLThe Samuel H. Kress Foundation Stephen Sansom David Sansone Matthew S. Santirocco Seth L. Schein Saundra Schwartz LQ�KRQRU�RI�6X]DQQH�6DLGRuth Scodel -��+��'DYLG�6FRXU¿HOG�Stephen Scully A. Serghidou Susan Setnik Barbara Shailor Julia Shapiro Deborah Shaw Julia Shear Nancy J. Shumate Janice Siegel Robert Holschuh Simmons Christopher M. Simon Kathryn Simonsen Matthew Simonton Marilyn B. Skinner Niall W. Slater

Ineke Sluiter Joseph B. Solodow Philip A. Stadter Eva M. Stehle Olin Storvick Sarah Stroup Thomas Strunk Ann C. Suter C. Sydnor Roy Antonia Syson Andrew Szegedy-Maszak

David W. Tandy LQ�KRQRU�RI�-DPHV�5HG¿HOGTheodore Tarkow Mark Thorne Allen Tice Elza C. Tiner Daniel P. Tompkins Isabelle Torrance LQ�KRQRU�RI�$ODQ�6RPPHUVWHLQMonica Tsunishi

James Uden

Evert van Emde Boas Phiroze Vasunia LQ�KRQRU�RI�7KRPDV�5��0DUWLQPamela Vaughn Arthur Verhoogt Heather Vincent Thomas Virginia B. Vivante

Allen M. Ward John Warman LQ�KRQRU�RI�5REHUW�)UDGNLQGavin Weaire Jake Weiner Barbara Weinlich Tara Welch Emily Blanchard West William C. West III Stephen Michael Wheeler Peter White Gillian Wible Martha Heath Wiencke Gareth Williams Maura K. Williams Allan Wooley

Froma I. Zeitlin Erika Zimmermann Damer Pamela Zinn LQ�KRQRU�RI�0RQLFD�5��*DOHIoannis Ziogas

Note: In 2014 the Society published a report on the Gateway Campaign that described its history and the projects it is now funding. It also contained the names of all contributors to the Campaign as well as lists of donors to the “Friends” funds established to honor eminent FODVVLFLVWV���3ULQWHG�FRSLHV�RI�WKLV�UHSRUW�DUH�DYDLODEOH�IURP�WKH�6RFLHW\�RI¿FH��DQG�LW�FDQ�DOVR�EH�GRZQORDGHG�IURP�WKH�6RFLHW\¶V�ZHE�VLWH���KWWS���ZZZ�DSDFODVVLFV�RUJ�VLWHV�GHIDXOW�¿OHV�FN¿QGHU�¿OHV�$FN%RRN:HE�SGI

50

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Saturday, January 10, 2015 Start End Event Hotel Room

7:00 AM 8:30 AM Meeting of the SCS Advisory Board for the American � � � 2I¿FH�RI�/¶$QQHH�SKLORORJLTXH Marriott .............................................Studio 1 7:00 AM 8:30 AM Meeting of the SCS Committee on Outreach Marriott .............................................Studio 2 7:00 AM 9:00 AM Intercollegiate Center for Classical Studies (ICCS) Breakfast Meeting Marriott ...........................................Balcony J 7:30 AM 8:30 AM Women’s Classical Caucus Open Meeting Sheraton ......................................Estherwood 7:30 AM 3:30 PM Registration Open Sheraton ...........Napoleon Ballroom Foyer

FOURTH SESSION FOR THE READING OF PAPERS 8:00 AM 10:30 AM Session 28: Poetics, Politics, and Religion in Greek Lyric and Epinician Sheraton ..............................................Borgne 8:00 AM 10:30 AM Session 29: Slavery and Status in Ancient Literature and Society Sheraton ........................... Grand Ballroom E 8:00 AM 10:30 AM Session 30: (Inter)generic Receptions in and of Early Imperial Epic Sheraton ........................Waterbury Ballroom 8:00 AM 10:30 AM Session 31: Receptions of Classical Literature in Premodern Scholarship Sheraton .........................................Bayside C 8:00 AM 10:30 AM Session 32: Untimeliness and Classical Knowing Sheraton ...........................Grand Ballroom D 8:00 AM 10:30 AM Session 33: New Frontiers in the Study of Roman Epicureanism Sheraton ................................. Grand Chenier 8:00 AM 10:30 AM Session 34: Performance as Research, Performance as Pedagogy (Organized by the SCS Committee on Ancient and Modern Performance) Sheraton ......................................Rhythms III 8:00 AM 10:30 AM Session 35: Platonism and the Irrational (Organized by the International Society for Neoplatonic Studies) Sheraton .........................................Bayside B 8:00 AM 10:30 AM Session 36: The Next Generation: Papers by Undergraduate Classics Students (Organized by Eta Sigma Phi) Sheraton .................................Grand Couteau 8:30 AM 11:00 AM Meeting of the SCS Publications and Research Committee Marriott .............................................Studio 3 9:30 AM 11:30 AM Meeting of the Forum for Classics, Libraries and Scholarly Communication Sheraton ...............................................Cornet 9:30 AM 5:30 PM Exhibit Hall Open Sheraton ...................... Napoleon Ballroom 10:00 AM 11:30 AM Business Meeting of the Lambda Classical Caucus Sheraton ....................................................821

FIFTH SESSION FOR THE READING OF PAPERS 10:45 AM 12:45 PM Session 37: Empires, Kingdoms, and Leagues in the Ancient Greek World Sheraton ................................. Grand Chenier 10:45 AM 12:45 PM Session 38: Rejecting the Classics: Rupture and Revolution Sheraton ........................... Grand Ballroom E� ������$0� ������30� 6HVVLRQ������,QÀDWLRQ�DQG�&RPPRGLW\�%DVHG�&RLQDJHV�LQ�WKH Later Roman Empire Sheraton ......................................Rhythms III 10:45 AM 12:45 PM Session 40: Interactive Pedagogy and the Teaching of Ancient History (Organized by the SCS Committee on Ancient History) Sheraton .........................................Bayside C 10:45 AM 12:45 PM Session 41: The End of the Roman Empire: Catastrophe and Collapse vs. Transition and Transformation: A Debate (Organized by the SCS Program Committee) (Joint AIA/SCS Session) Sheraton ........................Waterbury Ballroom 10:45 AM 12:45 PM Session 42: The Problematic Text: Classical Editing in the 21st Century Sheraton ...........................Grand Ballroom D

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10:45 AM 12:45 PM Session 43: /LEURV�PH�IXWXUXP: New Directions in Apuleian Scholarship Sheraton .........................................Bayside B 10:45 AM 12:45 PM Session 44: ORGANS: Form, Function and Bodily Systems in Greco-Roman Medicine (Organized by the Society for Ancient Medicine and Pharmacy) Sheraton .................................Grand Couteau 11:00 AM 12:00 PM Meeting of the SCS Membership Committee Marriott .............................................Studio 1 11:00 AM 1:00 PM Meeting of the SCS Committee on Ancient and Modern Performance Sheraton ......................................Estherwood 12:00 PM 5:00 PM Meeting of the SCS Committee on the Pearson Fellowship Sheraton ............................................Crescent 12:15 PM 1:45 PM Roundtable Discussion Groups (Joint SCS/AIA Session) Sheraton ...................... Napoleon Ballroom 12:45 PM 1:45 PM Meeting of the Managing Committee of the INSTAP Study Center for East Crete Sheraton ....................................................821 1:00 PM 3:00 PM Meeting of the SCS Cabinet Sheraton ...........................................Gallier B

SIXTH SESSION FOR THE READING OF PAPERS 1:45 PM 4:45 PM Session 45: Discourses of Greek Tragedy: Music, Natural Science, Statecraft, Ethics Sheraton ......................................Rhythms III 1:45 PM 4:45 PM Session 46: The Figure of the Tyrant Sheraton .........................................Bayside C 1:45 PM 4:45 PM Session 47: Women, Sex, and Power Sheraton ...........................Grand Ballroom D 1:45 PM 4:45 PM Session 48: Problems in Ancient Ethical Philosophy Sheraton .........................................Bayside B 1:45 PM 4:45 PM Session 49: Ancient Receptions of Classical Literature Sheraton ........................... Grand Ballroom E 1:45 PM 4:45 PM Session 50: Roman Exile: Poetry, Prose, and Politics Sheraton ........................Waterbury Ballroom 1:45 PM 4:45 PM Session 51: Polynomial Texture Mapping: An Introduction to Digital Archaeology Sheraton ..............................................Borgne 1:45 PM 4:45 PM Session 52: +RPR�/XGHQV: Teaching the Ancient World via Games Sheraton ................................. Grand Chenier 1:45 PM 4:45 PM Session 53: Neo-Latin Texts in the Americas and Europe (Organized by the American Association for Neo-Latin Studies) Sheraton .................................Grand Couteau 2:00 PM 4:00 PM Session 54: Poster Session Sheraton .........................Napoleon Ballroom 3:00 PM 5:00 PM Meeting of the SCS Committee on Professional Matters Marriott .............................................Studio 1 3:30 PM 5:00 PM Meeting of the National Committee for Latin and Greek Marriott ...........................................Balcony J 5:00 PM 6:45 PM SCS Plenary Session Sheraton ...........................Grand Ballroom D 6:45 PM 7:45 PM SCS Presidential Reception Sheraton ........................Grand Ballroom E 6:45 PM 8:15 PM Alumni/ae Association Meeting and Reception, The American School of Classical Studies at Athens Sheraton ....................... Armstrong Ballroom 6:45 PM 8:15 PM Reception Sponsored by College Year in Athens Sheraton ...............................................Cornet 7:00 PM 9:00 PM Reception Sponsored by Sunoikisis Marriott .............................................Studio 3 7:00 PM 9:00 PM Eta Sigma Phi Reception for Members and Advisors Sheraton ............................................Rampart 8:00 PM 10:00 PM Reception Sponsored by the University of Pennsylvania and Yale University, in conjunction with Bryn Mawr, Haverford and Swarthmore Colleges Offsite...Calcasieu, 930 Tchoupitoulas Street 9:00 PM 10:00 PM Reception Sponsored by the Department of Classics of Brown University Sheraton ................................. Grand Chenier 9:00 PM 11:00 PM Reception Sponsored by the Center for Hellenic Studies Marriott .............................................Studio 3 9:00 PM 11:00 PM Reception Sponsored by The Department of Classical Studies of the University of Michigan and the Department of Classics of the University of Cincinnati Sheraton ......................................Rhythms III 9:00 PM 11:00 PM Reception Sponsored by The University of Illinois, The University of Missouri, and Washington University in St. Louis Sheraton .................................Grand Couteau

S o c i e t y f o r c l a S S i c a l S t u d i e S � a n n u a l m e e t i n g

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Saturday, January 10, 2015(All sessions will take place at the Sheraton New Orleans unless otherwise noted.)

FOURTH SESSION FOR THE READING OF PAPERS8:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. BorgneSession #28Poetics, Politics, and Religion in Greek Lyric and Epinician

Kathryn Morgan, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DOLIRUQLD��/RV�$QJHOHV, Presider

*UHHN�O\ULF�DQG�HSLQLFLDQ�SRHWU\�SURYLGH�FRPSOH[�HYLGHQFH�IRU�VRFLDO��SROLWLFDO�DQG�UHOLJLRXV�SUDFWLFHV�DQG�EHOLHIV��7KH�SDSHUV�LQ�WKLV�SDQHO�H[SORUH�WKH�ZD\V�LQ�ZKLFK�VH[XDO�UHODWLRQV��V\VWHPV�RI�UHFLSURFLW\��WKUHDWV�WR�SROLWLFDO�VWDELOLW\��DQG�PRGHV�RI�FXOWLF�ZRUVKLS�IXQFWLRQ�LQ�WKHVH�JHQUHV�

1. David Wright, 5XWJHUV��7KH�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1HZ�-HUVH\ Rocking the Boat: The Iambic Sappho in the New Sappho Fragment (20 mins.)

2. Elsa Bouchard, 8QLYHUVLWp�GH�0RQWUpDO Wile-loving Aphrodite in Archaic Poetry (20 mins.)

3. David Kovacs, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�9LUJLQLD

Persuasion on Aegina in Pindar’s Eighth 1HPHDQ (20 mins.)4. Chris Eckerman, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�2UHJRQ

ȋȐȡȚȢ�LQ�WKH�(SLQLFLDQ�2GHV�RI�3LQGDU�DQG�%DFFK\OLGHV�����PLQV��5. Gregory Jones, ,QGHSHQGHQW�6FKRODU

Bacchylides’ Imitation of Art and Cult in 2GH 17 (20 mins.)6. Margaret Foster, ,QGLDQD�8QLYHUVLW\

Colonial Narrative and the Excision of the Seer: The Disappearance of Melampous in Bacchylides’ 2GH 11 (20 mins.)

8:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. Grand Ballroom ESession #29Slavery and Status in Ancient Literature and Society

T. Corey Brennan, 5XWJHUV�8QLYHUVLW\, Presider

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1. Anna Conser, &ROXPELD�8QLYHUVLW\ Why Can’t a Woman Be More like a Bee? Poetic Persona and Hesiod’s Bee Simile in Semonides )U� 7 (20 mins.)

2. Ephraim Lytle, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�7RURQWR

The Curious Case of Chaerephilus & Sons: Vertical Integration and the Ancient Greek Economy (20 mins.)3. Mark Pyzyk, 6WDQIRUG�8QLYHUVLW\

Specialization Among Citizens in Classical Greece (20 mins.)4. Clara Bosak-Schroeder, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�0LFKLJDQ

Keeping Luxury at Bay: Elephants in Megasthenes’ ,QGLND�(20 mins.)5. Matthew Leigh, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�2[IRUG

Sicily and the (FORJXHV of Vergil (20 mins.)6. William Owens, 2KLR�8QLYHUVLW\

Xenophon of Ephesus’ Critique of Stoic Thinking about Slavery (20 mins.)

8:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. Waterbury BallroomSession #30(Inter)generic Receptions in and of Early Imperial Epic

Andrew Zissos, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DOLIRUQLD��,UYLQH, Presider

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1. Catherine Mardula, ,QGHSHQGHQW�6FKRODU Vergil’s Shield of Aeneas and its Legacy in Lucan (20 mins.)

2. Christopher Caterine, 7XODQH�8QLYHUVLW\ Lucan’s Introduction and the Limits of Intertextual Analysis (20 mins.)

3. Siobhan Chomse, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DPEULGJH The Turn of the Screw: Lucan, Tacitus and the Sublime Machine (20 mins.)

4. Giulio Celotto, )ORULGD�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\ A New Interpretation of Tacitus +LVWRULDH 2.70: Lucan’s Caesar and Tacitus’ Vitellius (20 mins.)

5. Arthur Pomeroy, 9LFWRULD�8QLYHUVLW\�RI�:HOOLQJWRQ

Silius Italicus and Homer (20 mins.)6. Jessica Blum, <DOH�8QLYHUVLW\

Going for the Gold: 9LUWXV and OX[XULD in Valerius’ $UJRQDXWLFD (20 mins.)

8:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. Bayside CSession #31Receptions of Classical Literature in Premodern Scholarship

S. Douglas Olson, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�0LQQHVRWD, Presider

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1. Stylianos Chronopoulos, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�)UHLEXUJ

Arguing through Analogy in Pollux’ 2QRPDVWLNRQ (20 mins.)2. Carlo Vessella, &HQWHU�IRU�+HOOHQLF�6WXGLHV�

Atticist Lexica and Atticistic Pronunciation (20 mins.)3. Dave Oosterhuis, *RQ]DJD�8QLYHUVLW\

Dating the &DWDOHSWRQ: How Servius Misread Donatus and Created the Collection (20 mins.)4. Marja Vierros, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�+HOVLQNL

Scribes, Language, and Education in Petra in the 6th Century CE (20 mins.)5. Almut Fries, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�2[IRUG

A Byzantine Scholar at Work: Demetrius Triclinius and Responsion between Separated Strophes in Greek Drama (20 mins.)

8:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. Grand Ballroom DSession #32Untimeliness and Classical Knowing

Constanze Güthenke and Brooke Holmes, 3ULQFHWRQ�8QLYHUVLW\, Organizers

Brooke Holmes, 3ULQFHWRQ�8QLYHUVLW\ Introduction (10 mins.)

1. Simon Goldhill��8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DPEULGJH Classics and the Precipice of Time (20 mins.)

2. Constanze Güthenke, 3ULQFHWRQ�8QLYHUVLW\ The Untimely Scholar: Radicalism and Tradition (20 mins.)

3. Miriam Leonard, 8QLYHUVLW\�&ROOHJH�/RQGRQ

Tragedy and the Intrusion of Time: Carl Schmitt’s +DPOHW�RU�+HFXED (20 mins.)4. Tim Whitmarsh, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�2[IRUG

Quantum Classics: Untimely Chronologies and Postclassical Literary Histories (20 mins.)

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55

Glenn Most, 6FXROD�1RUPDOH�6XSHULRUH�GL�3LVD�8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&KLFDJRRespondent (20 mins.)

General discussion (40 mins.)

8:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. Grand ChenierSession #33New Frontiers in the Study of Roman Epicureanism

Benjamin Vines Hicks, 6RXWKZHVWHUQ 8QLYHUVLW\, Organizer

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1. Nathan Gilbert��8QLYHUVLW\�RI�7RURQWR

Gastronomy and Slavery under Caesar: The Politics of an Epicurean Cliché ($G�)DP� 15.18) (20 mins.)2. Pamela Gordon, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�.DQVDV

Code-switching for Epicurus in the Late Republic (20 mins.)3. Sergio Yona, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�,OOLQRLV

Horace’s Philosophical Upbringing in 6DWLUHV 1.4 (20 mins.)4. Benjamin Vines Hicks, 6RXWKZHVWHUQ 8QLYHUVLW\

Tibullus on Property Management (20 mins.)5. Robert Hedrick, )ORULGD�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\

Vergilian HQDUJHLD: Hellenistic Epistemology and Rhetoric in Aeneas’ Gaze (20 mins.)

Wilson Shearin, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�0LDPL�Response (20 mins.)

8:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. Rhythms IIISession #34Performance as Research, Performance as PedagogyOrganized by the Committee on Ancient and Modern Performance

T. H. M. Gellar-Goad, :DNH�)RUHVW�8QLYHUVLW\, Organizer

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1. Simone Oppen, &ROXPELD�8QLYHUVLW\ Reconsidering Choral Projection in Aeschylus through Performance (20 mins.)

2. Megan Wilson, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�0LFKLJDQ

Behind the Façade: Staging the House in Euripides’ 2UHVWHV (20 mins.)3. Christopher Bungard, %XWOHU�8QLYHUVLW\

Violence in Plautus: Or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Performance (20 mins.)4. Amy R. Cohen, 5DQGROSK�&ROOHJH

Doubling in Practice and Pedagogy (20 mins.)5. Lily Kelting, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DOLIRUQLD��6DQ�'LHJR

Aristophanes in Performance in the 21st-Century Classroom (20 mins.)

General Discussion (30 mins.)

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8:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. Bayside BSession #35Platonism and the IrrationalOrganized by the International Society for Neoplatonic Studies

John F. Finamore, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�,RZD�DQG�6YHWOD�6ODYHYD�*ULI¿Q��)ORULGD�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\, Organizers

,W�KDV�EHHQ����\HDUV�VLQFH�(��5��'RGGV�SXEOLVKHG�KLV�VHPLQDO�ZRUN��Greeks and the Irrational�� 6LQFH�WKDW�WLPH��VFKRODUV�RI�ODWHU�3ODWRQLVP�KDYH�EHHQ�H[DPLQLQJ�WKH�UROH�RI�PDJLF��GUHDP�LQWHUSUHWDWLRQ��GLYLQDWLRQ��WKHXUJ\��HWF���LQ�WKH�DQFLHQW�ZRUOG�DQG�KDYH�EHHQ�GLVFRYHULQJ�WKDW�SUDFWLFHV�WKDW�VHHP�LUUDWLRQDO�WR�PRGHUQV�ZHUH�VWDQGDUG�WRSLFV�IRU�SKLORVRSKLFDO�LQTXLU\�LQ�ODWH�DQWLTXLW\�� 7KLV�SDQHO�ZLOO�LQYHVWLJDWH�WKH�YDULRXV�VRUWV�RI�³LUUDWLRQDO´�WRSLFV�WKDW�DSSHDOHG�WR�3ODWRQLVWV�DQG�KRZ�WKH\�HQJDJHG�WKHP�LQ�WKHLU�SKLORVRSKLHV��

1. Ilaria Ramelli, &DWKROLF�8QLYHUVLW\�0LODQ��$QJHOLFXP

The Irrational Parts of the Soul “Against Nature” in Christian Neoplatonism? Gregory Nyssen with Antecedents in Origen and Aftermath in Evagrius (20 mins.)

2. Jason Reddoch, &RORUDGR�0HVD�8QLYHUVLW\ From Plato to Philo: On the Psychology and Physiology of Prophetic Dreaming (20 mins.)

