About the faculty of the
Department of Greek and Roman Classics
updated 13 May 2009Daniel W. Berman (beginning fall 2009), Associate Professor, earned his B.A. from the University of Michigan and his Ph.D. from Yale University, both in Classics. His research interests include archaic and classical Greek poetry and myth, mythography, and topography and ancient geography. His current research focuses on how Greek mythic texts represent physical space, especially the urban environment of Greek Thebes, and the presence of Greek Thebes and its territory of Boeotia in verses of the Boeotian poets Pindar and Corinna. He has published articles on Aeschylus, the city of Thebes, the Dirce spring, and related subjects, and also one on herdsmen in Theocritus. His monograph, Myth and Culture in Aeschylus' Seven Against Thebes, was published in 2007 by Edizioni dell'Ateneo, and he is translator from French of a book by Claude Calame, Myth and History in Ancient Greece: The Symbolic Creation of a Colony (Princeton 2003). Dan teaches courses in Greek and Latin language and literature, classical myth, and ancient civilization and culture. He also maintains a teaching interest in Roman archaeology and topography. In 2001-2002 he taught at the Intercollegiate Center for Classical Studies in Rome as an assistant professor, and he is looking forward to returning to ICCS-Rome as Professor-In-Charge in 2012-2013. Please visit his website for a full CV. [phone] [email]
Martha Davis, Associate Professor, received degrees in Classics and English from Florida State University, and the PhD in Classics from Cornell University. Her research is in Latin Poetry, particularly post-Augustan epic. She regularly teaches courses in Latin, comparative mythology, the ancient city, and Sacred Space (General education Arts). In 2004 Martha Davis was a winner of the Excellence in Teaching Award from the American Philological Association. Dr. Davis is Chair of the Board of Eta Sigma Phi, national undergraduate honorary society for Classics, and co-sponsors
the local chapter, Zeta Beta, with Dr. Karen Hersch. Dr. Davis is also the adviser for the Department. 204-8202. madavis@temple.eduKaren Klaiber Hersch, Assistant Professor, received her B.A. in Classics from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, her M.A. in Classics from Tufts University and her Ph.D. in Classics from Rutgers University. Her research interests include Roman religion, Roman social history and imperial Latin literature. She is currently working on revisions to her book The Roman Wedding, a revision of her dissertation, which Cambridge University Press will publish. She teaches courses in Latin, Roman literature, Women in Antiquity, Sacred Space, Roman religion and Intellectual Heritage. Dr. Hersch is co-adviser of Eta Sigma Phi, the National Classics Honor Society. Her publications include a review of Ittai Gradel's Emperor Worship and Roman Religion (Oxford, 2002) in the Journal of Roman Studies, and an article in the classical journal Arethusa entitled Violentilla Victa, a study of the depiction of the uniquely independent bride Violentilla in Statius. She works with Dr. Davis as co-adviser of Eta Sigma Phi. During 2004-5 Dr. Hersch held a Faculty Fellowship in Temple's Society of Fellows in the Humanities. khersch@temple.edu
Alex Gottesman (beginning fall 2009), Assistant Professor, received his B.A. from Hunter College of the City University of New York, and his M.A. and PhD from the University of Chicago. He is interested, broadly, in Greek literature and culture, and more specifically in Greek ideas about law, politics and economics. He is currently revising his dissertation for publication. The project, provisionally entitled Theatrical Democracy in Ancient Athens, examines how theatricality was used in Athenian politics, what its connection was to ideas of status and expense, and what kinds of responses it elicited from critics. Additional interests include rhetoric and performance (an article on the Homeric rhetorical figure of kertomia, and the kind of performance it denoted, appears in Classical Quarterly 58), and ideas about property and propriety.
