Classics & Classical Studies CLAS

FFW 2017: Homer's Iliad Marathon Reading

Beginning Friday afternoon Oct. 13, at 3 p.m., the Eve Adler Department of Classics will sponsor a marathon reading of Homer’s “Iliad,” in English using the Lattimore translation. The “Iliad” is an epic Greek poem that recounts the siege of Troy and includes memorable allusions to ancient art, heroics of war and enduring literary images. The reading, by both students and faculty, will continue through Oct. 15, beginning at 10 a.m. each morning on Saturday and Sunday until dusk each evening.

Davis Family Library

Free
Open to the Public

Classical Studies, Literary Studies, and Philosophy Departments - Commencement 2022 Remarks and Awards

Remarks & awards for Classics & Classical Studies, Literary Studies, and Philosophy seniors and their families at 5:15 p.m. in the Robison Concert Hall, during the joint reception ongoing from 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. in the upper lobby of the Mahaney Arts Center.

Mahaney Arts Center, Olin C. Robison Concert Hall

Sappho's Reception in Imperial Greek Literature

Classics lecture by Ewen Bowie, Oxford University

Sappho was the only woman poet to attain canonical status in the ancient Greek world. The talk will explore how, at the same time as papyri document many readers of her poems in Greco-Roman Egypt in the first 3 centuries AD, Greek writers of different sorts - critics, philosophers, sophists and novelists - displayed their appreciation and knowledge of her poetry and sometimes reworked it to create their new, Sappho-scented prose and poetry.

Twilight 201