3. Donka Markus, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�0LFKLJDQ

Dialectic as Autopsia: A Lesson in Neoplatonic Rationality (20 mins.)4. Marilynn Lawrence, ,PPDFXODWD�8QLYHUVLW\

Astrology for Neoplatonists: Rational or Irrational? (20 mins.)5. Greg Shaw, 6WRQHKLOO�&ROOHJH

The Irrational and the Paranormal: the Legacy of E. R. Dodds (20 mins.)

General discussion (20 mins.)

8:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. Grand CouteauSession #36The Next Generation: Papers by Undergraduate Classics Students Organized by Eta Sigma Phi

David H. Sick, 5KRGHV�&ROOHJH, Organizer

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1. Maxwell A. Gray, 5KRGHV�&ROOHJH The Seal of Theognis and Oral-Traditional Signature (15 mins.)

2. J. LaRae Ferguson, +LOOVGDOH�&ROOHJH “To Laugh at One’s Enemies:” Vengeance by Humiliation and the Tyranny of the Stronger in Sophocles’ $MD[ (15 mins.)

3. Haley Flagg, :DVKLQJWRQ�8QLYHUVLW\�LQ�6DLQW�/RXLV Foreign Voices: Caesar’s Use of ‘Enemy’ Speech in the Helvetii Campaign (15 mins.)

4. Emma Vanderpool, 0RQPRXWK�&ROOHJH Towards a New Lexicon of Fear: A Statistical and Grammatical Analysis of SHUWLPHVFHUH�in Cicero (15 mins.)

5. Joshua Benjamins, +LOOVGDOH�&ROOHJH “(W�OHJHEDW�HW�PXWDEDWXU�LQWXV:” Reading and Conversion in Augustine’s &RQIHVVLRQV�(15 mins.)

Kathleen M. Coleman, +DUYDUG 8QLYHUVLW\�Respondent (20 mins.)

General discussion (10 mins.)

S o c i e t y f o r c l a S S i c a l S t u d i e S � a n n u a l m e e t i n g

57

FIFTH SESSION FOR THE READING OF PAPERS10:45 a.m. - 12:45 p.m. Grand ChenierSession #37Empires, Kingdoms, and Leagues in the Ancient Greek World

Jeremy McInerney, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�3HQQV\OYDQLD, Presider

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1. Timothy Sorg, &RUQHOO�8QLYHUVLW\ An Empire of Allotment: Imperial Stability and the Athenian Frontier in Fifth-Century Euboea (20 mins.)

2. Denise Demetriou, 0LFKLJDQ�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\ The Practice of Diplomacy: Sidonian Kings and Greek States in the Fourth Century BCE (20 mins.)

3. M.S. (Marijn) Visscher, 'XUKDP�8QLYHUVLW\ The Seleucids in Babylon: Royal Euergetism and Local Elites (20 mins.)

4. John Tully, %RVWRQ�&RQVXOWLQJ�*URXS

Rhodes, the Cyclades, and the Second Nesiotic League (20 mins.)

10:45 a.m. - 12:45 p.m. Grand Ballroom ESession #38Rejecting the Classics: Rupture and Revolution

Adam Edward Lecznar, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�%ULVWRO, Organizer

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DQG�UHFHSWLRQ�DQG�ZKHWKHU�FHUWDLQ�SHULRGV�DQG�FHUWDLQ�DUHDV�RI�WKH�ZRUOG�DUH�PRUH�OLNHO\�WR�ZDQW�WR�UHMHFW�*UHHFH�DQG�5RPH��)LQDOO\��LW�VXJJHVWV�WKDW�VWXG\LQJ�DFWV�RI�UHMHFWLRQ�FDQ�KHOS�WR�FRPEDW�URVH�WLQWHG�XQGHUVWDQGLQJV�RI�DQWLTXLW\¶V�DIWHUOLIH�

1. Adam Edward Lecznar, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�%ULVWRO The Tragedy of Aimé Césaire: Building a Future from the Ruins of Antiquity (20 mins.)

2. Emma Cole, 8QLYHUVLW\�&ROOHJH�/RQGRQ

An Aristotelian 9HUIUHPGXQJVHIIHNW; or, the Rejection of the 3RHWLFV in Postdramatic Theatre (20 mins.)3. Mathura Umachandran, 3ULQFHWRQ�8QLYHUVLW\

Disenchanting Odysseus: Auerbach and Adorno on the Philhellenic Enlightenment (20 mins.)

Patrice Rankine, +RSH�&ROOHJHRespondent (20 mins.)

General discussion (40 mins.)

10:45 a.m. - 12:45 p.m. Rhythms IIISession #39,QÀDWLRQ�DQG�&RPPRGLW\�%DVHG�&RLQDJHV�LQ�WKH�/DWHU�5RPDQ�(PSLUH

Gilles Bransbourg, 1HZ�<RUN�8QLYHUVLW\�and�$PHULFDQ�1XPLVPDWLF�6RFLHW\, Organizer

7KH�/DWHU�5RPDQ�(PSLUH�GLVFRYHUHG�WKH�FRQFHSW�RI�DEVWUDFW�PRQHWDU\�XQLWV�RI�DFFRXQWV��$�FXUUHQF\�XQLW�QR�ORQJHU�PHDQW�D�VSHFL¿F�FRLQ��ZLWK�LWV�ZHLJKW�DQG�PHWDO�FRPSRVLWLRQ��7KLV�OHG�WR�SRVVLEO\�WKH�ORQJHVW�ODVWLQJ�SHULRG�RI�SHUPDQHQW�LQÀDWLRQ�LQ�KLVWRU\��IURP�WKH�PRQHWDU\�GLVORFDWLRQ�RI�WKH�PLG��UG�FHQWXU\�XQWLO�WKH�UHVWRUDWLRQ�RI�D�FRPSUHKHQVLYH�FRLQDJH�V\VWHP�XQGHU�$QDVWDVLXV��$'����������DIWHU�WKH�IDOO�RI�WKH�:HVWHUQ�(PSLUH��:H�ZLOO�H[SORUH�WKH�HFRQRPLF��SROLWLFDO�DQG�VRFLDO�FRQVHTXHQFHV�EURXJKW�E\�VXFK�DQ�H[WUHPH�GHJUHH�RI�¿GXFLDULW\�LQWR�D�ZRUOG�ZKHUH�SUHFLRXV�PHWDOV�UHPDLQHG�WKH�PRVW�UHFRJQL]HG�DQFKRU�RI�YDOXH�

1. Daniel Hoyer, 7KH�(YROXWLRQ�,QVWLWXWH��6(6+$7�*OREDO�+LVWRU\�'DWDEDQN�3URMHFW 'HEDVHPHQW�DQG�,QÀDWLRQ�LQ�WKH�:HVWHUQ�(PSLUH�GXULQJ�WKH�7KLUG�&HQWXU\�&(�����PLQV��

2. Irene Soto, ,QVWLWXWH�IRU�WKH�6WXG\�RI�WKH�$QFLHQW�:RUOG��1HZ�<RUN�8QLYHUVLW\ Bronze Currency and Local Authority in 4th-Century Egypt (20 mins.)

n e W o r l e a n S , l o u i S i a n a J a n u a ry 8 - 11 , 2 0 1 5

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3. Filippo Carlà, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�([HWHU &XUUHQF\�DQG�,QÀDWLRQ�LQ�/DWH�$QWLTXLW\�����PLQV��

4. Gilles Bransbourg, ,QVWLWXWH�IRU�WKH�6WXG\�RI�WKH�$QFLHQW�:RUOG��1HZ�<RUN�8QLYHUVLW\��and the $PHULFDQ�1XPLVPDWLF�6RFLHW\ Roman Coinage, between Commodity and Currency (20 mins.)

General discussion (30 mins.)

10:45 a.m. - 12:45 p.m. Bayside CSession #40Interactive Pedagogy and the Teaching of Ancient HistoryOrganized by the Committee on Ancient History

William S. Bubelis, :DVKLQJWRQ�8QLYHUVLW\�LQ�6DLQW�/RXLV, Organizer

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1. Carl A. Anderson, 0LFKLJDQ�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\�and T. Keith Dix, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�*HRUJLD

5HDFWLQJ�WR�WKH�3DVW: Pedagogy and ‘Beware the Ides of March, Rome in 44 BCE’ (20 mins.)2. Christine Loren Albright, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�*HRUJLD

Reconvening the Senate: Learning Outcomes after Using 5HDFWLQJ�WR�WKH�3DVW in the Intermediate Latin Course (20 mins.)3. Gregory Aldrete, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�:LVFRQVLQ±*UHHQ�%D\�

0DNLQJ�+LVWRU\�&RPH�$OLYH��5HÀHFWLRQV�RQ����<HDUV¶�:RUWK�RI�5ROH�3OD\LQJ�6LPXODWLRQ�*DPHV��([HUFLVHV��DQG�3DSHU�$V-signments (20 mins.)

4. Lee Brice, :HVWHUQ�,OOLQRLV�8QLYHUVLW\� More than Bringing History to Life: Experimental History as an Interactive Pedagogy (20 mins.)

Nicholas Rauh, 3XUGXH�8QLYHUVLW\Respondent (10 mins.)

General discussion (10 mins.)

10:45 a.m. - 12:45 p.m. Waterbury BallroomSession #41The End of the Roman Empire: Catastrophe and Collapse vs. Transition and Transformation: A Debate Organized by the SCS Program Committee (Joint AIA/SCS Session)

Carlos Noreña, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DOLIRUQLD��%HUNHOH\, Moderator

1. Kimberly Bowes, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�3HQQV\OYDQLD (40 mins.)2. Noel Lenski, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&RORUDGR�%RXOGHU (40 mins.)

General Discussion (40 mins.)

10:45 a.m. - 12:45 p.m. Grand Ballroom DSession #42The Problematic Text: Classical Editing in the 21st Century

Tom Keeline, :HVWHUQ�:DVKLQJWRQ�8QLYHUVLW\, and Justin Stover, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�2[IRUG, Organizers

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S o c i e t y f o r c l a S S i c a l S t u d i e S � a n n u a l m e e t i n g

59

Justin Stover, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�2[IRUGIntroduction (5 mins.)

1. Richard Tarrant, +DUYDUG�8QLYHUVLW\ 4XDH�TXLEXV�DQWHIHUDP? The Grouping and Ordering of Works in Modern Editions of Classical Texts (20 mins.)

2. Sarah Hendriks, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�2[IRUG

Editing the Latin Papyri from Herculaneum: The Case of 3+HUF. 78 (20 mins.)3. Cynthia Damon, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�3HQQV\OYDQLD

Beyond Variants: Some Digital Desiderata for the Critical Apparatus of Ancient Greek and Latin Texts (20 mins.)4. Francesca Schironi, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�0LFKLJDQ

Philology and Textual Editing in the Classroom (and beyond) (20 mins.)

Tom Keeline, :HVWHUQ�:DVKLQJWRQ�8QLYHUVLW\ Respondent (15 mins.)

10:45 a.m. - 12:45 p.m. Bayside BSession #43Libros Me Futurum: New Directions in Apuleian Scholarship

Sonia Sabnis, 5HHG�&ROOHJH�and Ashli Baker, %XFNQHOO�8QLYHUVLW\, Organizers

0DUNLQJ�WKH���WK�DQQLYHUVDU\�RI�-DFN�:LQNOHU¶V�ODQGPDUN�Auctor & Actor: A Narratological Reading of Apuleius’s Golden Ass��WKLV�SDQHO�ORRNV�WR�WKH�IXWXUH�RI�$SXOHLDQ�VWXGLHV��VHHNLQJ�ERWK�QHZ�TXHVWLRQV�DQG�IUHVK�DQVZHUV�WR�ORQJ�VWDQGLQJ�TXHVWLRQV�SRVHG�E\�$SX-

OHLXV¶�ULFK�ERG\�RI�ZRUN�� (PSOR\LQJ�GLYHUVH�DSSURDFKHV��WKHVH�SDSHUV�XQLI\�DURXQG�VHYHUDO�WKHPHV��KRZ�LVVXHV�UDLVHG�E\�QDUUDWRORJ\�FDQ�EH�DGGUHVVHG�E\�HQULFKLQJ�WKDW�LQWHUSUHWLYH�VWDQFH�ZLWK�RWKHUV��KRZ�$SXOHLXV¶�SKLORVRSKLFDO�SRVLWLRQV�±�HVSHFLDOO\�UHJDUGLQJ

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1. H. Christian Blood, <RQVHL�8QLYHUVLW\ Apuleius’ Book of Trans* Formations: A Transgender Studies Reappraisal of Met. 8.24-30 and 11.17-30 (20 mins.)

2. Elsa Giovanna Simonetti, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�3DGRYD

Apuleius and the ‘Impossible Tasks’: Linking Together the Heavens and the Earth (20 mins.)3. Jeffrey Ulrich, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�3HQQV\OYDQLD

Apuleius’ Use and Abuse of Platonic Myth in the 0HWDPRUSKRVHV (20 mins.)4. Sasha-Mae Eccleston, 3RPRQD�&ROOHJH

The Mantle of Humanity: Met. 11.24 and Apuleian Ethics (20 mins.)

General discussion (20 mins.)

10:45 a.m. - 12:45 p.m. Grand CouteauSession #44ORGANS: Form, Function and Bodily Systems in Greco-Roman MedicineOrganized by the Society for Ancient Medicine and Pharmacy

Ralph M. Rosen, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�3HQQV\OYDQLD, Organizer

/DUJHO\�KLGGHQ�IURP�VLJKW��WKH�RUJDQV�RI�WKH�ERG\�KDYH�DOZD\V�RIIHUHG�IDVFLQDWLRQ�DV�ZHOO�DV�IUXVWUDWLRQ��:H�VHQVH�WKHLU�IXQFWLRQ�LQ�WKH�FRXUVH�RI�VXVWDLQLQJ�D�ELRORJLFDO�OLIH��EXW�FDQ�PRVWO\�RQO\�LQIHU�WKH�GHWDLOV�RI�WKHLU�SURFHVVHV��,Q�SUH�PRGHUQLW\��WKLV�DOLHQDWLRQ�RI�WKH�VHOI�IURP�WKH�PDWHULDO�FRPSRQHQWV�RI�WKH�KXPDQ�ERG\�DQG�WKHLU�LQWHUDFWLRQV�ZDV�HVSHFLDOO\�DFXWH��DQG�VR�PDQ\�RI�WKH�DQFLHQW�PHGLFDO�WH[WV�DUH�FOHDUO\�JURSLQJ�IRU�ZD\V�WR�XQGHUVWDQG�WKH�IXQFWLRQV�RI�LQGLYLGXDO�RUJDQV�LQ�KHDOWK�DQG�GLVHDVH��ERWK�SK\VLRORJLFDO�DQG�SV\-FKRORJLFDO��7KLV�VHVVLRQ�ZLOO�H[SORUH�YDULRXV�DVSHFWV�RI�WKH�RUJDQV�DFURVV�WKH�ORQJ�KLVWRU\�RI�*UHFR�5RPDQ�PHGLFLQH�

Ralph M. Rosen, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�3HQQV\OYDQLDIntroduction (5 mins.)

1. Anna Bonnell-Freidin, 3ULQFHWRQ�8QLYHUVLW\ Birth and the Many-Legged Womb (20 mins.)

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2. Amber Porter, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DOJDU\ 2UJDQV�3HUVRQL¿HG��7KHLU�)RUP�DQG�)XQFWLRQ�LQ�WKH�(PSDWKHWLF�0HGLFDO�6\VWHP�RI�$UHWDHXV�RI�&DSSDGRFLD�����PLQV��

3. Michael Goyette, 7KH�*UDGXDWH�&HQWHU��7KH�&LW\�8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1HZ�<RUN Vivisection and Revelation: Some Narratives from Latin Literature (20 mins.)

4. Luis Alejandro Salas, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�7H[DV�DW�$XVWLQ

Fighting with the Heart of a Beast: Galen’s Use of Exotic Animal Anatomy against Cardiocentrists (20 mins.)

General discussion (10 mins.)

12:15 p.m. – 1:45 p.m. Napoleon BallroomRoundtable Discussion Groups (Joint SCS/AIA Session)

1. Best Practices for Interdisciplinary Collaborative Research Moderators: Matthew Loar, 6WDQIRUG�8QLYHUVLW\; Sarah Murray, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1HEUDVND±/LQFROQ� and Stefano Rebeggiani, New�<RUN�8QLYHUVLW\

2. Beyond Point & Click: Digital Photography for the Working Archaeologist John D. Muccigrosso, 'UHZ�8QLYHUVLW\

3. Blogging Antiquity Moderators: Mary Franks and Jaclyn Neel, <RUN�8QLYHUVLW\

4. Careers beyond the Classroom: Translating the Humanities PhD Moderator: John Paul Christy, $PHULFDQ�&RXQFLO�RI�/HDUQHG�6RFLHWLHV

5. Classical Traditions in Fantasy and Science Fiction Moderators: Brett M. Rogers, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�3XJHW�6RXQG, and Benjamin Eldon Stevens, %U\Q�0DZU�&ROOHJH

6. Current Work on Greek Inscriptional Poetry Moderators: Donald Lavigne, 7H[DV�7HFK�8QLYHUVLW\, and Ivana Petrovic and Andjrej Petrovic, 'XUKDP�8QLYHUVLW\

7. 'HYHORSLQJ�D�5HVHDUFK�&RPPXQLW\�IRU�WKH�6WXG\�RI�&XOWXUDO�+HULWDJH�LQ�&RQÀLFW Brian I. Daniels, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�3HQQV\OYDQLD�0XVHXP�RI�$UFKDHRORJ\�DQG�$QWKURSRORJ\

8. Digitized Manuscripts, Digital Scholarly Editions, and Linked Open Data Moderators: Cillian O’Hogan, 7KH�%ULWLVK�/LEUDU\, and Christopher Blackwell, )XUPDQ�8QLYHUVLW\

9. Globalizing Classics Moderator: Eric Dodson-Robinson, :HVW�&KHVWHU�8QLYHUVLW\

10. Hearing History: Sound in the Greek and Roman Past Moderators: Jeremy Hartnett and Bronwen Wickkiser, :DEDVK�&ROOHJH

11. +RZ�)DU�&DQ�2XWUHDFK�*R��DQG�:KR�'RHV�,W�%HQH¿W"� Moderators: Fiona McHardy, 5RHKDPSWRQ�8QLYHUVLW\, and Nancy S. Rabinowitz,�+DPLOWRQ�&ROOHJH

12. Latin On-Line Moderator: T. Davina McClain, 6FKRODUV¶�&ROOHJH�DW�1RUWKZHVWHUQ�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\

13. Negotiating Negotiation Moderators: Tara Welch, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�.DQVDV� and Sarah Levin-Richardson, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�:DVKLQJWRQ

14. Open Access Books: The Problem of Visibility Moderator: Catherine Mardikes, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&KLFDJR

15. Preparing for Museum Careers: What Do Students and Recent PhDs Need to Know? Moderator: Sara E. Cole, <DOH�8QLYHUVLW\

16. Reference Tools for a Digital Age Moderators: Sander M. Goldberg, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DOLIRUQLD��/RV�$QJHOHV, and Eric Rebillard, &RUQHOO�8QLYHUVLW\

17. Sculptural Reuse in Roman Times: Problems and Perspectives Gabriella Cirucci, 6FXROD�1RUPDOH�6XSHULRUH��3LVD

18. Silicon Valley and the Classics Moderator: Daniel Harris-McCoy, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�+DZDLұL�DW�0ƗQRD

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SIXTH SESSION FOR THE READING OF PAPERS1:45 p.m. - 4:45 p.m. Rhythms IIISession #45Discourses of Greek Tragedy: Music, Natural Science, Statecraft, Ethics

Laura McClure, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�:LVFRQVLQ, Presider

7KLV�SDQHO�UHVSRQGV�WR�UHFHQW�LQWHUHVW�LQ�WKH�UHODWLRQVKLS�EHWZHHQ�WKH�SHUIRUPDWLYH��DHVWKHWLF��DQG�SROLWLFDO�HIIHFWV�RI�*UHHN�WUDJHG\��3DSHUV�H[SORUH�WKH�SROLWLFDO�ZRUN�RI�WKH�WUDJLF�FKRUXV��WKH�UHODWLRQVKLS�EHWZHHQ�QDWXUDO�IRUFHV�DQG�KXPDQ�VXIIHULQJ��WKH�SROLWLFDO�HIIHFWV�RI�JQRPLF�XWWHUDQFHV��DQG�WKH�HWKLFDO�DQG�PRUDO�GLOHPPDV�SRVHG�E\�KXPDQ�PRUWDOLW\�

1. Valerie Hannon Smitherman, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�%HUJHQ� Performing Relationships: Aeschylus’ Use of 0RXVLNƝ�and &KRUHLD in the 2UHVWHLD (20 mins.)

2. 5REHUW�&LRI¿��%DUG�&ROOHJH Night of the Waking Dead: The Ghost of Clytemnestra and Collective Vengeance in Aeschylus’ (XPHQLGHV (20 mins.)

