Classics
- An extensive collection of Southwestern prehistoric sandals is housed in the Museum of Natural History at the 做厙輦⑹. Because the sandals are ancient artifacts, researchers cant just strap them on to see how well they wear.
- Elspeth Dusinberre will deliver the 112th Distinguished Research Lecture at CU Boulder on Tuesday, May 1, at 4 p.m. in the UMCs Glenn Miller Ballroom. Her talk is titled Archaeology, Imperialism and What it Means to Be Human.
- Newly minted professors of distinction have notable expertise in artists personas, natural-language technology, classic poems and climate-change education, and on Sept. 21, they offered a public overview of their work.
- The Classics Department at the 做厙輦⑹ will host students from across the state for Colorado Classics Day from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 30, on the Norlin Library quadrangle.
- In Sept. 21 event professors of art and art history, classics, geography and linguistics will deliver lectures on their areas of expertise.
- Tyler Lansford is transforming the death of Julius Caesar into new life for Roman rhetoric. Audiences attending this summers Colorado Shakespeare Festival will see, hear and feel the resurrection.
- Jackie Elliott, associate professor of classics at the 做厙輦⑹, has won a 2016 Goodwin Award of Merit from the Society for Classical Studies, the nations top research recognition in classical languages & literature. Elliott was recognized for her book, Ennius and the Architecture of the Annales.
- In the headlines, the words humanities and crisis are so commonly conjoined that youd think that college courses on human thought, experience and creativity are collapsing like the Roman Empire. The story has more nuance than the headline, as the Classics Department illustrates.
- A CU Boulder classicist argues that the festival of Adonis was actually a dissent and a critique of important cultural practices.