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Classics Faculty


Anthony Corbeill, Pamela Gordon, Stanley Lombardo, Emma Scioli, Michael Shaw, Philip Stinson,Tara Welch, John G. Younger


Dr. Anthony Corbeill

Tel. 785-864-2393


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Bibliography of Publications (PDF)

Anthony Corbeill, Professor of Classics, received his B.A. from the University of Michigan and his M.A. and Ph.D. in Classical Languages from the University of California at Berkeley (1990). He has held the American Philological Association fellowship to the Thesaurus Linguae Latinae in Munich, Germany, a comprehensive dictionary of the Latin language (1990-1991), and a post-doctoral fellowship at the American Academy in Rome (1994-1995). His research focuses on Roman literature and cultural history. He has published two books: Controlling Laughter. Political Humor in the Late Roman Republic (Princeton University Press 1996), which focuses on the meaning of humorous political invective, especially in the oratory of Cicero; and Nature Embodied. Gesture in Ancient Rome (Princeton University Press 2004), a survey of the meaning of gesture in the contexts of prayer and incantation, mourning ritual, and political invective, as well as on the correlation between facial expressions and political power, and the significance of thumbs. His current book-length project is entitled The Boundaries of Sex and Gender in Ancient Rome. He has also published on ancient sexuality, education, and Latin poetry; for additional information, see his list of publications.

Dr. Pamela Gordon

Tel. 785-864-2396


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Pamela Gordon, Chair and Associate Professor of Classics, has a B.A. from Oberlin College and an M.A. and Ph.D. from Bryn Mawr College. At KU she teaches Greek and Latin at all levels, as well as courses on Greek and Roman literature in translation. She received the Ned Fleming Award for Outstanding Teaching at KU in 1995, and her research has been supported by the American Council of Learned Societies. Gordon's research interests include the literature and culture of both Greece and Rome. Her publications include: Epicurus in Lycia: The Second-Century World of Diogenes of Oenoanda (University of Michigan Press, 1996); "Phaeacian Dido: Lost Pleasures of an Epicurean Intertext," Classical Antiquity 17.2 (1998); "The Lover's Voice in Heroides 15: Or, Why is Sappho a Man?" in Roman Sexualities, edited by Judy Hallett and Marilyn Skinner (Princeton University Press, 1998); "Some Unseen Monster: Rereading Lucretius on Sex," in The Roman Gaze, edited by David Fredrick (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2002); and "Remembering the Garden: The Trouble with Women in the School of Epicurus," in Philodemus and the New Testament World, edited by John Fitzgerald, Glenn Holland, and Dirk Obbink (E. J. Brill, 2004). She also wrote the introduction to Stanley Lombardo's Sappho: poems and fragments (Hackett 2002), and serves on the steering committee of the Hellenistic Moral Philosophy unit of the Society of Biblical Literature (http://www.pitts.emory.edu/hmpec/).

Dr. Stanley Lombardo

Tel. 785-864-2390


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Stanley Lombardo, Professor of Classics, is a native of New Orleans. He has a B.A. from Loyola University in New Orleans, an M.A. from Tulane University, and a Ph.D. from the University of Texas (1976). In 1976 he joined the faculty at the University of Kansas, where he served as department chair for fifteen years and teaches Greek and Latin at all levels, as well as general courses on Greek literature and culture. He was recently awarded a Kemper Teaching Fellowship by the university and a Mortar Board Teaching Award. He currently serves as Director of the University Honors Program. Professor Lombardo's publications are primarily literary translations of Greek poetry, including Homer's Iliad (Hackett, 1997; reviewed in the New York Times, 7/20/97; recipient of the Byron Caldwell Book Award; performed by Aquila Theatre Company at Lincoln Center, 1999); Homer's Odyssey (Hackett, 2000; reviewed in the New York Times, 7/09/00, and a New York Times Book of the Year); and translations of Plato, Hesiod, Callimachus, Aratus, and Horace. His translation of Sappho was a finalist for the 2003 Pen Literary Award for translation. He also maintains an interest in Asian philosophy and has co-authored , with Stephen Addiss, a translation of the Tao Te Ching (Hackett (1993). He has recently completed a translation of Virgil's Aeneid (Hackett, 2005). Professor Lombardo has given dramatic readings of his translations on campuses throughout the country, as well as at such venues as the Smithsonian Institution , the Chicago Poetry Center and on C-SPAN and National Public Radio.

Dr. Emma Scioli

Tel. 785-864-2546


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Emma Scioli, Assistant Professor of Classics, has a BA in Italian from Connecticut College (1993), and an MA and PhD (2005) from UCLA. She was an instructor at the Intercollegiate Center for Classical Studiers in Rome in 2001-2002, and held a two-year Kress Fellowship at the American Academy in Rome (2003-2005). She is currently teaching a graduate seminar on Latin elegy and supervising the introductory Latin program at KU. Professor Scioli's research interests include Latin poetry, dreams and sleep in antiquity, and Roman art. Her current projects include a study of representations of the hermaphrodite in Roman art, and an analysis of dreams and visual experience in Latin elegiac poetry. She is also co-editing a volume of papers from an international conference entitled Sub Imagine Somni: Nighttime Phenomena in Greco-Roman Culture.