3. Patrick Glauthier, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�3HQQV\OYDQLD

Playing the Volcano: 3URPHWKHXV�%RXQG and Fifth Century Volcanic Theory (20 mins.)4. Lucy Van Essen-Fishman, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�2[IRUG

Generalizing Force: The Breakdown of Creon’s Authority in Sophocles’ $QWLJRQH�(20 mins.)5. John Gibert, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&RORUDGR�%RXOGHU

5HÀH[LYLW\�DQG�,QWHJULW\�LQ�6RSKRFOHV¶�3KLORFWHWHV�(20 mins.)6. Wendy Closterman, %U\Q�$WK\Q�&ROOHJH

Dead Man Walking: The Use of Funerary Motifs in Euripides’ 2UHVWHV�(20 mins.)

1:45 p.m. - 4:45 p.m. Bayside CSession #46The Figure of the Tyrant

Christopher Baron, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1RWUH�'DPH, Presider

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1. Rachel Bruzzone, $OEHUW�/XGZLJV�8QLYHUVLWlW Inheriting War: Father and Son in the Peloponnesian War (20 mins.)

2. Robert Sing, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DPEULGJH Demosthenes and the Financial Power of Philip II (20 mins.)

3. Marcaline Boyd, )ORULGD�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\ Tyrant Labeling and Modes of Sole Rulership in Diodorus Siculus’ %LEOLRWKHNH (20 mins.)

4. Ioannis Ziogas, $XVWUDOLDQ�1DWLRQDO�8QLYHUVLW\ “You, Too, Son, Must Die!”: Caesar’s Prophecy and the Death of Brutus (20 mins.)

5. Jake Nabel, &RUQHOO�8QLYHUVLW\ A Bridge to Nowhere: Caligula’s Baiae Procession and Its Models (20 mins.)

6. Tristan Taylor, <DOH�8QLYHUVLW\ /LEHUDWRU or 7\UDQQXV? The Ideology of /LEHUWDV in Usurpation and Civil War (20 mins.)

1:45 p.m. - 4:45 p.m. Grand Ballroom DSession #47Women, Sex, and Power

Amy Richlin, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DOLIRUQLD��/RV�$QJHOHV, Presider

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1. Kathy L. Gaca, 9DQGHUELOW�8QLYHUVLW\ Aristotle and the Peripatetics on the Historiography of Martial Rape (20 mins.)

2. Rebecca Flemming, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DPEULGJH The Archaeology of the Classical Clitoris (20 mins.)

3. Heather Elomaa, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�3HQQV\OYDQLD

A Taste for the PHQWXOD: Female Critics in the &DUPLQD�3ULDSHD (20 mins.)4. Duane W. Roller, 7KH�2KLR�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\�

Feminist Geography: The Empowered Women of Strabo (20 mins.)5. Sebastian Anderson, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�,OOLQRLV�DW�8UEDQD�&KDPSDLJQ

The Apotheosis of Poppaea (20 mins.)6. Katharine von Stackelberg, %URFN�8QLYHUVLW\

The Erotics of Lettuce? Sexual Knowledge in Columella Book 10 (20 mins.)

1:45 p.m. - 4:45 p.m. Bayside BSession #48Problems in Ancient Ethical Philosophy

Phillip Horky, 'XUKDP�8QLYHUVLW\, Presider

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1. Carlo DaVia, )RUGKDP�8QLYHUVLW\ Method in Aristotle’s 1LFRPDFKHDQ�(WKLFV (20 mins.)

2. David Kaufman, 7UDQV\OYDQLD�8QLYHUVLW\ The Pre-Emotions of the Stoic Wise Man (20 mins.)

3. Georgina White, 3ULQFHWRQ�8QLYHUVLW\ Lucretian Temporality: The Problem of the Epicurean Past in the 'H�5HUXP�1DWXUD (20 mins.)

4. Pamela Zinn, 7ULQLW\�&ROOHJH�'XEOLQ

Love and the Structure of Emotion in Lucretius (20 mins.)5. Sonya Wurster, 7KH�8QLYHUVLW\�RI�0HOERXUQH��$XVWUDOLD

Reason in Philodemus’s 'H�GLV 1 (20 mins.)6. David Armstrong, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�7H[DV�DW�$XVWLQ

Real Harm, not Slight: The Prerequisites for “Natural Anger” in Philodemus’ 2Q�$QJHU�DQG�WKHLU�,QÀXHQFH�RQ�9HUJLO�����mins.)

7. Erica Bexley, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DPEULGJH More than Meets the Eye: Public Attention and Moral Conduct in Seneca (20 mins.)

1:45 p.m. - 4:45 p.m. Grand Ballroom ESession #49Ancient Receptions of Classical Literature

Ayelet Haimson Lushkov, 7KH�8QLYHUVLW\�RI�7H[DV�DW�$XVWLQ, Presider

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1. Erika Taretto, 'XUKDP�8QLYHUVLW\ Sites of Memory and Ancient Reception of Poets: Archilochos on Paros (20 mins.)

2. Mallory Monaco Caterine, 7XODQH�8QLYHUVLW\ Lycurgus and Other Lies: Plutarch’s “Agis and Cleomenes” and the Rhetoric of Political Revival (20 mins.)

3. Catherine Keesling, *HRUJHWRZQ�8QLYHUVLW\ Retrospective Portrait Statues and the Hellenistic Reception of Herodotus (20 mins.)

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4. Stephen Trzaskoma, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1HZ�+DPSVKLUH The Paradoxical Program of Chariton’s &DOOLUKRH (20 mins.)

5. Brandon Jones, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�:DVKLQJWRQ

Tacitus’ 'LDORJXV�GH�����5H�3XEOLFD (20 mins.)6. Jessica Moore, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�:LVFRQVLQ±0DGLVRQ

Plague in the Time of Procopius: Thucydides, Intertextuality, and Historical Memory (20 mins.)

1:45 p.m. - 4:45 p.m. Waterbury BallroomSession #50Roman Exile: Poetry, Prose, and Politics

David M. Pollio, &KULVWRSKHU�1HZSRUW�8QLYHUVLW\, and Gordon P. Kelly, /HZLV�DQG�&ODUN�&ROOHJH, Organizers

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David M. Pollio, &KULVWRSKHU�1HZSRUW�8QLYHUVLW\Introduction (5 mins.)

1. W. Jeffrey Tatum, 9LFWRULD�8QLYHUVLW\�RI�:HOOLQJWRQ

Exile as a Mode of Genius: Metellus Numidicus and the Performance of Exile (25 mins.)2. Alexandra Kennedy, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�$UL]RQD

The Exile of Coriolanus: Space, Identity, and Memory in Livy’s $E�8UEH�&RQGLWD (25 mins.)3. Kenneth Sammond, )DLUOHLJK�'LFNLQVRQ�8QLYHUVLW\

$FWL�IDWL�«�5RPDQDP�FRQGHUH�JHQWHP: The Politics of Exile in Vergil’s $HQHLG (25 mins.)4. Sanjaya Thakur, &RORUDGR�&ROOHJH

Resonances of Tiberius’ Exile in Ovidian Literature (25 mins.)5. Jayne Knight, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�%ULWLVK�&ROXPELD

,UD�&DHVDULV and Ovid’s Exile Epistles: A New Reading (25 mins.)

General discussion (15 mins.)

1:45 p.m. - 4:45 p.m. BorgneSession #51Polynomial Texture Mapping: An Introduction to Digital Archaeology

Benjamin F. S. Altshuler, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI 2[IRUG, Organizer

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1. Benjamin F. S. Altshuler��&6$'��8QLYHUVLW\�RI�2[IRUG Introduction to PTM & MSI Imaging Technology and Digital Archeology (30 mins.)

2. Thomas Mannack��%HD]OH\�$UFKLYH�and�&$5&��8QLYHUVLW\�RI�2[IRUG PTM Imaging and its Application to Athenian Painted Pottery (20 mins.)

3. Giles E.W. Richardson��2&0$�DQG�%HD]OH\�$UFKLYH��8QLYHUVLW\�RI�2[IRUG Applications of 3D and PTM Imaging in Maritime Archeology (20 mins.)

4. PTM Imaging Workshop: Hands-on Experience with PTM Imaging Technology (90 mins.)

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1:45 p.m. - 4:45 p.m. Grand ChenierSession #52Homo Ludens: Teaching the Ancient World via Games

T. H. M. Gellar-Goad, :DNH�)RUHVW�8QLYHUVLW\, and Robyn Le Blanc, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1RUWK�&DUROLQD�DW�&KDSHO�+LOO, Organizers

7KLV�LQWHUGLVFLSOLQDU\�ZRUNVKRS�RIIHUV�D�IRUXP�DERXW�JDPHV�DQG�SOD\�LQ�&ODVVLFV�FXUULFXOD�� :HOO�FRQVWUXFWHG�JDPHV�RIIHU�QXPHURXV�SHGDJRJLFDO�EHQH¿WV��FXVWRPL]DWLRQ��ULVN�WDNLQJ��OHDUQLQJ�IURP�PLVWDNHV��FKDOOHQJHV�SURPRWLQJ�VNLOO�PDVWHU\��SURPSW�IHHGEDFN��DQG�FUHDWLYH��LQWHJUDWLYH��WKLQNLQJ�WKURXJK�SHUVSHFWLYH�WDNLQJ�� *DPHSOD\�DQG�LWV�EHQH¿WV�FDQ�¿JXUH�LQWR�SHGDJRJ\�LQ�DQ\�FRXUVH�RQ�WKH�DQFLHQW�0HGLWHUUDQHDQ��IURP�ODQJXDJH�WR�FLYLOL]DWLRQ�WR�PDWHULDO�FXOWXUH��DW�DOO�OHYHOV�� 3UHVHQWHUV�H[SORUH�DSSURDFKHV��WHFKQLTXHV��DQG�VRXUFHV�RI�LQVSLUDWLRQ�IRU�JDPLI\LQJ�&ODVVLFV�WHDFKLQJ�� 7KH�VHVVLRQ�SURYLGHV�D�XQLTXH�RSSRUWXQLW\�IRU�D�OLYHO\�FRQYHUVDWLRQ�DERXW�RXU�UROH�LQ�WKH�FODVVURRP��DQG�KRZ�JDPHSOD\�KHOSV�PRWLYDWH�VWXGHQWV�DQG�VXJJHVWV�QHZ�GLUHFWLRQV�LQ�UHVHDUFK�

1. Sarah Landis, /DWLQ�6FKRRO�RI�&KLFDJR, Maxwell Teitel Paule, (DUOKDP�&ROOHJH, and T. H. M. Gellar-Goad, :DNH�)RUHVW�8QLYHUVLW\ 3HUVRQD�JUDWD: Role-Playing Games in Language and Civilization Instruction (30 mins.)

2. Robyn Le Blanc, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1RUWK�&DUROLQD�DW�&KDSHO�+LOO “Future Archaeology”: Modular Roleplay in Material-Culture Courses (30 mins.)

3. Bret Mulligan, +DYHUIRUG�&ROOHJH (WKRSRHLD and 5HDFWLQJ�WR�WKH�3DVW in the Latin Classroom (and Beyond) (30 mins.)

4. Roger Travis, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&RQQHFWLFXW A “Practomimetic” Approach to Game-Based Learning (30 mins.)

General Discussion (30 mins.)

1:45 p.m. - 4:45 p.m. Grand CouteauSession #53Neo-Latin Texts in the Americas and EuropeOrganized by the American Association for Neo-Latin Studies

Roger Stephen Fisher, <RUN�8QLYHUVLW\, Organizer

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Roger Stephen Fisher, <RUN�8QLYHUVLW\Introduction (5 mins.)

1. Owen Ewald, 6HDWWOH�3DFL¿F�8QLYHUVLW\� Out of the Pietist Labyrinth: Susanna Sprögel’s Latin Verses (20 mins.)

2. Eric Hutchinson, +LOOVGDOH�&ROOHJH Greek and Roman Sources in Niels Hemmingsen’s 'H�/HJH�1DWXUDH�$SRGLFWLFD�0HWKRGXV�(20 mins.)

3. K. T. S. Klos, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�)ORULGD

… TXDH�PLKL�VDWLV�OLEHUDOLV�HW�KXPDQD�YLVD (20 mins.)4. Jay Reed, %URZQ�8QLYHUVLW\�

Love’s Imperium in Garcilaso’s Third Latin Ode (20 mins.)5. Marco Romani Mistretta, +DUYDUG�8QLYHUVLW\�

Myths of Poetry and Praise: Orpheus in Poliziano’s and Statius’ 6LOYDH (20 mins.)6. Maya Feile Tomes, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DPEULGJH

José Manuel Peramás’ 'H�,QYHQWR�1RYR�2UEH�,QGXFWRTXH�,OOXF�&KULVWL�6DFUL¿FLR (1777): [World]views of America in a Lit-tle-Known Neo-Latin Epic on Columbus’ Voyages to the “New World” (20 mins.)

General discussion (25 mins.)

S o c i e t y f o r c l a S S i c a l S t u d i e S � a n n u a l m e e t i n g

65

2:00 p.m.-4:00 p.m. Napoleon BallroomSession #54Poster Session

1. Eduardo Engelsing, :HVWHUQ�:DVKLQJWRQ�8QLYHUVLW\ 7KH�&KLQHVH�5RRP�DQG�WKH�&KHVV�3OD\HU��2Q�5HDGLQJ�DQG�/DQJXDJH�3UR¿FLHQF\�LQ�&ODVVLFV�

2. Brandtly Jones, 6W��$QQH¶V�%HO¿HOG�6FKRRO The Promise and Pitfalls of Authoring Your Own E-Textbook

3. Matthew Sears, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1HZ�%UXQVZLFN and C. Jacob Butera, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1RUWK�&DUROLQD�DW�$VKHYLOOH The Site of the Battle of Philippi (42 BCE)

4. Erin Moodie, 3XUGXH�8QLYHUVLW\ Subversive Metatheater in Ancient Comedy

5. Denis Searby, 6WRFNKROP�8QLYHUVLW\ The Dicts and Sayings of Greek Philosophers in the Digital Age

6. Bram van der Velden, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DPEULGJH Multiple Explanations and Unresolved Ambiguity in Porphyrio’s Commentary on Horace

5:00 p.m. – 6:45 p.m. Grand Ballroom DSCS Plenary SeSSion

John Marincola, President-Elect, Presiding

�� Presentation of the SCS’s teaching awards �� Presentation of the Outreach Prize�� Presentation of the Goodwin Awards of Merit�� Presidential address:

Kathryn J. Gutzwiller, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&LQFLQQDWL³)DQWDV\�DQG�0HWDSKRU�LQ�0HOHDJHU´

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Greek Mythography in the Roman WorldALAN CAMERONAn exploration of the importance of semi-learned mythographic handbooks in the social, literary, and artistic world of Rome.2004 | 368 pp. | 2 illus. | Hardcover $115.00

Sextus EmpiricusThe Transmission and Recovery of PyrrhonismLUCIANO FLORIDI“An exemplary piece of scholarship.” —Renaissance Quarterly2002 | 172 pp. | 5 illus. | Hardcover $79.00

Traditional ElegyThe Interplay of Meter, Tradition, and Context in Early Greek PoetryR. SCOTT GARNERThe first ever study devoted to the traditional compositional techniques that lay behind archaic Greek elegy.2011 | 176 pp. | Hardcover $90.00

Representing AgrippinaConstructions of Female Power in the Early Roman EmpireJUDITH GINSBURG and Edited by ERIC GRUENA fresh look at both the literary and material representations of Agrippina.2005 | 160 pp. | 10 illus. | Hardcover $84.00

Work in ProgressLiterary Revision as Social Performance in Ancient RomeSEAN ALEXANDER GURD“Anyone interested in literature or the process of writing in antiquity should read this book.” —CHOICE2011 | 192 pp. | Hardcover $84.00

Homer’s Cosmic FabricationChoice and Design in the IliadBRUCE HEIDEN“A bold new approach to reading the Iliad.” —New England Classical Journal2008 | 272 pp. | 33 illus. | Hardcover $84.00

Studies on the Text of Macrobius’ SaturnaliaROBERT A. KASTER“Anyone interested in Kaster’s new text will need to consult these studies.” —Bryn Mawr Classical Review2010 | 144 pp. | Hardcover $74.00

HyperidesFuneral OrationEdited with Introduction, Translation, and Commentary by JUDSON HERRMANClear and accurate translation and commentary on one of the most important surviving funeral orations from classical Greece.2009 | 168 pp. | Hardcover $69.00

Figuring Genre in Roman SatireCATHERINE KEANE“Keane does an excellent job of explicating subtly the ways in which these satirists envisioned and represented their relationship on with one another.” —The Classical Review2006 | 190 pp. | Hardcover $79.00

Virgil RecomposedThe Mythological and Secular Centos in AntiquitySCOTT MCGILL“A valuable study.” —Times Literary Supplement2005 | 260 pp. | Hardcover $140.00

Studies in Classical History and SocietyMEYER REINHOLD“This volume is a model of accuracy and clarity for the historian of the ancient world.” —Ward W. Briggs Jr., University of South Carolina2002 | 168 pp. | Hardcover $100.00

Religion and Reconciliation in Greek CitiesThe Sacred Laws of Selinus and CyreneNOEL ROBERTSONA new edited text with translation, commentary, and interpretive essays on these documents.2009 | 432 pp. | Hardcover $105.00

The Augustan SuccessionAn Historical Commentary on Cassius Dio’s Roman History Books 55-56 (9 B.C.-A.D. 14)PETER MICHAEL SWAN“An excellent historical commentary on Cassius Dio’s books 55 and 56, which will be of great help to all students and scholars who study the last twenty years of Augustus’ reign.” —Gnomon2004 | 448 pp. | 6 maps | Hardcover $175.00

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Cicero’s Pro L. Murena OratioIntroduction and Commentary by ELAINE FANTHAMA long-overdue pedagogical commentary on Cicero’s Pro L. Muerna Oratio.2013 | 240 pp. | 1 map | Paperback $24.952013 | 240 pp. | 1 map | Hardcover $99.00

ForthcomingCicero’s De Provinciis Consularibus OratioLUCA GRILLO 2015 | 356 pp. | Hardcover $99.002015 | 356 pp. | Paperback $29.95

Sallust’s Bellum CatilinaeSecond EditionEdited by J. T. RAMSEYRamsey’s introduction and commentary bring the text to life for Latin students.2007 | 280 pp. | 4 illus. | Paperback $25.00

A Commentary on Demosthenes’ Philippic IWith Rhetorical Analyses of Philippics II and IIICECIL WOOTENThe first commentary in English on what is arguably the finest deliberative speech from antiquity.2008 | 200 pp. | Paperback $26.952008 | 200 pp. | Hardcover $78.00

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Ancient Greek ScholarshipA Guide to Finding, Reading, and Understanding Scholia, Commentaries, Lexica, and Grammatiacl Treatises, from Their Beginnings to the Byzantine PeriodELEANOR DICKEY“This book fills a deep need.” —The Classical Review2007 | 368 pp. | Hardcover $84.002007 | 368 pp. | Paperback $26.95

A Casebook on Roman Family LawBRUCE W. FRIER and THOMAS A. J. MCGINNThis casebook presents representative texts from Roman legal sources that introduce the basic problems arising in Roman families.2003 | 532 pp. | Paperback $58.002003 | 528 pp. | Hardcover $130.00

A Casebook on Roman Property LawHERBERT HAUSMANINGER, RICHARD GAMAUF, and Translated with Commentary by GEORGE A. SHEETSThis volume introduces Roman property law by means of “cases” consisting of brief excerpts from Roman juristic sources in Latin with English translations.2012 | 384 pp. | Paperback $36.952012 | 384 pp. | Hardcover $105.00

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New from OxfordPoiesisManufacturing in Classical AthensPETER ACTON2014 | 408 pp. | 40 figures and illus. | Hardcover $74.00

Classical PhilosophyA History of Philosophy without Any Gaps, Volume 1PETER ADAMSON2014 | 368 pp. | Hardcover $29.95

Classical Literature: A Very Short IntroductionWILLIAM ALLAN2014 | 144 pp. | 8 illus. | 2 maps |Paperback $11.95

Courage in the Democratic PolisIdeology and Critique in Classical AthensRYAN K. BALOT2014 | 424 pp. | Hardcover $65.00

Alexander the Great: A Very Short IntroductionHUGH BOWDEN2014 | 144 pp. | 8 illus. | Paperback $11.95

Seneca: MedeaEdited with Introduction, Translation, and CommentaryEdited by A. J. BOYLE2014 | 640 pp. | Hardcover $199.00

The Oxford Handbook of Roman EpigraphyEdited by CHRISTER BRUUN and JONATHAN EDMONDSON2014 | 928 pp. | 155 illus. | Hardcover $175.00

The Oxford Handbook of Animals in Classical Thought and LifeEdited by GORDON LINDSAY CAMPBELL2014 | 650 pp. | 35 illustrations | Hardcover $150.00

The Athenian Amnesty and Reconstructing the LawEDWIN CARAWAN2013 | 320 pp. | Hardcover $125.00

Explaining the CosmosCreation and Cultural Interaction in Late-Antique GazaMICHAEL W. CHAMPION2014 | 256 pp. | Hardcover $74.00

