Past Events



COLLOQUIUM: Rachel Lesser, Gettysburg, "Female Ethics and Epic Rivalry: Intertextuality between Penelope in the Odyssey and Helen in the Iliad"

Oct 26, 2017 at -

In book 23, lines 213–224 of the Odyssey, Penelope explains her slowness to acknowledge Odysseus’s identity with her dread of being deceived like Helen, who, as she asserts, would not have slept with a… Read More



COLLOQUIUM: Kim Bowes, UPENN, "Lives and landscapes of Roman peasants"

Oct 19, 2017 at -

New work on the lives of Roman non-elites is changing the way we understand everything from Roman economies to social relationships. This talk presents new work from the Roman Peasant Project, an interdisciplinary… Read More



COLLOQUIUM: Brooke Holmes, Princeton, "Tissue of the World: On Stoic Sympathy"

Oct 12, 2017 at -

The concept of cosmic sympathy, highly developed by the Stoics, is at once deeply foreign to us in its claims regarding a mind fully immanent in the world and intriguing, as we struggle anew with imagining… Read More



COLLOQUIUM: Chiara Ferella, Humboldt University of Berlin, "Empedocles' symmetry revisited"

Sep 28, 2017 at -

How many worlds per cosmic cycle did Empedocles postulate? The answer to this question derives from a revised notion of Empedocles’ symmetry, which renders the standard hypothesis of two worlds per cycle… Read More



COLLOQUIUM: Julia Hejduk, Baylor, "Was Virgil Reading the Bible? Original Sin and an Astonishing Acrostic in the Orpheus and Eurydice"

Sep 21, 2017 at -

The ancient Roman poet Virgil (70-19 BC), best known as the author of the Aeneid, holds a unique position in the Western tradition:  because his fourth Eclogue was thought to prophesy… Read More



COLLOQUIUM: Edmund Richardson, Durham, "Can Classical Reception Keep Its Promises?"

Sep 14, 2017 at -

Over the last two decades, classical reception has become a wide-ranging and voracious discipline. Yet scholarly consensus is hard to find on many fundamental questions regarding what reception… Read More



COLLOQUIUM: James Ker, UPENN, "The Distinguished Day: Diachronic Perspectives on Clock Time at Rome"

Sep 7, 2017 at -

Who divided the Roman day, and in the process divided Roman history? Ancient literature and material culture offer multiple possible perspectives on what it means to ask such a question, as well as multiple… Read More



Edith Hall, University College London, "How did reciting Euripides' Greek affect Ezra Pound's early poetry?"

Jun 20, 2017 at

The lecture is free and open to the public, and is part of the Ezra Pound International Conference (EPIC) meeting in the Kislak Center, Van Pelt-Dietrich Library, 6th Floor, June 19-23, 2017. The theme of the… Read More



PHF: The Persistent Life of Ancient Greece

Oct 18, 2017 at

The Penn Humanities Forum Presents:

"The Persistent Life of Ancient Greece" featuring guest speaker Edith Hall, Professor of Classics, King's College London.  

Read More



Cam Grey & Emily Wilson, ECCE HOMO @ The University of Deleware

Apr 18, 2017 - Apr 21, 2017 at -

What is human dignity? What sorts of perils does a society evoke when it (collectively) renounces or dismisses the concept of human dignity? What activities constitute a violation of human rights and to… Read More