Activities and Events
2017-18
Academic Festival
On May 2nd, from 1200-250pm, the Department hosted two successive sessions, one with individual papers reflecting research conducted in fall or spring semester, the other two panels reflecting on work done the spring semester.
The first session, labelled 鈥淲omen, Monsters, and The End of Days,鈥 included papers from courses on ancient sex and gender, apocalyptic literature, and Ovid鈥檚 poetry: Marley Amico 鈥10, 鈥淚t鈥檚 all Greek to Me: An Examination of the porne/hetaira Binary鈥; Kat Berg 鈥18, 鈥淟ooking Towards the End Times: Eschatological Imagery in Hieronymus Bosch鈥檚 Painting and John of Patmos鈥 Revelation鈥; Sophie Heath 鈥18, 鈥淒ealing with Monstrosity: Receptions of Ovid鈥檚 Metamorphoses鈥; and Sarah Smith 鈥20, 鈥淪partan and Athenian Women.鈥
The second session, titled 鈥淒esigning Students: Letting the Students Take Over,鈥 included two panels, one on the design of an original Greek tragedy, and the other on the crafting of an IdeaLab, role-playing History course. The first, 鈥淥pening Pandora鈥檚 Box: Ancient Women, Modern Tragedy,鈥 presented by Maisie Bernstein 鈥21, Shelby Fairchild 鈥21, Hannah Gross 鈥21 and Emily Schwartz 鈥20, addressed the spring production of Pandora, staged by students in Prof. Dan Curley鈥檚 Greek Tragedy course. The second panel, 鈥Pothos: Alexander the Great and 鈥榃orld鈥 Conquest,鈥 analyzed by Nora Barry 鈥19, Zoe Ousouljoglou, 鈥20, and Erika Petersen, 鈥19, focused on Prof. Michael Arnush鈥檚 semester-long role-playing course on Alexander.
Parilia
Parilia, the annual undergraduate Classics conference, on Friday, April 20th, was hosted by Union College, which welcomed students and faculty from Hamilton College and Skidmore. The following students presented their work as either papers or posters:
Papers: Ben Cail 鈥18, 鈥Ciceronianus es, non Christianus: Ciceronian Invective in the Writing of St. Jerome 鈥 and Kelly Platt 鈥18, 鈥淒uality of Woman: Ancient Greek Conceptions of the Feminine鈥
Posters: Phoebe Burton 鈥18, 鈥淭he Wandering Womb,鈥 Zoe Ousouljoglou 鈥20, 鈥淚rregular Bowel Diseases in Antiquity,鈥 and Erika Petersen 鈥19 and Nora Barry 鈥19, 鈥Pothos: Alexander the Great and 鈥榃orld鈥 Conquest: A Student-designed Role-playing Course鈥
David Porter Classical World Lecture
The annual David H. Porter Classical World Lecture, one of the year's most anticipated events, was delivered by Andrea Eis, Professor and Director of Cinema Studies, Oakland University (Rochester, MN): screening and discussion of her film, Penelope鈥檚 Odyssey. Tuesday, February 20th, 600pm, Davis Auditorium.
Shot on location in Greece, this provocative work projects a journey of homecoming (nostos) onto Penelope, the wife of the well-traveled Homeric hero, Odysseus. Quotes from Homer's Odyssey and authorial commentary anchor segments that fluctuate between cinematic subjectivity and invasive camerawork. Penelope鈥檚 "home" is both a tangible, comforting habitat and an internalized dwelling of estrangement.
The David H. Porter Classical World Lecture honors David Porter for his contributions to the College as former president, to the Classics Department as emeritus professor and inaugural holder of the Tisch Family Distinguished Professorship, and to the humanities at large. The event is a highlight of the spring term and part of the Department's gateway course, CC 200: The Classical World. The lecture was co-sponsored by the Film & Media Studies and Gender Studies programs.
Homerathon 2018
The Classical World students hosted the annual Homerathon! on February 8th, 600pm, in Murray-Aikins Dining Hall. A wonderful turnout, superb readings, and a lovely dinner filled out the evening for a sizeable and enthusiastic audience.
Homerathon! (a marathon reading of the Greek poet, Homer) is a time for students, faculty, staff, and other friends to gather in celebration of our earliest Western poet. Coupled with our Classical World course (CC 200), the Homerathon! reminds us that the ancient art of storytelling is alive and well.
Classics Department Honor Society Induction
The Department hosted the annual Dinner and Induction into the Iota Chapter of 螚危桅 (Eta Sigma Phi), the national Classics Honor Society, Murray-Aikins Dining Hall, Wednesday, November 29th, 600pm. This year鈥檚 inductees: Kat Berg 鈥18, Ben Cail 鈥18, Emma Griffin 鈥19, Emily Gunter 鈥19, hosted by Sophie Heath 鈥18 and Kelly Platt 鈥18.
Drunken Poets and Fallen Philosophers
On Wednesday, Oct. 18, 530pm, in the Somers Room in the Tang, we welcomed Bret Mulligan, Associate Professor and Chair of Classics at Haverford College, to deliver a lecture. Titled "Drunken Poets and Fallen Philosophers: Gout and Pathographic Identity in Antiquity," Prof. Mulligan's addressed disease as a metaphor. Here's how he described his talk:
鈥淒isease has often been understood as a manifestation of more than simply bodily infirmity. In the most stigmatizing circumstances, the presence of disease can become an external marker of deficient character or even just retribution for the moral failure of the afflicted." Prof. Mulligan explored what it means when a literary or historical figure in antiquity is characterized as suffering from gout. The attribution of gout carried with it a moralizing charge that enmeshed the subject in familiar categories of excessive consumption and loose moral character.
Prof. Mulligan works on late antiquity, which he describes as 鈥渢he twilight of classical culture.鈥 His publications focus on Roman poets and biographers of the later Roman Empire, and the lecture was part of a larger project on gout as a metaphor of disease.