The War with GodTheomachy in Roman Imperial PoetryPRAMIT CHAUDHURI2014 | 416 pp. | Hardcover $74.00

Triumph in DefeatMilitary Loss and the Roman RepublicJESSICA H. CLARK2014 | 272 pp. | 4 maps | Hardcover $74.00

The Fragments of the Roman HistoriansEdited by T. J. CORNELL2014 | 2,736 pp. | Quantity Pack $375.00

A Lexicon of Greek Personal NamesVolume V.B: Coastal Asia Minor: Caria to CiliciaAssociate Editor: T. CORSTEN2014 | 536 pp. | Hardcover $225.00

Narratology and ClassicsA Practical GuideIRENE J. F. DE JONG2014 | 240 pp. | Paperback $35.002014 | 240 pp. | Hardcover $99.00

Crafting CharactersHeroes and Heroines in the Ancient Greek NovelKOEN DE TEMMERMAN2014 | 432 pp. | Hardcover $150.00

Discourses, Fragments, HandbookEPICTETUSROBIN HARD and CHRISTOPHER GILL2014 | 400 pp. | Paperback $17.95

The Getty HexametersPoetry, Magic, and Mystery in Ancient SelinousEdited by CHRISTOPHER A. FARAONE and DIRK OBBINK2014 | 240 pp. | Hardcover $99.00

The Possibility of InquiryMeno’s Paradox from Socrates to SextusGAIL FINE2014 | 416 pp. | Hardcover $85.00

Early Greek MythographyVolume 2: CommentaryROBERT L. FOWLER2013 | 848 pp. | Hardcover $250.00

Shaggy CrownsEnnius’ Annales and Virgil’s AeneidNORA GOLDSCHMIDT2014 | 272 pp. | Hardcover $125.00

Disclosure and Discretion in Roman AstrologyManilius and his Augustan ContemporariesSTEVEN J. GREEN2014 | 248 pp. | Hardcover $74.00

Seneca on SocietyA Guide to De BeneficiisMIRIAM T. GRIFFIN2013 | 416 pp. | Hardcover $185.002014 | 416 pp. | Paperback $60.00

Classics in the Modern WorldA Democratic Turn?Edited by LORNA HARDWICK and STEPHEN HARRISON2013 | 520 pp. | 50 illus. | Hardcover $160.00

Being Christian in Late AntiquityA Festschrift for Gillian ClarkEdited by CAROL HARRISON, CAROLINE HUMFRESS, and ISABELLA SANDWELL2014 | 320 pp. | 1 illus. | Hardcover $99.00

Rationalizing Myth in AntiquityGRETA HAWES2014 | 304 pp. | Hardcover $99.00

The Restoration of RomeBarbarian Popes and Imperial PretendersPETER HEATHER2014 | 488 pp. | 45 illus. | Hardcover $34.95

Mastering the WestRome and Carthage at WarDEXTER HOYOS2015 | 360 pp. | 25 illus. | Hardcover $29.95

Prosopography of Greek Rhetors and Sophists of the Roman EmpirePAWEL JANISZEWSKI, KRYSTYNA STEBNICKA, and ELZBIETA SZABAT2014 | 480 pp. | Hardcover $275.00

Sharing with the GodsAparchai and Dekatai in Ancient GreeceTHEODORA SUK FONG JIM2014 | 400 pp. | 8 illus. | Hardcover $150.00

Rome’s Economic RevolutionPHILIP KAY2014 | 400 pp. | 3 illus. | Hardcover $150.00

BeautyThe Fortunes of an Ancient Greek IdeaDAVID KONSTAN2015 | 280 pp. | Hardcover $29.95

Faustina I and IIImperial Women of the Golden AgeBARBARA M. LEVICK2014 | 272 pp. | 12 illus. | 2 maps |Hardcover $65.00

Plato’s Rivalry with MedicineA Struggle and Its DissolutionSUSAN B. LEVIN2014 | 320 pp. | Hardcover $65.00

Dionysius Periegetes, Description of the Known WorldWith Introduction, Translation, and CommentaryJ. L. LIGHTFOOT2014 | 608 pp. | 6 maps | Hardcover $250.00

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The Ideals of InquiryAn Ancient HistoryG. E. R. LLOYD2014 | 176 pp. | Hardcover $55.00

Augustine’s ConfessionsPhilosophy in AutobiographyEdited by WILLIAM E. MANN2014 | 256 pp. | Hardcover $65.00

Aristotle on Perceiving ObjectsANNA MARMODORO2014 | 304 pp. | 3 illus. | Hardcover $74.00

Pindar and the Construction of Syracusan Monarchy in the Fifth Century B.C.KATHRYN A. MORGAN2015 | 472 pp. | Hardcover $85.00

Ancient Greek Women in FilmEdited by KONSTANTINOS P. NIKOLOUTSOS2014 | 400 pp. | 18 illus. | Hardcover $160.00

TuriaA Roman Woman’s Civil WarJOSIAH OSGOOD2014 | 240 pp. | Hardcover $99.002014 | 240 pp. | Paperback $27.95

The Oxford Companion to Classical CivilizationSecond EditionSIMON HORNBLOWER, ANTONY SPAWFORTH, and ESTHER EIDINOW2014 | 912 pp. | 130 illus. | Hardcover $65.00

Personal Names in Ancient AnatoliaEdited by ROBERT PARKER2014 | 230 pp. | 13 illus. | Hardcover $99.00

Twelve Voices from Greece and RomeAncient Ideas for Modern TimesCHRISTOPHER PELLING and MARIA WYKE2014 | 304 pp. | Hardcover $29.95

The OdysseyHOMERTranslated by BARRY B. POWELL2014 | 488 pp. | 25 illus. | Paperback $16.952014 | 488 pp. | 25 illus. | Hardcover $29.95

Suetonius the BiographerStudies in Roman LivesEdited by TRISTAN POWER and ROY K. GIBSON2014 | 368 pp. | Hardcover $150.00

Herodotus and Hellenistic CultureLiterary Studies in the Reception of the HistoriesJESSICA PRIESTLEY2014 | 288 pp. | Hardcover $99.00

State Correspondence in the Ancient WorldFrom New Kingdom Egypt to the Roman EmpireEdited by KAREN RADNER2014 | 320 pp. | 53 illus. | Hardcover $74.00

Scribes and ScholarsA Guide to the Transmission of Greek and Latin LiteratureFourth EditionL. D. REYNOLDS and N. G. WILSON2014 | 336 pp. | 16 pp. plates | Hardcover $150.002014 | 336 pp. | 16 pp. plates | Paperback $55.00

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Poetic Autonomy in Ancient RomeLUKE ROMAN2014 | 400 pp. | Hardcover $175.00

Toni Morrison and the Classical TraditionTransforming American CultureTESSA ROYNON2014 | 240 pp. | Hardcover $99.00

From Jupiter to ChristOn the History of Religion in the Roman Imperial PeriodJÖRG RÜPKE2014 | 336 pp. | Hardcover $120.00

Sport in the Greek and Roman WorldsEarly Greece, The Olympics, and Contests: Volume 1Edited by THOMAS F. SCANLON2014 | 432 pp. | 54 illus. | Hardcover $199.002014 | 432 pp. | 54 illus. | Paperback $65.00

State Power in Ancient China and RomeEdited by WALTER SCHEIDEL2015 | 328 pp. | 5 figures | 2 maps | Hardcover $74.00

Satyric PlayThe Evolution of Greek Comedy and Satyr DramaCARL SHAW2014 | 216 pp. | 32 illus. | Hardcover $74.00

The Language of AtomsPerformativity and Politics in Lucretius’ De rerum naturaW. H. SHEARIN2015 | 232 pp. | Hardcover $74.00

Daughters of HecateWomen and Magic in the Ancient WorldEdited by KIMBERLY B. STRATTON with DAYNA S. KALLERES2014 | 552 pp. | Hardcover $99.002014 | 552 pp. | Paperback $39.95

Apuleius’ MetamorphosesA Study in Roman FictionSTEFAN TILG2014 | 208 pp. | Hardcover $85.00

Senecan Tragedy and the Reception of Augustan PoetryCHRISTOPHER V. TRINACTY2014 | 272 pp. | Hardcover $74.00

Re-imagining the PastAntiquity and Modern Greek CultureEdited by DIMITRIS TZIOVAS2014 | 448 pp. | 37 illus. | Hardcover $150.00

The Invisible SatiristJuvenal and Second-Century RomeJAMES UDEN2014 | 272 pp. | Hardcover $74.00

Taken at the FloodThe Roman Conquest of GreeceROBIN WATERFIELD2014 | 320 pp. | 25 illus. | Hardcover $27.95

The Rise of the Greek Aristocratic BanquetMAREK WECOWSKI2014 | 432 pp. | 28 illus. | Hardcover $175.00

Parmenides’ Grand DeductionA Logical Reconstruction of the Way of TruthMICHAEL V. WEDIN2014 | 288 pp. | Hardcover $74.00

HellenicaVolume III: Philosophy, Music and Metre, Literary Byways, VariaM. L. WEST2014 | 528 pp. | 5 illus. | Hardcover $150.00

The Making of the OdysseyM. L. WEST2014 | 368 pp. | Hardcover $125.00

Contested MonarchyIntegrating the Roman Empire in the Fourth Century ADEdited by JOHANNES WIENAND2014 | 552 pp. | 26 illus. and maps | Hardcover $99.00

The Greatest EmpireA Life of SenecaEMILY WILSON2014 | 272 pp. | 24 illus. | 3 maps | Hardcover $29.95

By the SpearPhilip II, Alexander the Great, and the Rise and Fall of the Macedonian EmpireIAN WORTHINGTON2014 | 416 pp. | 27 illus. | 10 maps | Hardcover $34.95

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In God’s PathThe Arab Conquests and the Creation of anIslamic EmpireROBERT G. HOYLAND2014 | 320 pp. | 30 illus. | Hardcover $29.95

Patterns of the PastEpitedeumata in the Greek TraditionEdited by ALFONSO MORENO and ROSALIND THOMAS2014 | 272 pp. | 9 illus. | Hardcover $99.00

Classical Traditions in Science FictionBRETT M. ROGERS and BENJAMIN ELDON STEVENS2015 | 400 pp. | 12 illus. | Hardcover $99.002015 | 400 pp. | 12 illus. | Paperback $35.00

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71

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Sunday, January 11, 2015 Start End Event Hotel Room

7:00 AM 9:00 AM Meeting of the SCS Committee on Classical Tradition and Reception Sheraton ............................................Rampart

SEVENTH SESSION FOR THE READING OF PAPERS 8:00 AM 11:00 AM Session 55: Truth and Untruth Sheraton .........................................Bayside C 8:00 AM 11:00 AM Session 56: Problems of Triumviral and Augustan Poetics Sheraton .........................................Bayside B 8:00 AM 11:00 AM Session 57: Family Values: Fathers and Sons in Flavian Literature Sheraton ........................... Grand Ballroom E 8:00 AM 11:00 AM Session 58: Demystifying Assessment (Organized by the SCS Education Committee) Sheraton ..............................................Borgne 8:00 AM 11:00 AM Session 59: 40 Years of Goddesses, Whores, Wives, and Slaves: Women’s History in Classics (Organized by the SCS Committee on the Status of Women and Minority Groups) Sheraton ........................Waterbury Ballroom 8:00 AM 11:00 AM Session 60: The Intellectual Legacy of M. Terentius Varro: � � � 9DUURQLDQ�,QÀXHQFH�RQ�5RPDQ�6FKRODUVKLS�DQG�/DWLQ Literary Culture (Organized by the SCS Committee on the TLL Fellowship) Sheraton .................................Grand Couteau 8:00 AM 11:00 AM Session 61: Ancient Greek and Roman Music: Current Approaches and New Perspectives (Organized by the International Society for the Study of Greek and Roman Music: MOISA) Sheraton ...............................................Cornet 8:00 AM 11:00 AM Session 62: Making Meaning from Data (Organized by the Digital Classics Association) Sheraton ...........................Grand Ballroom D 8:00 AM 11:00 AM Session 63: Culture and Society in Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Egypt (Organized by the American Society of Papyrologists) Sheraton ......................................Rhythms III 8:00 AM 12:00 PM Registration Open Sheraton ...........Napoleon Ballroom Foyer 9:00 AM 10:00 AM The American Society of Greek and Latin Epigraphy Business Meeting Sheraton ........................................Gallier AB 9:30 AM 10:30 AM Meeting of the Caucus of North American Classics Associations Sheraton ....................................................821 8:00 AM 12:00 PM Exhibit Hall Open Sheraton ...................... Napoleon Ballroom 11:00 AM 11:30 AM SCS Business Meeting Sheraton ............................................ Oakley

EIGHTH SESSION FOR THE READING OF PAPERS 11:30 AM 1:30 PM Session 64: Charioteering and Footracing in the Greek Imaginary Sheraton ...............................................Cornet 11:30 AM 1:30 PM Session 65: The Intellectual Culture of the Second to Fourth Centuries CE: Christians, Jews, Philosophers, and Sophists Sheraton .........................................Bayside C� ������$0� �����30� 6HVVLRQ������ȝ઼ȜȜȠȞ�țĮ�ȝ઼ȜȜȠȞ��+RZ�*UHHN�,QVWUXFWLRQ Can Reach More Students at More Levels Sheraton ......................................Rhythms III� ������$0� �����30� 6HVVLRQ������3UR¿WV�DQG�/RVVHV�LQ�$QFLHQW�*UHHN�:DUIDUH� 6KHUDWRQ ........................... Grand Ballroom E 11:30 AM 1:30 PM Session 68: The Classics and Early Anthropology (Organized by the SCS Committee on Classical Tradition and Reception) Sheraton .................................Grand Couteau 11:30 AM 1:30 PM Session 69: +LVWRULD�SUR[LPD�SRHWLV: The Intertextual Practices of Historical Poetry Sheraton ........................Waterbury Ballroom

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11:30 AM 1:30 PM Session 70: Greek Shamanism Reconsidered Sheraton ..............................................Borgne 11:30 AM 1:30 PM Session 71: Travel, Travelers and Traveling in Late Antique Literary Culture (Organized by the Society for Late Antiquity) Sheraton ...........................Grand Ballroom D 11:30 AM 1:30 PM Session 72: Greek and Latin Linguistics (Organized by the Society for the Study of Greek and Latin Language and Linguistics) Sheraton .........................................Bayside B 11:30 AM 4:00 PM Meeting of the SCS Board of Directors Sheraton ................................. Grand Chenier

NINTH SESSION FOR THE READING OF PAPERS 1:45 PM 4:15 PM Session 73: Homer: Poetics and Exegesis Sheraton ........................... Grand Ballroom E 1:45 PM 4:15 PM Session 74: Comedy and Comic Receptions Sheraton ...............................................Cornet 1:45 PM 4:15 PM Session 75: War, Slavery, and Society in the Ancient World Sheraton ......................................Rhythms III 1:45 PM 4:15 PM Session 76: Civic Responsibility Sheraton .........................................Bayside B 1:45 PM 4:15 PM Session 77: Innovative Encounters between Ancient Religious Traditions Sheraton ........................Waterbury Ballroom 1:45 PM 4:15 PM Session 78: Ancient Books: Material and Discursive Interactions Sheraton ...........................Grand Ballroom D 1:45 PM 4:15 PM Session 79: Language and Linguistics: Lexical, Syntactical, and Philosophical Aspects Sheraton .........................................Bayside C 1:45 PM 4:15 PM Session 80: Vergil, Elegy, and Epigram (Organized by the Vergilian Society) Sheraton ..............................................Borgne 1:45 PM 4:15 PM Session 81: Between Fact and Fiction in Ancient Biographical Writing (Organized by the International Plutarch Society) Sheraton .................................Grand Couteau

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Sunday, January 11, 2015(All sessions will take place at the Sheraton New Orleans unless otherwise noted.)

SEVENTH SESSION FOR THE READING OF PAPERS8:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. Bayside CSession #55Truth and Untruth

Cynthia Damon, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�3HQQV\OYDQLD, Presider

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1. Bryant Kirkland, <DOH�8QLYHUVLW\ No Place Like Home: Narratorial Participation in Lucian’s 7UXH�+LVWRULHV (20 mins.)

2. Charles Oughton, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�7H[DV�DW�$XVWLQ

Hannibal the Historian at Ticinus and Cannae (20 mins.)3. Alexander Lessie, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DOLIRUQLD��/RV�$QJHOHV

A Body of Text: Incorporating Mark Antony into the 6HFRQG�3KLOLSSLF (20 mins.)4. Kathryn Langenfeld, 'XNH�8QLYHUVLW\

The +LVWRULD�$XJXVWD’s “Audacity to Invent”: Biography and the Ancient Novel in the Late Empire (20 mins.)5. Robert Simms, &KXR�8QLYHUVLW\

Empire and DSRULD in Petronius’ %HOOXP�&LYLOH (20 mins.)6. Miller Krause��8QLYHUVLW\�RI�)ORULGD

Coloring outside the Lines: Magnus Felix Ennodius’ Distorted Declamations (20 mins.)

8:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. Bayside BSession #56Problems of Triumviral and Augustan Poetics

Irene Peirano Garrison, <DOH�8QLYHUVLW\, Presider

7KH�SRHWU\�RI�+RUDFH��9HUJLO��7LEXOOXV��3URSHUWLXV��DQG�2YLG�FRQWLQXHV�WR�EH�D�VXEMHFW�RI�DFWLYH�UHVHDUFK��7KLV�SDQHO�H[SORUHV LQVWDQFHV�RI�KLWKHUWR�XQUHFRJQL]HG�RU�XQGHU�UHFRJQL]HG�JHQHULF�DI¿QLWLHV��SROLWLFDO�DQG�KLVWRULFDO�SHUVSHFWLYHV��LQWHUWH[WXDOLW\�DQG�ZRUG�SOD\��DQG�UHÀHFWLRQV�RI�FXOWXUDO�FRPPRQSODFHV�LQ�WKLV�SRHWU\�IURP�WKH�HDUO\�7ULXPYLUDO�WR�WKH�ODWH�$XJXVWDQ�SHULRG�

1. Andrew Horne, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&KLFDJR

Horace and K\SRWKrNDL (20 mins.)2. Jeri DeBrohun, %URZQ�8QLYHUVLW\

Revolutionary Horaces (20 mins.)3. Brian McPhee, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1RUWK�&DUROLQD�DW�&KDSHO�+LOO

Cupid, Minerva, and Lyric Consciousness: Two Readings of Horace, 2GHV�3.12 (20 mins.)4. Kevin Muse, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�:LVFRQVLQ±0LOZDXNHH

9DULXP�HW�PXWDELOH�VHPSHU�IHPLQD��$HQHLG 4.569-70 and�2G\VVH\ 15.20-3 (20 mins.)5. Rebecca Katz, +DUYDUG�8QLYHUVLW\

The Rule of Three or IHUH�WULD"�$XWKRULDO�$UWL¿FH�LQ�3URSHUWLXV����������PLQV��6. Nandini Pandey, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�:LVFRQVLQ±0DGLVRQ

Fashion Victim? Domination and the Arts of Coiffure in Augustan Elegy (20 mins.)

8:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. Grand Ballroom ESession #57Family Values: Fathers and Sons in Flavian Literature

Jacques Bromberg, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�3LWWVEXUJK��and Micaela Janan, 'XNH�8QLYHUVLW\, Organizers

$V�WKH�¿UVW�5RPDQ�HPSHURUV�not�WR�VKDUH�-XOLR�&ODXGLDQ�JHQHV��WKH�)ODYLDQV�DFXWHO\�SUHFLSLWDWHG�WKH�TXHVWLRQ�RI�QRQ�EORRGOLQH�VXFFHVVLRQ��2Q�ZKDW�EDVLV�H[DFWO\�GRHV�WKH�HPSHURU�UXOH"� 2XU�SDQHO�LQYHVWLJDWHV�KRZ�)ODYLDQ�DXWKRUV�UHSUHVHQW�IDWKHUV�DQG�VRQV�DV�

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FRQFHSWXDO�PRGHOV�IRU�FKDQJLQJ�UHODWLRQVKLSV�RI�KLHUDUFK\�DQG�SRZHU�� 7KURXJK�FORVH�UHDGLQJV�RI�9DOHULXV�)ODFFXV��6WDWLXV��DQG�ERWK�3OLQ\V��ZH�SURSRVH�WKDW�WKH�HYROXWLRQ�RI�5RPDQ�LPSHULDO�SRZHU�XQGHU�)ODYLDQ�HPSHURUV�LV�SODLQO\�YLVLEOH�LQ�FRQWHPSRUDU\�OLWHUDU\�UHSUHVHQWDWLRQV�RI�SDWHUQLW\�� $IWHU�WKH�-XOLR�&ODXGLDQV��ZKDW�LV�5RPDQ�SRZHU��ZKDW�LV�5RPDQ�SDWHUQLW\��DQG�KRZ�GR�5RPDQ�ZULWHUV�KHOS�UHGH¿QH�ERWK"

Micaela Janan, 'XNH�8QLYHUVLW\Introduction (5 mins.)

