Author: pmichell

‘Aristophanes’ Play Announced!

Announcing the Department of Classical Studies and the Core Curriculum’s annual “Aristophanes” production: Plautus’ Mostellaria (“The Haunted House”). That’s right, for the first time ever, the annual “Aristophanes” play will actually be a Roman Comedy! There will be clever slaves, foolish young men, and prostitutes with complicated backstories! They will get mixed up in hair-brained schemes involving […]

Graduate Students at CANE

Four of our graduate students will present papers at CANE (Classical Association of New England) Annual Meeting, St. Anselm College, Manchester, New Hampshire March 7-8, 2014 March 7 Paper Session II (10:10-11:25) Amanda Jarvis, “Visual Perception and the Graspable Image in Ovid” Karen Mower, “Circe’s Understanding of Rape Victims in Ovid” March 8 Paper Session […]

Workshop with Alice Oswald

The English poet Alice Oswald will conduct a workshop on her book-length poem, “Memorial: A Version of Homer’s Iliad”, Thursday, Feb. 20 from 3:00-4:30 p.m. in Mugar Library 424 (771 Commonwealth Ave).  All are most welcome.

Graduate Student Conference Announced

The sixth annual Graduate Student Conference of Classical Studies at Boston University is scheduled for Saturday, March 8, 2014 in the Colloquium Room (RM 906) of the Photonics Building.  We are very excited to have Professor Maria Liston of the University of Waterloo deliver the keynote at the conference.  Breakfast and lunch will be provided. For more information, […]

Workshop on New Sappho

Students and faculty gathered together for a two-hour workshop to discuss the recently discovered fragments by Sappho, with the focus on the better preserved “Brothers Poem” and its interpretation, constitution of the text, and reception. For more information about the findings, please click here.

Classics Major Places Second at UROP Symposium

Sydney Shea (CAS’14, Ancient Greek and Latin) won 2nd place poster in the Sixteenth Annual Undergraduate Research Symposium last week for outstanding presentation of her research, Alexandria’s Influence: the Culture of Editing Homeric Manuscripts. For more about undergraduate research in the Classical Studies Department, visit our webpage.