Hopkins Graduates at the SCS Conference 2025
Hopkins Classics Graduates and Post-Docs presented in strength at this year’s SCS conference in Philadelphia (Jan. 2-6), with the following papers on a wide variery of panels, including Greek Tragedy; Animals; Hidden Labor and Precarity in the Roman World; Byzantine and Early Modern Reception; Translation and Creative Adaptation; Between, Beyond, Bygone, Behind: Queer Time in the Ancient Mediterranean; Classical Legacies and the Ibero-Classical World.
Congratulations to all!
Martin Michalek: ‘Hope Mirrlees, Horace, and the Carpe Diem Poetics of Modernism.’
Keisuke Nakajima: ‘ “What is to love, umpossible?”: Plato, Lyly and the Alchemy of Love.’
Charissa Skoutelas: ‘ “A Torch Like the Shining Moon”: Xenophanean Threads in Aeschylus’ Agamemnon.’
Kathryn Stutz: ‘To Live by Night and Die by Day: (Having a) Queer Time in the Ancient Greek Arctic.’ Tashi Treadway: ‘Ancient Veterinarians and their Animal Patients.’
Ella González (History of Art): ‘Antioch Mosaics in Cuba? Exploring the Classical Tradition in the Caribbean.’
Christopher Londa (Loeb Library Foundation Post-doctoral Fellow): ‘Last words: Deathbeds, Dictation, and Dying “Alone”.’