1. Neil Bernstein, 2KLR�8QLYHUVLW\ Moralizing Kinship in the Flavian Era: Animal Families in the Elder Pliny (20 mins.)

2. Timothy Stover, )ORULGD�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\ 2SLEXVTXH�XOWUD�QH�FUHGH�SDWHUQLV: Fathers and Sons on the Wrong Side of History in Valerius’ $UJRQDXWLFD (20 mins.)

3. Antonios Augoustakis, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�,OOLQRLV�DW�8UEDQD�&KDPSDLJQ

Male Lament in Statius’ 7KHEDLG (20 mins.)4. Micaela Janan, 'XNH�8QLYHUVLW\

The Father’s Tragedy: Assessing Paternity in 6LOYDH 2.1 (20 mins.)5. Jacques Bromberg, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�3LWWVEXUJK

Pliny’s 7HOHPDFKHLD: Epic and Exemplarity under Vesuvius (20 mins.)

General discussion (40 mins.)

8:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. BorgneSession #58Demystifying AssessmentOrganized by the Education Committee

Eric Dugdale, *XVWDYXV�$GROSKXV�&ROOHJH and Keely Lake, :D\ODQG�$FDGHP\, Organizers

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WLWDWLYH�DQG�TXDOLWDWLYH��IRUPDO�DQG�LQIRUPDO��ORQJLWXGLQDO�DQG�LQVWDQW��7KH�SDSHUV�GHVFULEH�IRUPV�RI�DVVHVVPHQW�WKDW�UDQJH�LQ�VFDOH�IURP�PXOWL�LQVWLWXWLRQDO�SURMHFWV�WR�IRUPV�RI�DVVHVVPHQW�LPSOHPHQWHG�LQ�LQGLYLGXDO�FRXUVHV��DQG�UHSUHVHQW�ERWK�XQLYHUVLW\�DQG�KLJK�VFKRRO�FRQWH[WV��'LVFXVVLRQ�ZLOO�IROORZ�

Eric Dugdale, *XVWDYXV�$GROSKXV�&ROOHJH Introduction: Making Assessment Work for You (10 mins.)

1. David Johnson and Yasuko Taoka, 6RXWKHUQ�,OOLQRLV�8QLYHUVLW\ Assessing Translingual and Transcultural Competence (20 mins.)

2. Jacqueline Carlon, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�0DVVDFKXVHWWV�%RVWRQ

Rethinking the Latin Classroom: Changing the Role of Translation in Assessment (20 mins.)3. Michael Arnush, 6NLGPRUH�&ROOHJH�and Kenny Morrell��5KRGHV�&ROOHJH

The Teagle Assessment Project: A Study of the Learning Outcomes for Majors in Classics (20 mins.)4. Keely Lake, :D\ODQG�$FDGHP\

$VVHVVPHQW�DW�WKH�6HFRQGDU\�/HYHO��'HPDQGV�DQG�%HQH¿WV�����PLQV��5. Ryan Fowler and Amy Singer, )UDQNOLQ�DQG�0DUVKDOO�&ROOHJH

Assessing Learning Outcomes Online: A Longitudinal, Collaborative, Inter-institutional Case Study (20 mins.)

General discussion (40 mins.)

8:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. Waterbury BallroomSession #5940 Years of Goddesses, Whores, Wives, and Slaves: Women’s History in ClassicsOrganized by the Committee on the Status of Women and Minority Groups

Georgia Tsouvala, ,OOLQRLV�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\ and Celia Schultz, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�0LFKLJDQ, Organizers

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77

,Q�KRQRU�RI�WKH���WK�DQQLYHUVDU\�RI�6DUDK�%��3RPHUR\¶V�ODQGPDUN�VWXG\�Goddesses, Whores, Wives, and Slaves��D�GLYHUVH�SDQHO�RI�KLVWRULDQV�DQG�FODVVLFLVWV�ZLOO�UHÀHFW�RQ�DQG�LQYHVWLJDWH�WKH�LPSDFW�RI�WKH�ERRN�DQG�WKH�HYROXWLRQ�RI�WKH�¿HOG�RI�ZRPHQ¶V�KLVWRU\�ZLWKLQ�FODVVLFV�� 7KLV�SDQHO�DGGUHVVHV�WKH�UHFHSWLRQ�RI�3RPHUR\������DQG�WKH�LQWHJUDWLRQ�RI�ZRPHQ�LQWR�WKH�ODUJHU�KLVWRULFDO�QDUUDWLYH��DQG�ZLOO�SUHVHQW�QHZ�UHVHDUFK�RQ�*UDHFR�5RPDQ�ZRPHQ¶V�KLVWRU\��

Dee Clayman, &LW\�8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1HZ�<RUNIntroduction (5 mins.)

1. Ann Hanson, <DOH�8QLYHUVLW\ Following Sarah (20 mins.)

2. Bruce Frier, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�0LFKLJDQ

Roman Law and the Marriage of Underage Girls (20 mins.)3. Sheila Murnaghan, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�3HQQV\OYDQLD

Tragic Realities: What Kind of History Do Fictional Women Let Us Write? (20 mins.)4. Kristina Milnor, %DUQDUG�&ROOHJH

On Knowing and Not Knowing (20 mins.)

General discussion (35 mins.)

8:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. Grand CouteauSession #607KH�,QWHOOHFWXDO�/HJDF\�RI�0��7HUHQWLXV�9DUUR��9DUURQLDQ�,QÀXHQFH�RQ�5RPDQ�6FKRODUVKLS�DQG�/DWLQ�/LWHUDU\�&XOWXUHOrganized by the TLL Fellowship Advisory Board

Matthew M. McGowan, )RUGKDP�8QLYHUVLW\, Organizer

Christopher S. van den Berg, $PKHUVW�&ROOHJHIntroduction (10 mins.)

1. Isaia Crosson, &ROXPELD�8QLYHUVLW\ The $QWLTXLWDWHV�5HUXP�'LYLQDUXP and the Creation of the Roman National Identity (15 mins.)

2. Curtis Dozier, 9DVVDU�&ROOHJH Parodic Pedants: Satire in Quintilian’s ,QVWLWXWLR�2UDWRULD 1.6 and Varro’s 'H�/LQJXD�/DWLQD 8–9 (15 mins.)

3. Scott DiGiulio, %URZQ�8QLYHUVLW\ 0RQXPHQWD�UHUXP�DF�GLVFLSOLQDUXP? Varro’s Reception and the Case of Gellius’ 1RFWHV�$WWLFDH Book 3 (15 mins.)

4. Michele Renee Salzman, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DOLIRUQLD��5LYHUVLGH 9DUUR�DQG�+LV�,QÀXHQFH�LQ�WKH�)RXUWK�DQG�)LIWK�&HQWXU\�/DWLQ�:HVW�����PLQV��

5. Steven J. Lundy, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�7H[DV�DW�$XVWLQ

Varro’s WKHRORJLD�WULSHUWLWD in Augustus and Augustine (15 mins.)

Christopher S. van den Berg, Amherst CollegeRespondent (20 mins.)

General discussion (40 mins.)

8:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. CornetSession #61Ancient Greek and Roman Music: Current Approaches and New PerspectivesOrganized by the International Society for the Study of Greek and Roman Music (MOISA)

Pauline A. LeVen, <DOH�8QLYHUVLW\, Organizer

)RU�LWV�LQDXJXUDO�6&6�SDQHO��02,6$�LQYLWHG�VFKRODUV�LQWHUHVWHG�LQ�DQ\�DVSHFW�RI�DQFLHQW�*UHHN�DQG�5RPDQ�PXVLF�DQG�LWV�FXOWXUDO�KHULWDJH�WR�FRQWULEXWH�SDSHUV�LOOXVWUDWLQJ�FXUUHQW�DSSURDFKHV�WR�DQFLHQW�PXVLF��XQGHUVWRRG�LQ�LWV�ODUJHVW�VHQVH��DQG�QHZ�SHUVSHFWLYHV��LQFOXGLQJ�WUDQV�GLVFLSOLQDU\��RQ�WKH�WRSLF��7KH�SDQHO�LOOXVWUDWHV�WKH�YLEUDQF\�DQG�GLYHUVLW\�RI�VWXGLHV�RQ�*UHHN�DQG�5RPDQ�PXVLF�DQG�H[DPLQHV�WKH�LQWHUDFWLRQV�EHWZHHQ�PXVLF�DQG�RWKHU�GLPHQVLRQV�RI�DQFLHQW�FXOWXUH��LQ�SDUWLFXODU�WKH�YLVXDO�DUWV��DQFLHQW�VFLHQFH��DQG�SHUIRUPDQFH�SUDFWLFHV�

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Pauline A. LeVen, <DOH�8QLYHUVLW\Introduction (10 mins.)

1. Sheramy Bundrick��8QLYHUVLW\�RI�6RXWK�)ORULGD�6W��3HWHUVEXUJ

From Athens to Tarquinia: A Female Musician in Context (20 mins.)2. Sarah Olsen, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DOLIRUQLD��%HUNHOH\

Kinesthetic FKRUHLD: Music, Dance, and Memory in Ancient Greece (20 mins.)3. John Franklin, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�9HUPRQW

East Faces of Early Greek Music (20 mins.)4. Lauren Curtis, %DUG�&ROOHJH

Catullan FKRUHLD: Reinventing the Chorus in Roman Poetry (20 mins.)5. Daniel Walden, +DUYDUG�8QLYHUVLW\

Musica Prisca Caput: Ancient Greek Music Theory, Vitruvius, and Enharmonicism in Sixteenth-Century Italy (20 mins.)

General discussion (30 mins.)

8:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. Grand Ballroom DSession #62Making Meaning from Data (Joint SCS/AIA Panel)Organized by the Digital Classics Association

Neil Coffee, 8QLYHUVLW\�DW�%XIIDOR��6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1HZ�<RUN� Organizer

³%LJ�GDWD´�LV�EHFRPLQJ�LQFUHDVLQJO\�VLJQL¿FDQW�LQ�FODVVLFV��$UFKDHRORJLVWV�FDQ�QRZ�JHQHUDWH�YDVW�DPRXQWV�RI�GLJLWDO�LQIRUPDWLRQ��2QOLQH�UHSRVLWRULHV�IRU�WKH�VWXG\�RI�JHRJUDSK\��SURVRSRJUDSK\��SRHWU\��DQG�RWKHU�DUHDV�FRQWLQXH�WR�DSSHDU��DORQJ�ZLWK�QHZ�SURWRFROV�DQG�WRROV�IRU�H[SORULQJ�WKHP��7KLV�SDQHO�DGGUHVVHV�WKH�FKDQJLQJ�UHVHDUFK�HQYLURQPHQW�ZLWK�SUHVHQWDWLRQV�WKDW�VKRZ�KRZ�ZH�FDQ�PDNH�PHDQLQJ�IURP�RXU�GDWD��DQG�VR�GHYHORS�QHZ�DQG�LQWHJUDWHG�SHUVSHFWLYHV�RQ�WKH�FODVVLFDO�ZRUOG�

1. Elton Barker, 7KH�2SHQ�8QLYHUVLW\; Pau de Soto, 7KH�8QLYHUVLW\�RI�6RXWKDPSWRQ; Leif Isaksen, 7KH�8QLYHUVLW\�RI�6RXWKDPS-

ton; and Rainer Simon, 7KH�$XVWULDQ�,QVWLWXWH�RI�7HFKQRORJ\ What Do You Do with a Million Links? (20 mins.)

2. Marie-Claire Beaulieu, J. Matthew Harrington, and Bridget Almas, 7XIWV�8QLYHUVLW\ Beyond Rhetoric: The Correlation of Data, Syntax, and Sense in Literary Analysis (20 mins.)

3. Francesco Mambrini, 'HXWVFKHV�$UFKDHRORJLVFKHV�,QVWLWXW�%HUOLQ, and Marco Passarotti, 8QLYHUVLWj�&DWWROLFD�GHO�6DFUR�&XR-

UH��0LODQ Trees into Nets: Network-based Approaches to Ancient Greek Treebanks (20 mins.)

4. Rachel Opitz, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�$UNDQVDV; James Newhard, &ROOHJH�RI�&KDUOHVWRQ; Marcello Mogetta, )UHLH�8QLYHUVLWlW�%HUOLQ; Tyler Johnson, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�$UNDQVDV; Samantha Lash, %URZQ�8QLYHUVLW\; and Matt Naglak, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�0LFKLJDQ

Inside-out and Outside-in: Improving and Extending Digital Models for Archaeological Interpretation (20 mins.)5. Joseph P. Dexter, +DUYDUG�8QLYHUVLW\; Matteo Romanello, 'HXWVFKHV�$UFKDHRORJLVFKHV�,QVWLWXW�%HUOLQ; Pramit Chaudhuri,

'DUWPRXWK�&ROOHJH; Tathagata Dasgupta, +DUYDUG�8QLYHUVLW\; and Nilesh Tripuraneni, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DPEULGJH Enhancing and Extending the Digital Study of Intertextuality (20 mins.)

Neil Coffee, 8QLYHUVLW\�DW�%XIIDOR��6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1HZ�<RUN�Respondent (10 mins.)

General discussion (40 mins.)

8:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. Rhythms IIISession #63Culture and Society in Greek, Roman, and Byzantine EgyptOrganized by the American Society of Papyrologists

Todd Hickey, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DOLIRUQLD��%HUNHOH\, Organizer

7KLV�\HDU¶V�SDQHO�ZHOO�LOOXVWUDWHV�WKH�EUHDGWK�RI�FXUUHQW�SDS\URORJLFDO�UHVHDUFK��,W�FRPPHQFHV�ZLWK�D�SDSHU�WKDW�FKDOOHQJHV�XV��WKURXJK�D�FDUHIXO�DQDO\VLV�RI�(J\SWLDQ�IXQHUDU\�WH[WV��WR�UHWKLQN�RXU�FRQFHSWLRQV�RI�WUDQVODWLRQ��7KLV�LV�IROORZHG�E\�D�QRYHO�LQWHUSUHWDWLRQ�RI�D�

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PHOHWƝ�RQ�D�3WROHPDLF�SDS\UXV�WKDW�\LHOGV�DQ�DGGLWLRQDO�VRXUFH�IRU�WKH�VXLFLGH�RI�'HPRVWKHQHV��6RFLR�KLVWRULFDO�V\QWKHVHV�RI�DVVHP-

EODJHV�RI�GRFXPHQWDU\�WH[WV�IURP�WKH�)D\XP�GHSUHVVLRQ�DUH�WKH�REMHFW�RI�WKH�WKLUG�DQG�IRXUWK�FRQWULEXWLRQV��7KH�¿IWK�SDSHU�PRYHV�LQWR�WKH�³VXEOLWHUDU\�´�SURYLGLQJ�D�FORVH�UHDGLQJ�DQG�FRQWH[WXDOL]DWLRQ�RI�D�&KULVWLDQ�DPXOHW��7KH�SDQHO�FORVHV�ZLWK�WKH�SUHVHQWDWLRQ�RI�D�QHZ�GRFXPHQW�IURP�D�ZHOO�NQRZQ�ODWH�DQWLTXH�DUFKLYH�IURP�Oxyrhynchus.

1. Emily Cole, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DOLIRUQLD��/RV�$QJHOHV Translation as a Means of Textual Composition in the Bilingual Funerary Papyri 5KLQG I and II (25 mins.)

2. Davide Amendola, 6FXROD�1RUPDOH�6XSHULRUH�GL�3LVD

The Account of Demosthenes’ Death in 3�%HURO��LQY� 13045 (25 mins.)3. Micaela Langellotti, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DOLIRUQLD��%HUNHOH\

Village Elites in Roman Egypt: The Case of First-Century Tebtunis (25 mins.)4. W. Graham Claytor and Elizabeth Nabney, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�0LFKLJDQ

Child Labor in Greco-Roman Egypt: New Texts from the Archive of Harthotes (25 mins.)5. Michael Zellmann-Rohrer, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DOLIRUQLD��%HUNHOH\

A Christian Amulet in Context: Report on a Re-edition and Study of 3�2[\. VIII 1151 (25 mins.)6. C. Michael Sampson, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�0DQLWRED

A New Text from the Dossier of the Descendants of Flavius Eulogius (20 mins.)

Business meeting (35 mins.)

EIGHTH SESSION FOR THE READING OF PAPERS11:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. CornetSession #64Charioteering and Footracing in the Greek ImaginaryDavid Potter, 7KH�8QLYHUVLW\�RI�0LFKLJDQ, Presider

%HJLQQLQJ�ZLWK�WKH�IXQHUDO�JDPHV�RI�3DWURFOXV�LQ�WKH�Iliad��WKH�LPDJH�RI�WKH�FKDULRW�DQG�WKH�FKDULRW�UDFH�KDV�SOD\HG�DQ�LPSRUWDQW�UROH�LQ�*UHHN�WKRXJKW�� 7KH�SDSHUV�LQ�WKLV�VHVVLRQ�H[SORUH�WKH�KLVWRU\�DQG�YDULDWLRQ�RI�WKHVH�LPDJHV�LQ�D�QXPEHU�RI�DQFLHQW�*UHHN�JHQUHV��

1. E. Christian Kopff, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&RORUDGR�%RXOGHU The Race at Aristotle, 5KHWRULF 3.9.1409a32-34 VWDGLRQ�or GLDXORV? (20 mins.)

2. Eric Dodson-Robinson, :HVW�&KHVWHU�8QLYHUVLW\�RI�3HQQV\OYDQLD

Medea’s Exit: Dramatic Necessity through Inverted Ritual (20 mins.)3. Bill Beck, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�3HQQV\OYDQLD

The Turning Post and the Finish Line: False Boundaries in the ,OLDG (20 mins.)4. Olga Levaniouk, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�:DVKLQJWRQ

Run for Your Life: Footraces, Chariots and the Myth of Hippodameia (20 mins.)

11:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. Bayside CSession #65The Intellectual Culture of the Second to Fourth Centuries CE: Christians, Jews, Philosophers, and Sophists

Kristina Ann Meinking, (ORQ�8QLYHUVLW\ and Jared Secord,�8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&KLFDJR� Organizers

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1. Allan Georgia, )RUGKDP�8QLYHUVLW\ Style, Posture and Deportment in the Frame Narrative of Justin Martyr’s 'LDORJXH�ZLWK�7U\SKR��D�-HZ (25 mins.)

2. Jared Secord,�8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&KLFDJR Diogenes Laertius and Cross-Cultural Intellectual Debates in the Third Century (25 mins.)

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3. Kristina Ann Meinking, (ORQ�8QLYHUVLW\ Lactantius’s Plato: Rethinking the Role of Philosophers in 'H�LUD�'HL (25 mins.)

4. Matthew Lootens, )RUGKDP�8QLYHUVLW\ 1DPLQJ�*RG��'H¿QLQJ�+HUHWLFV��DQG�WKH�'HYHORSPHQW�RI�D�7H[WXDO�&XOWXUH��*UHJRU\�RI�1\VVD�DQG�WKH�(XQRPLDQ�&RQWURYHU-sy (25 mins.)

Kendra Eshleman, %RVWRQ�&ROOHJHResponse (10 mins.)

General discussion (10 mins.)

11:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. Rhythms IIISession #66ȝ઼ȜȜȠȞ�țĮ�ȝ઼ȜȜȠȞ��+RZ�*UHHN�,QVWUXFWLRQ�&DQ�5HDFK�0RUH�6WXGHQWV�DW�0RUH�/HYHOV

Karen Rosenbecker, /R\ROD�8QLYHUVLW\�1HZ�2UOHDQV, Organizer

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1. Karen Rosenbecker, /R\ROD�8QLYHUVLW\�1HZ�2UOHDQV Stronger Beginnings: Teaching First-Semester Greek in a Differentiated Classroom (20 mins.)

2. Lauri Reitzammer and Mitch Pentzer, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&RORUDGR�%RXOGHU Beginning Classical Greek Online (20 mins.)

3. Velvet Yates, 8QLYHUVLW\ RI�)ORULGD

Teaching Graduate-Level Ancient Greek Online (20 mins.)4. Albert Watanabe, /RXLVLDQD�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\�

The 2014 College Greek Exam (20 mins.)

General discussion (5 mins.)

11:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. Grand Ballroom ESession #673UR¿WV�DQG�/RVVHV�LQ�$QFLHQW�*UHHN�:DUIDUH

Matthew Trundle, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�$XFNODQG��1HZ�=HDODQG and Michael S. Leese, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1HZ�+DPSVKLUH� Organizers

1. Matthew Trundle, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�$XFNODQG��1HZ�=HDODQG )XQGLQJ�*UHHN�:DUIDUH��)URP�5HFLSURFLW\�DQG�5HGLVWULEXWLRQ�WR�3UR¿W�DQG�:DJHV�����PLQV��

2. Michael S. Leese, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1HZ�+DPSVKLUH $WKHQLDQ�*HQHUDOV��3ULYDWH�3UR¿W�DQG�WKH�3UREOHP�RI�$JHQF\�����PLQV��

3. Ellen Millender, 5HHG�&ROOHJH The Perils of Plunder: Sparta’s Uneasy Relationship with the Spoils of War (20 mins.)

4. Graham Oliver, %URZQ�8QLYHUVLW\ :DU��3UR¿W��/RVV��DQG�WKH�+HOOHQLVWLF�*UHHN�3ROLV��$�%DODQFH�6KHHW�����PLQV��

General discussion (20 mins.)

11:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. Grand CouteauSession #68The Classics and Early AnthropologyOrganized by the Committee on Classical Tradition and Reception

Emily Varto, 'DOKRXVLH�8QLYHUVLW\, Organizer

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1. Eliza Gettel, +DUYDUG�8QLYHUVLW\ Culture and Classics: Edward Burnett Tylor and Romanization (20 mins.)

2. Melissa Funke, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�%ULWLVK�&ROXPELD

Colorblind: The Use of Homeric Greek in Cultural Linguistics (20 mins.)3. Franco De Angelis, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�%ULWLVK�&ROXPELD

Anthropology and the Creation of the Classical Other (20 mins.)4. Maurizio Bettini, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�6LHQD and William Short, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�7H[DV�DW�6DQ�$QWRQLR

Towards a New Comparativism in Classics (20 mins.)

General discussion (20 mins.)

11:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. Waterbury BallroomSession #69Historia Proxima Poetis: The Intertextual Practices of Historical Poetry

Lauren Donovan Ginsberg, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&LQFLQQDWL, Organizer

Lauren Donovan Ginsberg, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&LQFLQQDWLIntroduction (10 mins.)

1. Thomas Biggs, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�*HRUJLD

4XLD�YLGHWXU�KLVWRULDP�FRPSRVXLVVH��QRQ�SRHPD: Roman Epic as Roman History (20 mins.)2. Suzanne Abrams-Rebillard, &RUQHOO�8QLYHUVLW\

Gregory of Nazianzus’ 'H�YLWD�VXD (3RHPD 2.1.11): Tragedy’s Emotion and Historiography (20 mins.)3. Salvador Bartera,�0LVVLVVLSSL�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\�and Claire Stocks, 5DGERXG�8QLYHUVLW\�1LMPHJHQ

Epic Manipulation: Restructuring Livy’s Hannibalic War in Silius Italicus’ 3XQLFD (20 mins.)4. Scott Farrington, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�0LDPL

Poetry in Polybius: The Source Material of Hellenistic Historiography (20 mins.)

General Discussion (5 mins.)

11:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. BorgneSession #70Greek Shamanism Reconsidered

Vayos Liapis, 2SHQ�8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&\SUXV and Yulia Ustinova, %HQ�*XULRQ�8QLYHUVLW\�RI�WKH�1HJHY, Organizers

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RGV��LQ�SDUWLFXODU�LQWHUGLVFLSOLQDU\�DQG�FRPSDUDWLYH�DSSURDFKHV��,W�GHDOV�ZLWK�VXFK�WRSLFV�DV�µVKDPDQLF¶�HOHPHQWV�LQ�WKH�FXOW�DQG�P\WK�RI�WKH�*UHHNV�DQG�WKH�0LQRDQV��µVKDPDQLF¶�H[SHULHQFHV�RI�*UHHN�WKLQNHUV��*UHHN�µVKDPDQLVP¶�DQG�SRHWU\��DQG�PHWKRGRORJLFDO�LVVXHV�LQ�WKH�VWXG\�RI�*UHHN�µVKDPDQLVP�¶�(DFK�SDSHU�ZLOO�EH�IROORZHG�E\���PLQXWHV�RI�GLVFXVVLRQ�

Yulia Ustinova, %HQ�*XULRQ�8QLYHUVLW\�RI�WKH�1HJHYIntroduction (10 mins.)

1. Parker Bradley Croshaw, &RQFRUGLD�8QLYHUVLW\ Crossing Over: Greek Shamanism and Indo-European Cosmological Belief (20 mins.)

2. Caroline Jane Tully, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�0HOERXUQH Trance-former/Performer: Shamanic Elements in Late Bronze Age Minoan Cult (20 mins.)

3. Kenneth Thomas Munro Mackenzie, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�2[IRUG� Parmenides’ 3URHP: Divine Inspiration as a Form of Expression (20 mins.)

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4. Amir Yeruham, 7HO�$YLY�8QLYHUVLW\ Terpander and the Acoustics of Greek Shamanism (20 mins.)

Vayos Liapis, 2SHQ�8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&\SUXVRespondent (10 mins.)

11:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. Grand Ballroom DSession #71Travel, Travelers and Traveling in Late Antique Literary CultureOrganized by the Society for Late Antiquity

Cam Grey, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�3HQQV\OYDQLD, Organizer

1DUUDWLYHV�RI�WUDYHO�XQGHUSLQ�D�PXOWLWXGH�RI�JHQUHV�DQG�WH[WV�LQ�ODWH�DQWLTXLW\��2XU�VRXUFHV�DOVR�VXJJHVW�WKDW�DQ�H[WUDRUGLQDU\�YDULHW\�RI�LQGLYLGXDOV�ZDONHG�RU�URGH�WKH�URDGV�RI�WKH�5RPDQ�ZRUOG�LQ�WKH�SHULRG��QRWZLWKVWDQGLQJ�WKH�GDQJHUV�WKDW��ZH�DUH�WROG��DWWHQGHG�VXFK�WUDYHO��7KH�SDSHUV�LQ�WKLV�VHVVLRQ�HQJDJH�ZLWK�D�UDQJH�RI�GLIIHUHQW�OLWHUDU\�WH[WV�DQG�PDWHULDO�REMHFWV�WR�H[SORUH�TXHVWLRQV�DERXW�WKH�UROH�RI�WUDYHO�DV�D�VWUXFWXULQJ�GHYLFH�IRU�DXWKRUV�DQG�WKHLU�FRPPXQLWLHV�WR�HPSOR\��D�PHWDSKRU�IRU�WKHP�WR�DFFHVV��DQG�D�WRRO�IRU�WKHP�WR�XVH�LQ�VKDSLQJ�WKHLU�LQGLYLGXDO�DQG�FROOHFWLYH�LGHQWLWLHV�

Cam Grey, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�3HQQV\OYDQLDIntroduction (5 mins.)

1. Colin Whiting, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DOLIRUQLD��5LYHUVLGH Exile and Identity: The Origins of the Luciferian Community (20 mins.)

2. Alex Petkas, 3ULQFHWRQ�8QLYHUVLW\ Philosophy and Travel in the Letters of Synesius (20 mins.)

3. David Natal Villazala, $XVWULDQ�$FDGHP\�RI�6FLHQFHV Symbolic Territories: Relic Translation and Aristocratic Competition in Victricius of Rouen (20 mins.)

Edward Watts, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DOLIRUQLD��6DQ�'LHJRRespondent (20 mins.)

General discussion (20 mins.)

11:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. Bayside BSession #72Greek and Latin LinguisticsOrganized by the Society for the Study of Greek and Latin Language and Linguistics

Jeremy Rau, +DUYDUG�8QLYHUVLW\, Benjamin Fortson, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�0LFKLJDQ, and Timothy Barnes, +DUYDUG�8QLYHUVLW\, Organizers

1. Anthony Yates, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DOLIRUQLD��/RV�$QJHOHV Motivating Osthoff’s Law in Latin (20 mins.)

2. Alexander Dale, 1HZ�<RUN�8QLYHUVLW\ The Prehistory of Eternity (20 mins.)

3. Jesse Lundquist, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DOLIRUQLD��/RV�$QJHOHV *UHHN��ıȚ��$EVWUDFWV�DQG�WKH�5HFRQVWUXFWLRQ�RI�3URWHURNLQHWLF� �Wt��LQ�3URWR�,QGR�(XURSHDQ�����PLQV��

4. Alexander Nikolaev, %RVWRQ�8QLYHUVLW\ *UHHN�İੂĮȝİȞ�����PLQV��

General discussion (5 mins.)

NINTH SESSION FOR THE READING OF PAPERS1:45 p.m. - 4:15 p.m. Grand Ballroom ESession #73Homer: Poetics and Exegesis

Lillian Doherty��8QLYHUVLW\�RI�0DU\ODQG��&ROOHJH�3DUN, Presider

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1. Chiara Bozzone, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DOLIRUQLD��/RV�$QJHOHV The Death of Achilles and the Meaning and Antiquity of Formulas in Homer (20 mins.)

2. Tyler Flatt, +DUYDUG�8QLYHUVLW\ The Limits of Lament: Grief, Consummation, and Homeric Narrative (20 mins.)

3. John Esposito, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1RUWK�&DUROLQD�DW�&KDSHO�+LOO Athena KHWDLURV: The Replacement of Warrior-Companionship in the 2G\VVH\ (20 mins.)

4. Aara Suksi, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�:HVWHUQ�2QWDULR

The Shield and the Bow: Arms, Authority and Identity in the ,OLDG and the 2G\VVH\ (20 mins.)5. George Gazis��'XUKDP�8QLYHUVLW\

The Way to Ithaca Lies Through Hades: Odysseus’ nostos and the 1HN\LD�(20 mins.)6. Benjamin Sammons, 1HZ�<RUN�8QLYHUVLW\

Exegetic Backgrounds to Aristotle’s +RPHULF�3UREOHPV (20 mins.)

1:45 p.m. - 4:15 p.m. CornetSession #74Comedy and Comic Receptions

T. Davina McClain, 6FKRODUV¶�&ROOHJH�DW�1RUWKZHVWHUQ�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\, Presider

7KLV�SDQHO�H[DPLQHV�WKH�FDSDFLW\�RI�DQFLHQW�FRPHG\��*UHHN�DQG�5RPDQ��2OG�DQG�1HZ��WR�GH¿QH�LWVHOI�WKURXJK�GLDORJXH�ZLWK�RWKHU�OLWHU-DU\�JHQUHV�DQG�WR�DGDSW�LWVHOI�WR�QHZ�VRFLDO�DQG�KLVWRULFDO�VLWXDWLRQV��7KH�PDWHULDO�FRQVLGHUHG�UDQJHV�IURP�WKH�¿IWK�FHQWXU\�%&�WR�WKH�ODWH�WZHQWLHWK�FHQWXU\�DQG�LQFOXGHV�SKLORVRSKLFDO�DV�ZHOO�DV�OLWHUDU\�UHFHSWLRQV�RI�HDUOLHU�FRPHG\�

1. Sebastiana Nervegna, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�6\GQH\ Sophocles, Polemon and Fifth-Century Comedy (20 mins.)

2. Craig Jendza, 7KH�2KLR�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\ Paracomic Costuming: Euripides’ Helen as a Response to Aristophanes’ $FKDUQLDQV (20 mins.)

3. Al Duncan, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�8WDK

Boogeymen in the Playwright’s Closet: Mormolukeia, Generic Aesthetics, and Adolescent Outreach in Old Comedy (20 mins.)

4. Patrick Dombrowski, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1RUWK�&DUROLQD�DW�&KDSHO�+LOO Spectator Courts: Metatheater and Program in Terence’s Prologues (20 mins.)

5. Mathias Hanses, &ROXPELD�8QLYHUVLW\ Lucretius at the Ludi: Comedy and Other Drama in Book Four of 'H�5HUXP�1DWXUD (20 mins.)

6. Rodrigo Gonçalves��8QLYHUVLGDGH�)HGHUDO�GR�3DUDQi��%UD]LO� Alfonso Sastre’s /RV�'LRVHV�\�ORV�&XHUQRV (1995) as a Rewriting of Plautus’ $PSKLWUXR (20 mins.)

1:45 p.m. - 4:15 p.m. Rhythms IIISession #75War, Slavery, and Society in the Ancient World

Jonathan Edmondson,�<RUN�8QLYHUVLW\, Presider

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1. David Yates, 0LOOVDSV�&ROOHJH Remembering to Forget: The Battle of Oenoe (20 mins.)

2. Aaron Beek, University of Minnesota The Pirate Connection: Rome’s Servile Wars and Eastern Campaigns (20 mins.)

3. Grace Gillies, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DOLIRUQLD��/RV�$QJHOHV Staging Revolt: Theater in the Sicilian Slave Wars (20 mins.)

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4. Matthieu Abgrall, 6WDQIRUG�8QLYHUVLW\ Handling Slaves in The Wake of War: A Closer Look at the Roman Slave Supply (20 mins.)

5. Graeme Ward��0F0DVWHU�8QLYHUVLW\ “By Any Other Name” – Disgrace, Defeat and the Loss of Legionary History (20 mins.)

6. Lee E. Patterson, (DVWHUQ�,OOLQRLV�8QLYHUVLW\ The Armenian Factor in Constantine’s Foreign Policy (20 mins.)

1:45 p.m. - 4:15 p.m. Bayside BSession #76Civic Responsibility

Craig Gibson, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�,RZD��3UHVLGHU

,Q�DQFLHQW�*UHHFH�DQG�5RPH�DOO�IUHH�PHQ�ZHUH�H[SHFWHG�WR�SOD\�VRPH�UROH�LQ�WKH�SROLWLFDO�OLIH�RI�WKH�FRPPXQLW\�� 3DSHUV�LQ�WKLV�SDQHO�FRQVLGHU�GLIIHUHQW�DVSHFWV�RI�D�FLWL]HQ¶V�GXWLHV�DQG�KRZ�EHVW�WR�LQFXOFDWH�WKH�UHTXLVLWH�VHQVH�RI�UHVSRQVLELOLW\�LQ�WKH�\RXQJ�PHQ�RI�D�FRP-

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1. Mitchell Parks, %XFNQHOO�8QLYHUVLW\ Isocrates’ Letter to Archidamus in its Literary Context (20 mins.)

2. Mirko Canevaro��7KH�8QLYHUVLW\�RI�(GLQEXUJK

'HPRVWKHQLF�,QÀXHQFHV�LQ�(DUO\�5KHWRULFDO�(GXFDWLRQ��+HOOHQLVWLF�UKHWRUHV and Athenian Imagination (20 mins.)3. David J. Riesbeck, 5LFH�8QLYHUVLW\

Aristotle on Community and Exchange (20 mins.)4. David West, %RVWRQ�8QLYHUVLW\

The Rhetoric of Cicero’s ODXGDWLR�VDSLHQWLDH: 'H�/HJLEXV 1.58-62 (20 mins.)5. Lydia Spielberg, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�3HQQV\OYDQLD

1RQ�XW�KLVWRULFXP�VHG�XW�RUDWRUHP: The FRQWLR and Sallust’s Historiography (20 mins.)6. Craig Gibson, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�,RZD

Artistic License and Civic Responsibility in Greek and Roman Declamation (20 mins.)

1:45 p.m. - 4:15 p.m. Waterbury BallroomSession #77Innovative Encounters between Ancient Religious Traditions

Peter Struck, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�3HQQV\OYDQLD, Presider

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1. Kirk R. Sanders, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�,OOLQRLV�DW�8UEDQD�&KDPSDLJQ

Why Was Socrates Charged with “Introducing Religious Innovations”? (20 mins.)2. Frederick E. Brenk, 3RQWL¿FDO�%LEOLFDO�,QVWLWXWH

Animals and Worship in the Temple of Isis at Pompeii (20 mins.)3. Timothy Heckenlively, %D\ORU�8QLYHUVLW\

Constantine on the “Rise” of Adam (20 mins.)4. Thomas Miller, 'HHS�6SULQJV�&ROOHJH

Monica as Socrates in Augustine’s &RQIHVVLRQV��Book 9 (20 mins.)5. Byron MacDougall, %URZQ�8QLYHUVLW\

How to Read Isis: Apuleius and Plato’s Myth of Er (20 mins.)6. Jon Solomon��8QLYHUVLW\�RI�,OOLQRLV

Josephus and Judah Ben-Hur (20 mins.)

S o c i e t y f o r c l a S S i c a l S t u d i e S � a n n u a l m e e t i n g

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1:45 p.m. - 4:15 p.m. Grand Ballroom DSession #78Ancient Books: Material and Discursive Interactions

William Johnson, 'XNH�8QLYHUVLW\, Presider

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New Readings in the Derveni Papyrus (20 mins.)2. Christopher Brunelle, 6W��2ODI�&ROOHJH

Alexander’s Persian Pillow (20 mins.)3. James Patterson, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�7H[DV�DW�$XVWLQ

The Hippocratic &ULWLFDO�'D\V: Texts and Education in Greek Late Antiquity (20 mins.)4. Justin Stover, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�2[IRUG

A New Work by Apuleius (20 mins.)5. Timothy Haase, :KHDWRQ�&ROOHJH

A “Performative” Lacuna in Petronius’s Affair of Circe and Encolpius (6DW\ULFRQ�132.1-2) (20 mins.)

1:45 p.m. - 4:15 p.m. Bayside CSession #79Language and Linguistics: Lexical, Syntactical, and Philosophical Aspects

Brian Krostenko, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1RWUH�'DPH, Presider

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1. Hans Bork, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�&DOLIRUQLD��/RV�$QJHOHV Not-So-Impersonal Passives in Plautus (20 mins.)

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Listening to the ORJRV��KDUPRQLD and Syntax in Heraclitus (20 mins.)5. Charles George, 5XWJHUV��7KH�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\�RI�1HZ�-HUVH\

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1:45 p.m. - 4:15 p.m. BorgneSession #80Vergil, Elegy, and EpigramOrganized by the Vergilian Society

Richard F. Thomas, +DUYDUG�8QLYHUVLW\, Organizer

1. Aaron Seider, &ROOHJH�RI�WKH�+RO\�&URVV Poetic Constraints: Gallus and the Limits of Generic Exploration in the (FORJXHV (15 mins.)

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1:45 p.m. - 4:15 p.m. Grand Couteau Session #81Between Fact and Fiction in Ancient Biographical WritingOrganized by the International Plutarch Society

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1. Ayelet Haimson Lushkov, 8QLYHUVLW\�RI�7H[DV�DW�$XVWLQ

Death by a Thousand Sources: Biographical Fragmentation and Authorial LQYHQWLR in Livy’s $8& (20 mins.)2. Eran Almagor, ,QGHSHQGHQW�6FKRODU

The Use and Abuse of History: Xenophon and Plutarch’s /LYHV Revisited (20 mins.)3. Molly Pryzwansky, 'XNH�8QLYHUVLW\�and�1RUWK�&DUROLQD�6WDWH�8QLYHUVLW\

The Art of Suetonius’ Nero: Focus, (In)Consistency and Character (20 mins.)4. Irene Peirano Garrison, <DOH�8QLYHUVLW\

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Returning to Novelistic Biography with Sesonchosis (20 mins.)