Dr. Michael Shaw

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Michael Shaw, Associate Professor of Classics, received his B.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Texas at Austin. His main interest is Greek literature, and his most recent effort is the introduction and notes for a translation of Sophocles' Electra, which appeared in 2001 in the series "The Greek Tragedy in New Translations," published by Oxford University Press. Prof. Shaw has also taught courses in Greek Literature and Tragedy, Modern Remakes of Greek Tragedy, and undergraduate and graduate Greek and Latin. Professor Shaw also serves as an advisor at the Freshman-Sophomore Advising Center. He is involved in historic preservation and has served as president of the Lawrence Preservation Alliance and the Kansas Preservation Alliance.

Professor Shaw also serves as Undergraduate Advisor.

Dr. Philip Stinson

Tel. 785-864-3065


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Philip Stinson, Assistant Professor of Classics, joined KU's Classics faculty in 2007. He earned his Bachelor of Architecture from Ball State University (1991), a Master in Design Studies (in Architectural History and Theory) from Harvard University (1995), an MA from the University of California at Los Angeles (2001), and a PhD in the History of Art and Classical Archaeology from the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University (2007). As architect, conservator, and excavator at the excavations of Aphrodisias and Sardis, he is publishing the Civil Basilica at Aphrodisias, an early Classical painted tomb at Sardis, and working on conservation projects at Sardis. Recent publications include an exhibition catalogue, The Ancient City of Sardis: Approaches to Graphic Recording (2003), plans and drawings in K. Welch's The Roman Amphitheatre from its Origins to the Colosseum (2007), and other articles and exhibitions. His major interests include Greek and Roman art and architecture, Classical archaeology, information technology and the humanities, and the cultural heritage of archaeological sites.

Dr. Tara Welch

Tel. 785-864-2395


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Tara Welch Associate Professor of Classics, completed degrees in Latin and Greek at USC (B.A. 1990), Oxford University (M.A. 1993) and UCLA (Ph.D. 1999). At KU, she teaches Latin at all levels, as well as courses in Roman and Greek literature and civilization. Professor Welch's research interests are in Latin poetry, particularly of the Augustan age, and the city of Rome. Her publications include a book on the late poetry of the elegiac poet Propertius, The Elegiac Cityscape: Propertius and the Meaning of Roman Monuments (forthcoming Fall 2005 from the Ohio State University Press) and articles on Propertius' topographical poetry and on Horace's Satires. She has also reviewed books for Classical Review, Classical Bulletin, and the New England Journal of Classical Studies. Her current project is a comprehensive study of the myth of Tarpeia in Rome. This project, for which she was awarded the NEH Summer Stipend, mines Roman literature, architecture, coins, religious practice, and law to understand how Tarpeia's myth was a vehicle Romans used to explore their own identity, to consider tensions in their social and political ideology, and to scrutinize their relationships with each other and with other communities. Professor Welch is a member of the American Philological Association and CAMWS. She also coordinates the selection of Rhodes Scholars from Kansas, Missouri, Arkansas, and Mississippi.

Professor Welch also serves as Undergraduate Advisor.

Dr. John G. Younger

Tel. 785-864-3263


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Professor Younger's Homepage
Professor Younger's Curriculum Vitae

John G. Younger, joined the department in 2002 as Professor of Classics and of Humanities and Western Civilization; he has a BA in Classics from Stanford University, and an MA and PhD in Classics from the University of Cincinnati. Professor Younger's research focuses on the Bronze Age Aegean (especially in art [particularly sealstones and engraved fingerrings] and writing [especially Cretan Hieroglyphic and Linear A] and administration) and on Greek art, especially sculpture. He has written two books on Minoan-Mycenaean sealstones, and another on Music in the Aegean Bronze Age; he has also written numerous articles and reviews on various Bronze Age and Classical topics. His most recent work has centered on gender and sexuality: "Women in Relief: 'Double Consciousness' in Classical Tombstones," in From the Homosocial to the Homoerotic: Women's Relations to Women in Antiquity, edited by Nancy S. Rabinowitz and Lisa Auanger (Austin: University of Texas Press 2001), "Waist Compression in the Preclassical Aegean," Archaeological News 23 (1998-2000) 1-9; Sex in the Ancient World, A-Z (Routledge Press, fall 2004). Work-in-progress includes a holistic analysis of Cretan Hieroglyphic, and Greek Art & Archaeology, a Social History (forthcoming; Blackwells Press). Professor Younger's professional memberships include the American Philological Association (APA), member and former Fellow of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens (ASCSA), Archaeological Institute of America (AIA), British School of Archaeology at Athens (BSA), KU Oread Rainbow Alliance (KU-ORA), and the Women's Classical Caucus (WCC) and the Lambda Classical Caucus (LCC) of the American Philological Association. He is currently Editor of AJA Book Reviews (http://people.ku.edu/~jyounger/ajareviews) for the American Journal of Archaeology (http://www.ajaonline.org, and co-creator and manager of AegeaNet, an email discussion group centered on the pre-classical Aegean world since 1993 (http://people.ku.edu/~jyounger/aegeanet.html). He has three dogs.