by Graham Whitaker, University of Glasgow
Introduction by T. H. M. Gellar-Goad
2017 marked the twentieth anniversary of the publication of Barbara McManus’ Classics and Feminism: Gendering the Classics. It was also the twenty-fourth anniversary of the publication of Nancy Rabinowitz and…
by Barbara Gold
It was exciting to be at CAAS in 2017 both to look back at how far we have come in the fields of feminist scholarship and activism and to look ahead at where we might (should?)…
by Rachel H. Lesser
Nancy Sorkin Rabinowitz and Amy Richlin’s Feminist Theory and the Classics (1993) and Barbara F. McManus’ Classics and Feminism: Gendering the Classics…
Beginning in November 2016, I became the target of a campaign of anti-Semitic, misogynistic harassment, primarily on social media and by email. That harassment was the direct result of the work I do studying classical reception in virtual…
I remember the first time I read Catullus 101 (multas per gentes et multa per aequora vectus…), when I knew that all the index cards filled with principal parts had not…
The focus on Grace Macurdy’s role as a Classical historian and on Barbara McManus’ engaging biography of her has…
There is great power in naming a thing, bringing it into the light, calling it out, identifying it as something with a meaning…