S o c i e t y f o r c l a S S i c a l S t u d i e S � a n n u a l m e e t i n g

87

Graeco-Roman Archives from the FayumK. VANDORPE, W. CLARYSSE, H. VERRETH2015 – Collectanea Hellenistica 6 – ca 500 p. – Forthcoming – ISBN 978-90-429-3162-6

Creating Severan RomeThe Architecture and Self-Image of L. Septimius Severus (A.D. 193-211)S. LUSNIA2014 – Collection Latomus 345 – 293 p. – 59 EURO – ISBN 978-2-87031-292-6

Religion and Competition in AntiquityD. ENGELS, P. VAN NUFFELEN (eds)2014 – Collection Latomus 343 – 307 p. – 51 EURO – ISBN 978-2-87031-290-2

Sylloge Nummorum Graecorum: State Pushkin Museum of Fine ArtsCoins of the Black Sea Region. Part II: Ancient Coins of the Black Sea LittoralS. KOVALENKO2015 – Colloquia Antiqua 11 – X-51 p. – Forthcoming – ISBN 978-90-429-2922-7

The Periphery of the Classical World in Ancient Geography and CartographyA.V. PODOSSINOV (ed.)2014 – Colloquia Antiqua 12 – XII-164 p. – 68 EURO – ISBN 978-90-429-2923-4

Corpus of Byzantine Church Mosaic Pavements in Israel and the Palestinian TerritoriesA.M. MADDEN2015 – Colloquia Antiqua 13 – XVI-242 p. – Forthcoming – ISBN 978-90-429-3061-2

Hellenistic Poetry in ContextM.A. HARDER, R.F. REGTUIT, G.C. WAKKER (eds)2014 – Hellenistica Groningana 20 – X-349 p. – 64 EURO – ISBN 978-90-429-2985-2

Production and Prosperity in the Theodosian PeriodI. JACOBS (ed.)2014 – Interdisciplinary Studies in Ancient Culture and Religion 14 – XVI-397 p. – 67 EURO – ISBN 978-90-429-3012-4

Children and Family in Late AntiquityLife, Death and InteractionC. LAES, K. MUSTAKALLIO, V. VUOLANTO (eds)2015 – Interdisciplinary Studies in Ancient Culture and Religion 15 – VI-374 p. – 72 EURO – ISBN 978-90-429-3135-0

Inside and OutInteractions between Rome and the Peoples on the Arabian and Egyptian Frontiers in Late AntiquityJ.H.F. DIJKSTRA, G. FISHER (eds)2014 – Late Antique History and Religion 8 – XVIII-481 p. – 94 EURO – ISBN 978-90-429-3124-4

Identifiers and Identification Methods in the Ancient WorldLegal Documents in Ancient Societies IIIM. DEPAUW, S. COUSSEMENT (eds)2014 – Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 229 – VI-286 p. – 84 EURO – ISBN 978-90-429-2983-8

On the Fringe of CommentaryMetatextuality in Ancient Near Eastern and Ancient Mediterranean CulturesS.H. AUFRÈRE, P.S. ALEXANDER, Z. PLEŠE (eds)2014 – Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 232 – XX-472 p. – 94 EURO – ISBN 978-90-429-3073-5

The Age of the Successors and the Creation of the Hellenistic Kingdoms (323-276 B.C.)H. HAUBEN, A. MEEUS (eds)2014 – Studia Hellenistica 53 – XVI-733 p. – 105 EURO – ISBN 978-90-429-2958-6

Double Names and Elite Strategy in Roman EgyptY. BROUX2015 – Studia Hellenistica 54 – ca 320 p. – Forthcoming – ISBN 978-90-429-3125-1

JournalsAncient SocietyByzantionLatomusRevue des études byzantinesP

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88

PLUTARCH THE RISE OF ROME Translated by Ian Scott-Kilvert, Christopher Pelling, and Jeffrey Tatum Introduction by Jeffrey Tatum

THE AGE OFALEXANDERTranslated by Ian Scott-Kilvert and Timothy E. Duff Introduction and Notes by Timothy E. Duff

JOHN MINFORD, translator I CHINGThe Essential Translation of the Ancient Chinese Oracle and Book of WisdomIntroduction and Commentary by the translator

NEIL MacGREGOR A HISTORY OF THE WORLD IN 100 OBJECTS

MO ZITHE BOOK OF MASTER MOEdited and Translated with Notes and an Introduction by Ian Johnston

DANIEL KLEINTRAVELS WITH EPICURUSA Journey to a Greek Island in Search of a Fulfilled Life

JERRY BROTTON A HISTORY OF THE WORLD IN 12 MAPS

ARMAND MARIE LEROITHE LAGOONHow Aristotle Invented Science

HERODOTUS THE HISTORIESTranslated by Tom HollandIntroduction by Paul Cartledge

DIARMAID MacCULLOCHSILENCEA Christian History

TACITUS ANNALSTranslated with an Introduction by Cynthia Damon

CICERO ON LIVING AND DYING WELLTranslated with an Introduction and Notes by Thomas Habinek

ROBERT MacFARLANE THE OLD WAYSA Journey on Foot

THOMAS BULFINCHBULFINCH’S MYTHOLOGYThe Classic Introduction to Myth and Legend —Complete and Unabridged

JAMES CARROLLCHRIST ACTUALLYThe Son of God for the Secular Age

CONFUCIUSTHE ANALECTSTranslated with an Introduction and Notes by Annping Chin

LESLEY HAZLETONTHE FIRST MUSLIMThe Story of Muhammad

THOMAS F. MADDENVENICEA New History

EPICURUSTHE ART OF HAPPINESSTranslated with an Introduction and Commentaries by George K. StrodachForeword by Daniel Klein

PAUL JOHNSONSOCRATESA Man for Our Times

GEORGE MARTINTHE BATTLE OF THE FROGS AND THE MICEA Homeric FableIllustrated by Fred Gwynne

KATE COOPERBAND OF ANGELSThe Forgotten World of Early Christian Women

SIMON PRICE and PETER THONEMANNTHE BIRTH OF CLASSICAL EUROPE A History from Troy to Augustine

ROBERT GRAVESTHE GREEK MYTHSPenguin Classics Deluxe EditionIntroduction by Rick RiordanCover by Ross MacDonald

JERRY TONERTHE ROMAN GUIDE TO SLAVE MANAGEMENTA Treatise by Nobleman Marcus Sidonius FalxForeword by Mary Beard

JORGE GUILLERMOSIBYLSProphecy and Power in the Ancient World

RICHARD MILESCARTHAGE MUST BE DESTROYEDThe Rise and Fall of an Ancient Civilization

SIMON GARFIELD ON THE MAPA Mind-Expanding Exploration of the Way the World LooksForeword by Dava Sobel

APOLLONIUS OF RHODESJASON AND THE ARGONAUTSTranslated by Aaron PoochigianIntroduction and Notes by Benjamin Acosta-Hughes

PETER STOTHARDALEXANDRIAThe Last Nights of Cleopatra

VARIOUSTHE CYNIC PHILOSOPHERS From Diogenes to JulianEdited and Translated with an Introduction by Robert Dobbin

ANN WROEORPHEUSThe Song of Life

LONGUS, CHARITON, and ANONYMOUS GREEK FICTIONCallirhoe, Daphnis and Chloe, Letters of ChionEdited with an Introduction by Helen Morales Translated by Rosanna Omitowoju, Phiroze Vasunia, and John Penwill

PENGUIN GROUP USA V I S I T T H E P E N G U I N G R O U P A T B O O T H 7 0 0

www.pengu in .com/academicAc a d e m i c M a r ke t i n g D e p a r t m e n t375 Hudson Street New York, NY 10014

PLATOTHE REPUBLIC Translated with an Introduction and Notes by Christopher Rowe

THE LAST DAYS OF SOCRATESTranslated with an Introduction and Notes by Christopher Rowe

89

90

Visit us at booth #203

www.pennpress.org800-537-5487

OVID’S EROTIC POEMS“Amores” and “Ars Amatoria”Ovid (Publius Ovidius Naso). Translated by Len Krisak. Introduction by Sarah Ruden

“Krisak has found a voice that accurately refl ects that of his author, revealing the elegance of Ovid’s skill in writing verses and the liveliness of his sensibility and subversive wittiness.”—Charles Martin

2014 | 232 PAGES | CLOTH | $32.50

FOUNDATION MYTHS IN ANCIENT SOCIETIESDialogues and DiscoursesEdited by Naoíse Mac Sweeney

“Mac Sweeney sets out an exciting new paradigm in which myths are treated as seg-ments of multilayered foundation discourse; the individual contributors apply this model to a wide range of ancient societies from Italy to Afghanistan, with breathtaking results.”—Ian Rutherford, University of Reading

2014 | 256 PAGES | 36 ILLUS. | CLOTH | $69.95

THE NEOPLATONIC SOCRATESEdited by Danielle A. Layne and Harold Tarrant

“A welcome addition to growing scholarly in-terests in Neoplatonism and Socratic studies. These essays open up the fascinating world of how later Platonists read the dialogues and allow us to glimpse the Socratic dialogues in a way that defamiliarizes them.”—Sara Ahbel-Rappe, University of Michigan

2014 | 264 PAGES | CLOTH | $75.00

HOLY WAR, MARTYRDOM, AND TERRORChristianity, Violence, and the WestPhilippe Buc

Examining moments in history from the Greco-Roman period through September 11, Buc contends that twenty-fi rst century expressions of terror, terrorism, and martyrdom are inextricably linked to earlier Christian conceptions of holy war.

HANEY FOUNDATION SERIES

MAR 2015 | 496 PAGES | CLOTH | $49.95

NEW IN PAPERBACKVIOLENCE AND BELIEF IN LATE ANTIQUITYMilitant Devotion in Christianity and IslamThomas Sizgorich

“In this bold and learned book, Thomas Sizgorich probes the ideological roots of violence in the Christian and Muslim communities of late antiquity.”—Church HistoryDIVINATIONS: REREADING LATE ANCIENT RELIGION

2014 | 408 PAGES | PAPER | $29.95

VIOLENCE IN ROMAN EGYPTA Study in Legal InterpretationAri Z. Bryen

“An extremely important study that will fundamentally change how we think about violence in Egypt and elsewhere in the Roman Empire—in fact, the way we conceive Roman rule in the provinces altogether.”—Noel Lenski, Yale University

EMPIRE AND AFTER

2013 | 376 PAGES | 5 ILLUS. | CLOTH | $75.00

LITURGICAL SUBJECTSChristian Ritual, Biblical Narrative, and the Formation of the Self in ByzantiumDerek Krueger

“A thrilling tour of Byzantine culture through wholly unexpected routes. With beautifully crafted prose, Krueger presents a trajectory lucidly drawn, fi lled with arresting insight and searing, poignant imagery.”—Susan Ashbrook Harvey, Brown University

DIVINATIONS: REREADING LATE ANCIENT RELIGION

2014 | 328 PAGES | 24 ILLUS. | CLOTH | $75.00

APOCALYPSE OF THE ALIEN GODPlatonism and the Exile of Sethian GnosticismDylan M. Burns

“Clearly and compellingly written, Apocalypse of the Alien God is a must for scholars in the fi eld of Gnosticism and later Greek philosophy.”— John D. Turner, University of Nebraska,

Lincoln

DIVINATIONS: REREADING LATE ANCIENT RELIGION

2014 | 336 PAGES | 4 ILLUS. | CLOTH | $69.95

NEW IN PAPERBACK ENCHANTMENTOn Charisma and the Sublime in the Arts of the WestC. Stephen Jaeger

“Extremely rich. . . . The authors and the works discussed cover a very wide span of time, from Homer to Federico Fellini and Woody Allen.”—Philosophical InquiriesHANEY FOUNDATION SERIES

2015 | 440 PAGES | 52 ILLUS. | PAPER | $29.95

91

Booth 40630% Conference Discount

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The Complete Works of AristotleThe Revised Oxford Translation, One-Volume Digital EditionAristotleEdited by Jonathan BarneseBook $75.00

Pericles of AthensVincent AzoulayTranslated by Janet LloydWith a foreword by Paul CartledgeCloth $35.00

Homeric Effects in Vergil’s NarrativeAlessandro BarchiesiTranslated by Ilaria Marchesi & Matt FoxWith a new foreword by Philip Hardie and a new afterword by the authorCloth $35.00

Genealogy of the TragicGreek Tragedy and German Philosophy Joshua BillingsCloth $45.00

Byzantine MattersAveril CameronCloth $22.95

The Life of Roman RepublicanismJoy ConnollyCloth $39.95

Sexing the WorldGrammatical Gender and Biological Sex in Ancient RomeAnthony CorbeillCloth $45.00

Wandering Greeks The Ancient Greek Diaspora from the Age of Homer to the Death of Alexander the GreatRobert GarlandCloth $35.00

The Enneads of PlotinusA Commentary, Volume 1Paul KalligasTranslated by Elizabeth Key Fowden & Nicolas PilavachiCloth $85.00

The Birth of HedonismThe Cyrenaic Philosophers and Pleasure as a Way of LifeKurt LampeCloth $45.00

The AmazonsLives and Legends of Warrior Women across the Ancient WorldAdrienne MayorCloth $29.95

DelphiA History of the Center of the Ancient WorldMichael ScottCloth $29.95

PhilologyThe Forgotten Origins of the Modern HumanitiesJames TurnerCloth $35.00

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Aristotle’s EthicsWritings from the Complete WorksRevised, edited, and with an introduction by Jonathan Barnes & Anthony KennyPaper $22.95

Winner, 2013 Jacques Barzun Prize in Cultural History, American Philosophical SocietyWinner, 2013 Philip Schaff Prize, American Society of Church History

Through the Eye of a NeedleWealth, the Fall of Rome, and the Making of Christianity in the West, 350–550 ADPeter BrownPaper $24.95

The Symptom and the SubjectThe Emergence of the Physical Body in Ancient GreeceBrooke HolmesPaper $29.95

Forthcoming

The Birth of PoliticsEight Greek and Roman Political Ideas and Why They MatterMelissa LaneCloth $26.95

Pagans and PhilosophersThe Problem of Paganism from Augustine to LeibnizJohn MarenbonCloth $35.00

The Rise and Fall of Classical GreeceJosiah OberThe Princeton History of the Ancient WorldCloth $35.00

Barrington Atlas of the Greek and Roman World for ipad

Edited by Richard J.A. TalbertAPP $19.99

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92

dePartmental memberShiP in the

Society for claSSical StudieS

The Society for Classical Studies (SCS) invites college and university departments offering programs in classical studies to become departmental members. The SCS instituted this category of membership as a way of giving recognition to those departments that DUH�ZLOOLQJ�WR�VXSSRUW�WKH�HQWLUH�¿HOG�ZKLOH�WKH\�GR�WKH�HVVHQWLDO�ZRUN�RI�SDVVLQJ�RQ�DQ�XQGHUVWDQGLQJ�RI�FODVVLFDO�DQWLTXLW\�WR�HDFK�new generation of students. Departmental members will be listed on the Society’s web site, in an issue of the Society’s 1HZVOHWWHU, and on a page in the Annual Meeting 3URJUDP. The SCS will issue outstanding achievement awards to students designated by the GHSDUWPHQW���'HSDUWPHQWDO�PHPEHUV�ZLOO�DOVR�EH�DEOH�WR�REWDLQ�FHUWDLQ�6&6�SXEOLFDWLRQV�DQG�RWKHU�EHQH¿WV�DW�QR�FKDUJH��DQG�WKH\�ZLOO�VXSSRUW�WZR�LPSRUWDQW�LQWHUQDWLRQDO�FODVVLFV�SURMHFWV�LQ�ZKLFK�WKH�$3$�SDUWLFLSDWHV���WKH�$PHULFDQ�2I¿FH�RI�O¶$QQpH�SKLORORJLTXH and LWV�IHOORZVKLS�WR�WKH�7KHVDXUXV�/LQJXDH�/DWLQDH��7//����'HSDUWPHQWDO�GXHV�UHYHQXH�WKDW�H[FHHGV�WKH�YDOXH�RI�EHQH¿WV�UHFHLYHG�ZLOO�EH�used to support these two projects and, in the case of the TLL Fellowship, will make the SCS eligible to receive matching funds from the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) which is currently the major supporter of this project. $�IRUP�IRU�HQUROOLQJ�D�GHSDUWPHQW�DV�D�PHPEHU�LV�DYDLODEOH�RQ�WKH�$3$�ZHE�VLWH���KWWS���DSDFODVVLFV�RUJ�VLWHV�GHIDXOW�¿OHV�FN¿QGHU�¿OHV�'HSDUWPHQWDO���0HPEHUVKLS���,QYRLFH������6&6�SGI���'HSDUWPHQWV�PD\�VHOHFW�D�PHPEHUVKLS�FDWHJRU\�WKDW�FRUUHVSRQGV�to the highest academic degree that each one offers. However, departments selecting the higher Supporting or Sustaining categories will enable the Association to claim additional matching funds from the NEH so that the Association can focus its fund-raising efforts on unrestricted annual giving. The listings of member departments give appropriate recognition to those selecting the higher levels. Organizations other than academic departments that support the study of classical antiquity may become departmental members upon approval by the APA Board of Directors. As of December 8, 2014, the following departments were participating in the program for this year.

Sustaining Brown University Cornell University

University of Texas at Austin University of Washington

Supporting Brandeis University Dickinson College

Ph.D.-granting Departments Florida State University

The University of Western Ontario University of Buffalo University of Chicago

University of Cincinnati University of Colorado Boulder

University of Florida University of Iowa

University of Minnesota University of Missouri

University of Pennsylvania University of Southern California University of Wisconsin Madison

M.A.-granting Departments Boston College

Brock University Case Western Reserve University

University of Georgia University of Kentucky

University of Maryland College Park University of North Carolina Greensboro

University of Notre Dame University of Oregon

B.A.-granting Departments Arizona State University

Baylor University Calvin College

Carleton College Carthage College

College of William and Mary Emory University

Eta Sigma Phi Grand Valley State University

Grinnell College Gustavus Adolphus College

Hillsdale College Loyola University of Chigago

Monmouth College Northwestern University

Oberlin College Reed College

Rice University St. Olaf College

Trinity University University of Mary Washington

University of Miami University of North Carolina at Asheville

University of Oklahoma University of Rochester

Vassar College

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AIA and SCS Joint Annual Mtg January 8-11 2015

Sheraton Hotel - Napoleon Ballroom - 3rd floorNew Orleans, LA

Camp Street

REGISTRATION

Round Tables Round Tables

Poster Session

Table Top Exhibits

Premium Booths

Preferred Corner Booths

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Exhibit

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2015 annual meeting exhibit hall liSt

exhibitor name WebSite booth

Accurex Measurement .................................................. www.accurexmeasure.com ............................................... 600

American Classical League ........................................... www.aclclassics.org.......................................................... 703

American Institute for Conservation (AIC) .................. www.conservation-us.org ................................................ 112

American Schools of Oriental Research ....................... www.asor.org ...................................................................... 11

Arch Aerial LLC ............................................................ www.archaerial.com ......................................................... 701

Archaeological Institute of America ............................ www.archaeological.org ........................................AIA Kiosk

ArcheoLINK – Americas .............................................. www.archeolink-americas.org .......................................... 202

Ashgate Publishing ........................................................ www.ashgate.com ............................................................. 705

Avid Tour & Travel Agency .......................................... www.avid-tour.com .............................................................. 7

Beta Analytic ................................................................ www.radiocarbon.com...................................................... 405

BigC Dino-Lite Digital Microscope ............................ www.dinolite.us ................................................................ 500

Bloomsbury Publishing ................................................. http://www.bloomsbury.com/us/academic/ ...................... 502

Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers, Inc. ............................. www.bolchazy.com................................................... 300, 302

Brill ................................................................................ www.brill.com .......................................................... 407, 409

Cambridge University Press .......................................... www.cambridge.org/us/academic ....................504, 506, 508

Carney, Sandoe & Associates ........................................ www.carneysandoe.com .................................................. 200

Casemate Academic ..................................................... www.oxbowbooks.com/dbbc ...........................107, 108, 109

Center for Digital Antiquity .......................................... www.digitalantiquity.org ...................................................... 9

Center for Hellenic Studies ........................................... www.chs.harvard.edu ....................................................... 507

De Gruyter .................................................................... www.degruyter.com .......................................................... 702

Deutsches Archäologisches Institut (German Archaeological Institute) ............................... www.dainst.de .................................................................. 207

Educational Tours, Cruises LLC ................................... www.ed-tours.com ............................................................ 101

Eta Sigma Phi (ETA) ..................................................... www.etasigmaphi.org ........................................................... 5

Forestry Suppliers, Inc. ............................................... www.forestrysuppliers.com .............................................. 706

Getty Publications ......................................................... www.getty.edu/publications ........................................... 403

Hackett Publishing Company ........................................ www.hackettpublishing.com ............................................ 301

HarperCollins ................................................................ http://www.harpercollins.com/ ....... Combined Book Exhibit

Harvard University Press .............................................. www.hup.harvard.edu .......................................501, 503, 505

ISD ................................................................................ www.isdistribution.com ........................................... 601, 603

John Hopkins University Press ..................................... press.jhu.edu ..................................................................... 201

Journal of Roman Archaeology..................................... www.journalofromanarch.com ............................................. 6

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exhibitor name WebSite booth

Left Coast Press, Inc. ..................................................... www.lcoastpress.com ....................................................... 106

Maney Publishing .......................................................... www.maneypublishing.com ............................................. 111

Melissa Publishing House ............................................. http://www.melissabooks.com ......................................... 605

Michigan Classical Press ............................................... http://michiganclassicalpress.com .................................... 607

Noet Scholarly Tools ..................................................... https://noet.com ................................................................ 707

NU Digital Heritage (Newcastle University) ............... www.nudigitalheritage.com ................................................. 3

Oxford University Press ............................................... www.oup.com ........................................................... 304, 306

Peeters Publishers ......................................................... www.peeters-leuven.be .................................................... 604

Penguin Random House ................................................ http://global.penguinrandomhouse.com/.......................... 700

Princeton University Press ............................................ http://press.princeton.edu ................................................. 406

Project Archaeology ...................................................... http://projectarchaeology.org ................................................ 1

Register of Professional Archaeologists (RPA) ............ http://rpanet.org/ ................................................................. 10

Routledge ....................................................................... www.routledge.com .......................................................... 104

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Society of Biblical Literature ........................................ www.sbl-site.org ............................................................... 105

Sophron Editor ............................................................... HQDVRSKURQ#JPDLO�FRP�� ..................................................... 2

The American School of Classical Studies at Athens ... www.ascsa.edu.gr ............................................................. 110

The Classical Association of the Middle West and South (CAMWS) .............................. www.camws.org ............................................................... 205

The New York Times ..................................................... www.nytimes.com ............................................................ 206

The Ohio State University Press ................................... https://ohiostatepress.org/ ................................................. 606

Tina Ross Archaeological Illustrations ......................... www.tinaross.ca .................................................................... 8

UGA Center for Applied Isotope Studies ..................... www.cais.uga.edu ............................................................. 303

University of California Press ...................................... www.ucpress.edu .............................................................. 402

University of Chicago Press .......................................... www.press.uchicago.edu .................................................. 401

University of Leicester .................................................. www.le.ac.uk .................................................................... 704

University of Michigan Press ........................................ www.press.umich.edu ....................................................... 204

University of Oklahoma Press ...................................... www.oupress.com............................................................. 602

University of Pennsylvania Press .................................. www.pennpress.org .......................................................... 203

University of Texas Press ............................................. www.utexaspress.com ...................................................... 400

University of Wisconsin Press ...................................... http://uwpress.wisc.edu .................................................... 404

Wiley .............................................................................. www.wiley.com ........................................................ 305, 307