Eric Kondratieff, Assistant Professor (Teaching/Instructional) earned his M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in Ancient History at the University of Pennsylvania, where he wrote his dissertation on Popular Power in Action: Tribunes of the Plebs in the Later Republic. While at Penn, Eric taught a wide range of courses in Greek and Roman history, archaeology, topography and Latin. One of the co-authors for the book Mapping Augustan Rome (Journal of Roman Archaeology, Suppl. 50), he has also published articles in Roman numismatics, a continuing research interest for nearly two decades. He is currently working on a revision of his dissertation for publication, and on articles exploring the intersection of Augustan coinage as commemorative art and as evidence for other commemorative art. His other (current) research interests include Greek and Roman historiography, epigraphy and economy. ekondrat@temple.edu
Robin Mitchell-Boyask, Professor and Chair, received his B.A. In Classics from the University of Chicago and his Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from Brown University. He teaches courses in the Greek and Latin languages, classical mythology, ancient epic and Greek drama. He has won the Ketels Award for teaching in Intellectual Heritage and the Eleanore Hofkin Award for Excellence in Teaching from CLA. Robin serves as Web Editor of the American Philological Association. His research interests include Greek drama, Homer, Vergil and Comparative Literature, and he has published a number of articles on Euripides, Sophocles, the Aeneid, and comparative approaches to Greek tragedy. His book, Approaches to Teaching the Dramas of Euripides was published by the MLA in 2002, and Focus issued his translation and commentary on Euripides' Hecuba in 2006. His monograph Plague and the Athenian Imagination: Drama, History, and the Cult of Asclepius, was published by Cambridge University Press in 2008, and his study of the Eumenides of Aeschylus also appears in 2008 with Duckworth. Future plans include a book on the function of the horse in ancient epic. He has been a Junior Fellow at the Center for Hellenic Studies, and, during 2005, he was a Visiting Fellow at Wolfson College, University of Cambridge. 204-3672. His complete vita is available. robin@temple.edu
Sydnor Roy (beginning fall 2009), Assistant Professor (Teaching/Instructional), earned her B.A. from Swarthmore College and her M.A. and Ph.D. in Classics from UNC Chapel Hill. Her interests include Greek Historiography, the Philosophy of History, Early Political Theory, the Ancient Novel, and Augustan Poetry. She is currently revising her dissertation, Political Relativism: Implicit Political Theory in Herodotus’ Histories, for publication, as well as working on articles on Lucretius, Ovid, and Herodotus.
Daniel P. Tompkins, Associate Professor, earned his B.A. at Dartmouth College and his Ph. D. at Yale University. He has written reviews and essays on Homer, Thucydides, Wallace Stevens, and the ancient city, and is currently working on Thucydidean historiography and language. He teaches courses on the history of slavery, the ancient city, Greek language, and the western intellectual tradition. Dr. Tompkins also has won the Excellence in Teaching Award from the American Philological Association, and, in 2009, the Great Teacher Award from Temple University. His website is available now. 204-4900, pericles@temple.edu
PEGGY SHADDING is the department secretary. 204-8267.
Affiliated Faculty
Jane Evans is Professor of Art History. Her doctorate is from the University of Pennsylvania, and her research areas are Art of Ancient Rome, Art of Ancient Greece, History of Crafts (to the Industrial Revolution). During the summer she participate in an excavation of the small Gallo-Roman town of Javols, France, under the direction of Alain Ferdieres, Universite de Tours. Temple students join Dr Evans in the work.
Vasiliki Limberis is Associate Professor of Religion. She received her doctorate from Harvard. Dr. Limberis is trained in the History of Ancient Christianity and is fascinated by the interplay of religious cultures -- pagan, Christian, Jewish -- in the first five centuries of the common era. Her teaching reflects a wide variety of themes, but invariably lands on the two most volatile centuries, the first and the fourth, when the power of the Roman state brings the most to bear on the varieties of religions in the Mediterranean. In addition, her teaching interests have expanded to include the visual arts of the period, iconography, sculptural arts, Roman painting, and mosaics. Dr. Limberis' main topic of research is the Cappadocian Fathers. She is currently researching the imbrication of "family" in Late Antiquity and Christianity.
David Wolfsdorf, Assoociate Professor of Philosophy, Ph.D. University of Chicago, specializes in Greek philosophy. His book Trials of Reason: Plato and the Crafting of Philosophy published in 2007 (OUP). He has published many articles on Greek philosophy with a particular focus on Plato. He is currently working on Greek philosophical treatments of pleasure and its relation to goodness.
GHR Classics is located on the third floor of Anderson Hall.
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