Women’s Classical Caucus (WCC) .............................. www.wccaucus.org ............................................................... 4

96

index of SPeaKerS

AAbgrall, Matthieu ................................84Abraham, Roshan ................................37Abrams-Rebillard, Suzanne ................81Albright, Christine Loren ....................58Aldrete, Gregory .................................58Alison, Jane .........................................38Allen-Hornblower, Emily ...................38Almagor, Eran .....................................86Almas, Bridget ....................................78Altshuler, Benjamin F. S. ....................63Amendola, Davide ..............................79Anderson, Carl A. ...............................58Anderson, Sebastian ............................62Ando, Clifford .....................................29Andrews, James ..................................36Armstrong, David ...............................62Arnush, Michael ..................................76Augoustakis, Antonios ........................76

BBabcock, Robert ..................................35Baker, Ashli .........................................59Bakker, Egbert ....................................33Bannon, Cynthia .................................37Barker, Elton .......................................78Barnes, Timothy ..................................82Baron, Christopher ..............................61Bartera, Salvador .................................81Bartlett, Charles ..................................30Beaulieu, Marie-Claire ........................78Beck, Bill ............................................79Beck, Deborah .....................................85Beek, Aaron .........................................83Bendlin, Andreas .................................37Beneker, Jeffrey ..................................86Benjamins, Joshua ...............................56Bernstein, Neil ....................................76Bettini, Maurizio .................................81Bexley, Erica .......................................62Biggs, Thomas ....................................81Blackwell, Christopher .......................60Blondell, Ruby ....................................40Blood, H. Christian .............................59Blum, Jessica .......................................54Boehringer, Sandra ..............................40

Bonnell-Freidin, Anna .........................59Bork, Hans ..........................................85Bosak-Schroeder, Clara ......................53Bouchard, Elsa ....................................53Bowes, Kimberly ................................58Boychenko, Leanna .............................36Boyd, Marcaline ..................................61Bozzone, Chiara ..................................83Bransbourg, Gilles ........................57, 58Brassel, Kate Meng .............................37Brenk, Frederick E. .............................84Brennan, T. Corey ...............................53Brice, Lee ............................................58Brodd, Jeffrey......................................32Bromberg, Jacques ........................75, 76Brunelle, Christopher ..........................85Bruzzone, Rachel ................................61Bubelis, William S. .............................58Bundrick, Sheramy .............................78Bungard, Christopher ..........................55Butera, C. Jacob ..................................65Butz, Patricia A. ..................................32

CCaldwell, Craig ...................................40Campbell, Charles ...............................36Canevaro, Mirko .................................84Carlà, Filippo ......................................58Carlon, Jacqueline ...............................76Caterine, Christopher ..........................54Caterine, Mallory Monaco ..................62Cazzato, Vanessa .................................36Celenza, Christopher S. .......................31Celotto, Giulio.....................................54Ceserani, Giovanna .............................31Chaldekas, Matthew ............................36Chaudhuri, Pramit .........................31, 78Chiu, Angeline ....................................31Chomse, Siobhan ................................54Christy, John Paul ...............................60Chronopoulos, Stylianos .....................54Ciccolella, Federica .............................31&LRI¿��5REHUW ......................................61Cirillo, Thomas ...................................29Cirucci, Gabriella ................................60Clark, Jessica H. ..................................39

Clauss, James ......................................30Clayman, Dee ......................................77Claytor, W. Graham ............................79Closterman, Wendy .............................61Coffee, Neil .........................................78Cohen, Amy R. ....................................55Cole, Emily .........................................79Cole, Emma .........................................57Cole, Sara E. .......................................60Coleman, Kathleen M .........................56Connolly, Joy ......................................40Conser, Anna .......................................53Coulson, Frank ....................................35Cribiore, Raffaella ...............................39Croshaw, Parker Bradley ....................81Crosson, Isaia ......................................77Curtis, Lauren .....................................78

DDale, Alexander ...................................82Damon, Cynthia ............................59, 75Daniels, Brian I. ..................................60Daniels, Eb Joseph ..............................35Dasgupta, Tathagata ............................78DaVia, Carlo .......................................62De Angelis, Franco ..............................81DeArmond, Thea .................................31DeBrohun, Jeri ....................................75Demetriou, Denise ..............................57Deminion, Mary ..................................30Dench, Emma ......................................37de Soto, Pau ........................................78Devereaux, Jennifer ............................38Dexter, Joseph P. .................................78DiGiulio, Scott ....................................77Dix, T. Keith ........................................58Dixon, Dustin ......................................36Dodson-Robinson, Eric .................60, 79Doherty, Lillian ...................................82Dombrowski, Patrick ..........................83Dova, Stamatia ....................................35Dozier, Curtis ......................................77Dugdale, Eric ......................................76Duncan, Al ..........................................83

97

EEccleston, Sasha-Mae .........................59Eckerman, Chris ..................................53Edmondson, Jonathan .........................83Elliott, Jay ...........................................34Elomaa, Heather ..................................62Engelsing, Eduardo .............................65English, Mary C. .................................35Eshleman, Kendra ...............................80Esposito, John .....................................83Evans, Nancy ......................................32Ewald, Owen .......................................64

FFagan, Garrett .....................................38Farrington, Scott .................................81Feldherr, Andrew ................................29Ferguson, J. LaRae ..............................56Finamore, John F. ................................56Fincher, Joshua ....................................30Fisher, Roger Stephen .........................64Flagg, Haley ........................................56Flatt, Tyler ...........................................83Flemming, Rebecca .............................62Flores, Samuel .....................................36Ford, Andrew ......................................40Fortson, Benjamin ...............................82Foster, Margaret ..................................53Fowler, Ryan .......................................76Frampton, Stephanie ...........................39Franklin, John .....................................78Franks, Mary .......................................60Fredrick, David ...................................40Frier, Bruce .........................................77Fries, Almut.........................................54Funke, Melissa ....................................81

GGaca, Kathy L. ....................................62Gamel, Mary-Kay ...............................39Garrison, Irene Peirano .................75, 86Gazis, George ......................................83Gellar-Goad, T. H. M. ...................55, 64George, Charles ...................................85George, Coulter ...................................85Georgia, Allan .....................................79Germany, Robert ................................ 33Gessert, Genevieve .............................34Gettel, Eliza .........................................81

Gibert, John .........................................61Gibson, Craig ......................................84Gilbert, Nathan ....................................55Gillies, Grace ......................................83Gilligan, Carol .....................................38Ginsberg, Lauren Donovan .................81Glauthier, Patrick ................................61Goldberg, Sander M. ...........................60Goldhill, Simon ...................................54Goldman, Max L. ................................39Gonçalves, Rodrigo .............................83Gordon, Pamela ...................................55Goslin, Owen ......................................38Goyette, Michael .................................60Gray, Maxwell A. ................................56Green, Jerry .........................................34Grek, Leon ..........................................29Grey, Cam ...........................................82Groves, Robert ....................................85Güthenke, Constanze ..........................54Gurd, Sean ...........................................39Gutzwiller, Kathryn ......................40, 65

HHaase, Timothy ...................................85Hallett, Judith P. ..................................38Halliwell, Stephen ...............................40Hankins, James ...................................31Hanses, Mathias ..................................83Hanson, Ann ........................................77Harrington, J. Matthew .......................78Harris, William ....................................39Harris-McCoy, Daniel .........................60Hartman, Joshua J. ..............................35Hartnett, Jeremy ..................................60Haselswerdt, Ella ................................36Haslam, Michael .................................30Hawkins, Tom .....................................29Haworth, Marina .................................40Hay, Paul .............................................29Heckenlively, Timothy ........................84Hedrick, Robert ...................................55Hejduk, Julia .......................................86Hendriks, Sarah ...................................59Hickey, Todd .......................................78Hicks, Benjamin Vines ........................55Hinds, Stephen ....................................31Holland, Lora ......................................37Holmes, Brooke ..................................54Horky, Phillip ................................36, 62

Horne, Andrew ....................................75Hoyer, Daniel ......................................57Hsu, Katherine Lu ...............................36Hunt, Jeffrey........................................31Hutchinson, Eric .................................64Hyland, John .......................................39

IIsaksen, Leif ........................................78Iversen, Paul A. .............................32, 37

JJackson, Kassandra .............................33Janan, Micaela ...............................75, 76Janko, Richard .....................................85Jendza, Craig .......................................83Johnson, David ....................................76Johnson, Tyler .....................................78Johnson, William ...........................39, 85Johstono, Paul .....................................39Jones, Alexander .................................33Jones, Brandon ....................................63Jones, Brandtly ....................................65Jones, Gregory ....................................53

KKachuck, Aaron ...................................36Kamen, Deborah .................................40Katz, Rebecca .....................................75Kauffman, Nicholas ............................30Kaufman, David ..................................62Keeline, Tom .................................58, 59Keesling, Catherine .............................62Keith, Thomas .....................................37Kelly, Gordon P. ..................................63Kelting, Lily ........................................55Kennedy, Alexandra ............................63Kirkland, Bryant .................................75Klos, K. T. S. .......................................64Knight, Jayne ......................................63Knox, Peter .........................................31Kopff, E. Christian ..............................79Kosmetatou, Elizabeth ........................32Kovacs, David .....................................53Kowerski, Lawrence ...........................33Krause, Miller .....................................75Krevans, Nita ......................................36Krostenko, Brian .................................85

98

LLaBuff, Jeremy....................................32Lake, Keely .........................................76Lambdin, Patrick .................................36Lamont, Jessica ...................................32Landis, Sarah .......................................64Langellotti, Micaela ............................79Langenfeld, Kathryn ...........................75Lardinois, Andre .................................30Lash, Samantha ...................................78Laskaris, Julie .....................................29Lattmann, Claas ..................................33Lavigne, Donald ..................................60Lawrence, Marilynn ............................56Le Blanc, Robyn .................................64Lecznar, Adam Edward .......................57Leese, Michael S. ................................80Leigh, Matthew ...................................53Lenski, Noel ........................................58Leonard, Amy .....................................85Leonard, Miriam .................................54Lessie, Alexander ................................75Levaniouk, Olga ..................................79LeVen, Pauline A. ...................38, 77, 78Levin-Richardson, Sarah .....................60Liapis, Vayos .................................81, 82Lidov, Joel ...........................................30Loar, Matthew .....................................60Lootens, Matthew ...............................80Lundquist, Jesse ..................................82Lundy, Steven J. ..................................77Lushkov, Ayelet Haimson .............62, 86Lytle, Ephraim .....................................53

MMacDonald, Carolyn ...........................30MacDougall, Byron .............................84Mackenzie, Kenneth Thomas Munro ..81Mackey, Jacob .....................................38Mahoney, Anne ...................................35Mambrini, Francesco ..........................78Mann, Kristin ......................................31Mannack, Thomas ...............................63Mardikes, Catherine ............................60Mardula, Catherine .............................54Marincola, John ...................................65Markus, Donka ....................................56Marshall, C. W. ...................................35Masri, Larisa .......................................37

Master, Emily ......................................30McCallum, Sarah ................................86McClain, T. Davina .......................60, 83McClure, Laura ...................................61McGowan, Matthew M. ......................77McHardy, Fiona ..................................60McInerney, Jeremy ..............................57McPhee, Brian .....................................75Meineck, Peter ....................................38Meinking, Kristina Ann ................79, 80Millender, Ellen ..................................80Miller, John F. .....................................34Miller, Thomas ....................................84Milnor, Kristina ...................................77Mistretta, Marco Romani ....................64Mogetta, Marcello ...............................78Moodie, Erin .......................................65Moore, Jessica .....................................63Morgan, Kathryn .................................53Morgan, Llewelyn ...............................30Morrell, Kenny ....................................76Most, Glenn.........................................55Mowbray, Carrie .................................29Muccigrosso, John D. .........................60Muir, Steven ........................................32Mulder, Tara ........................................35Mulligan, Bret ...............................35, 64Murnaghan, Sheila ..............................77Murray, Sarah ......................................60Muse, Kevin ........................................75

NNabel, Jake ..........................................61Nabney, Elizabeth ...............................79Naglak, Matt .......................................78Naiden, Fred ........................................34Neel, Jaclyn .........................................60Nervegna, Sebastiana ..........................83Nethercut, Jason ..................................31Newhard, James ..................................78Newton, Francis ..................................35Nikolaev, Alexander ............................82Nooter, Sarah ................................37, 38Noreña, Carlos ....................................58

OObbink, Dirk .......................................30O’Connor, Eugene ..............................40O’Donnell, James J. ............................31

O’Hogan, Cillian .................................60Oliver, Graham ....................................80Olsen, Sarah ........................................78Olson, S. Douglas ...............................54Oosterhuis, Dave .................................54Opitz, Rachel .......................................78Oppen, Simone ....................................55Oughton, Charles ................................75Owens, William ...................................53

PPache, Corinne O. ...............................34Pandey, Nandini ..................................75Parca, Maryline ...................................35Parker, Luke ........................................85Parks, Mitchell ....................................84Paschalis, Sergios ................................29Passarotti, Marco .................................78Patterson, James ..................................85Patterson, Lee E. .................................84Paule, Maxwell Teitel .........................64Pearson, Cameron .............................. 32Pentzer, Mitch .....................................80Petkas, Alex .........................................82Petrovic, Andjrej .................................60Petrovic, Ivana ....................................60Phillips, Carl .......................................39Pollio, David M. ..................................63Pomeroy, Arthur ..................................54Poole, Ursula M. .................................29Popescu, Catalina ................................35Porter, Amber ......................................60Porter, James I. ....................................40Potter, David .......................................79Power, Timothy ...................................38Pryzwansky, Molly .............................86Pyzyk, Mark ........................................53

RRabinowitz, Nancy S. .........................60Ramelli, Ilaria .....................................56Rankine, Patrice ..................................57Ratzan, David M. ................................30Rau, Jeremy .........................................82Rauh, Nicholas ....................................58Rayor, Diane .......................................31Ready, Jonathan ..................................33Rebeggiani, Stefano ......................30, 60Rebillard, Eric .....................................60

99

Reddoch, Jason ...................................56Reed, Jay .............................................64Reitzammer, Lauri ..............................80Reznick, Martin ...................................30Richardson, Giles E.W. .......................63Richlin, Amy .................................39, 61Rives, James ........................................37Riesbeck, David J. ...............................84Robinson, Clifford ..............................36Rogers, Brett M. ..................................60Roller, Duane W. .................................62Roman, Luke .......................................29Romanello, Matteo ..............................78Romm, James ......................................38Ronnick, Michele Valerie ....................36Rosen, Ralph M. .................................59Rosenbecker, Karen ............................80Rosenstein, Nathan .............................40Russell, Amy .......................................37

SSabnis, Sonia .......................................59Salas, Luis Alejandro ..........................60Salzman, Michele Renee .....................77Sammond, Kenneth .............................63Sammons, Benjamin ...........................83Sampson, C. Michael ..........................79Sanders, Kirk R. ............................34, 84Sattler, Barbara ....................................33Schironi, Francesca .............................59Schultz, Celia ......................................76Schwartz, Ariane ................................ 31Schwei, David .....................................37Searby, Denis ......................................65Sears, Matthew ....................................65Secord, Jared .......................................79Seider, Aaron .......................................85Shaw, Greg ..........................................56Shearin, Wilson .............................35, 55Short, William ...............................38, 81Shupeck, Lekha ...................................37Sick, David H. .....................................56Sider, David ........................................36Simms, Robert.....................................75Simon, Rainer .....................................78Simonetti, Elsa Giovanna ....................59Sing, Robert ........................................61Singer, Amy ........................................76Skotheim, Mali ....................................296ODYHYD�*ULI¿Q��6YHWOD ........................56

Sluiter, Ineke .......................................38Smith, Alden .......................................31Smitherman, Valerie Hannon ..............61Sneed, Debby ......................................32Solomon, Jon.......................................84Sorg, Timothy .....................................57Soto, Irene ...........................................57Spielberg, Lydia ..................................84Stark, Caroline ....................................33Stehle, Eva ..........................................30Stem, Rex ............................................86Stevens, Benjamin Eldon ..............29, 60Stocks, Claire ......................................81Stoop, Jelle ..........................................32Stover, Justin ...........................58, 59, 85Stover, Timothy ...................................76Struck, Peter ........................................84Suksi, Aara ..........................................83

TTalbert, Richard ...................................34Taoka, Yasuko .....................................76Taretto, Erika .......................................62Tarrant, Richard ..................................59Tatum, W. Jeffrey ................................63Taylor, Tristan .....................................61Teffeteller, Annette ..............................33Thakur, Sanjaya ..................................63Thomas, Richard F. .......................36, 85Thompson, Dorothy ............................34Thorp, John .........................................34Tomes, Maya Feile ..............................64Topper, Kathryn ..................................40Travis, Roger .......................................64Tripuraneni, Nilesh .............................78Trnka-Amrhein, Yvona .......................86Trundle, Matthew ................................80Trzaskoma, Stephen ............................63Tsouvala, Georgia ...............................76Tueller, Michael ..................................85Tully, Caroline Jane ............................81Tully, John ...........................................57Turner, Brian .......................................39

UUlrich, Jeffrey .....................................59Umachandran, Mathura .......................57Ustinova, Yulia ....................................81

Vvan den Berg, Christopher S. ..............77Vanderpool, Emma ..............................56van der Velden, Bram ..........................65Van Essen-Fishman, Lucy ...................61Varhelyi, Zsuzsanna ............................37Varto, Emily ........................................80Vessella, Carlo .....................................54Vidovic, Goran ....................................29Vierros, Marja .....................................54Villazala, David Natal .........................82Visscher, M.S. (Marijn) .......................57von Stackelberg, Katharine .................62

WWalden, Daniel ....................................78Walsh, Robyn ......................................32Ward, Graeme .....................................84Wasdin, Katherine .........................33, 34Watanabe, Albert .................................80Watts, Edward .....................................82Weinlich, Barbara ................................31Welch, Tara .........................................60West, David .........................................84White, Georgina ..................................62Whiting, Colin.....................................82Whitmarsh, Tim ..................................54Wickkiser, Bronwen ............................60Wilson, Emily .....................................39Wilson, Megan ....................................55Winkler, Martin ...................................34Woolf, Gregory ...................................39Wright, David ......................................53Wurster, Sonya ....................................62

YYates, Anthony ....................................82Yates, David ........................................83Yates, Velvet ........................................80Yeruham, Amir ....................................82Yona, Sergio ........................................55Yu, Kenneth .........................................32

ZZellmann-Rohrer, Michael ..................79Zinn, Pamela .......................................62Ziogas, Ioannis ....................................61Zissos, Andrew ....................................53

100

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Published Dec. 2013wileyonlinelibrary.com/ref/virgil

A HISTORY OF

ROMAN ARTSTEVEN L. TUCK

GREEK ARTA HISTORY OF

MARK D. STANSBURY!O’DONNELL

Wiley Classics

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2015 advertiSer index

Bloomsbury Academic .............................................................................................................................................2

Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers, Inc. ................................................................................... Inside front cover, 17-19

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Classics Post-Baccalaureate Program at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey .......................................100

Cornell University Press ........................................................................................................................................25

Hackett Publishing Company, Inc. ................................................................................................................... 42-43

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Princeton University Press .....................................................................................................................................91

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University of Pennsylvania Press ...........................................................................................................................90

University of Wisconsin Press .............................................................................................................................103

Wiley ....................................................................................................................................................................104

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— NOTES —

M i c h i g a n C l a s s i c a l P r e s s

The Economy in the Roman World Jean Andreau Translated by Corina Kesler

Michigan Classical Press � PO Box 130194 � Ann Arbor MI USA 48113-9998 �www.michiganclassicalpress.com

FORTHCOMING Caesar’s Commentaries on the Gallic War FW Kelsey Updated and with notes by Rex Stem

Thucydidean Narrative & Discourse Mabel Lang Edited by Jeffrey S Rusten and Richard Hamilton “...should complement any bookshelf devoted to Thucydides...” BMCR

NOW IN PRINT

Divine Honors for Mortal Men in Greek Cities: The Early CasesChristian Habicht Translated by John Noël Dillon

A Commentary on Polybius, Histories, Book 1

David D Phillips

IMMINENT

Christian HabichtTranslated by John Noël Dillon

DIVINE HONORSfor MORTAL MENin GREEK CITIEST H E E A R L Y C A S E S

M I C H I G A N C L A S S I C A L P R E S S

The Economy in the Roman World

Jean Andreau

Translated by Corina Keslerwith David Potter and Ellen Bauerle

Michigan Classical Press

Sappho’s Gift: The Poet and Her Community Franco Ferrari Translated by Benjamin Acosta-Hughes and Lucia Prauscello “...stimulating and admirable...” Phoenix

Society for Classical Studies

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Philadelphia, PA 19104-3512

http://www.classicalstudies.org

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FOUNDED IN 1 8 6 9 A S THE AMER ICAN PH I LOLOG ICAL AS SOC IAT ION

FOUNDED IN 1869 AS THE AMERICAN PHILOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION

FOUNDED IN 1869 AS THE AMERICAN PHILOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION