Celticgirlonamission ago

Whatever kid peace

Celticgirlonamission ago

If they can be tied together it can you shill

Celticgirlonamission ago

I'm suggesting that porn could be traded through university system, why does that sound so far far fetched

Celticgirlonamission ago

It's a commonality also seems to be lots of universities tied to podesta emails

Celticgirlonamission ago

Berkeley

http://www.classics.berkeley.edu/people/faculty Susanna Elm Professor of History and Classics 2310 Dwinelle Hall [email protected] (510) 642-2238

G.R.F. (John) Ferrari Melpomene Distinguished Professor of Classical Languages and Literature; Professor of Classics 7217 Dwinelle Hall [email protected] (510) 642-3164

Mark Griffith Klio Distinguished Professor of Classical Languages and Literature, Professor of Classics and of TDPS (Theater, Dance, and Performance Studies) 7215 Dwinelle Hall [email protected] (510) 642-3147; alternate: (510) 642-4218

Christopher Hallett Professor of Classics and Art History 418 Doe Library [email protected] (510) 643-4512; alternate: (510) 643-7290; fax: (510) 643-2185

Todd Hickey Associate Professor/Director, Center for the Tebtunis Papyri 489 Bancroft Library [email protected] (510) 642-4556; fax: (510) 643-4313

Leslie Kurke Gladys Rehard Wood Chair, Professor of Classics and Comparative Literature 4331 Dwinelle Hall [email protected] (510) 642-2054; alternate: (510) 642-4218; fax: (510) 643-2959

Duncan MacRae Assistant Professor of Classics 7213 Dwinelle [email protected]

Sara Magrin Assistant Professor of Classics 7216 Dwinelle [email protected]

Maria Mavroudi Professor of History and Classics

Kathleen McCarthy Associate Professor of Classics, Graduate Adviser for Classics 7221 Dwinelle Hall [email protected]

Trevor Murphy Associate Professor of Classics 7220 Dwinelle Hall [email protected] (510) 642-4120; alternate: (510) 642-4218

Ellen Oliensis Professor & Chair, Classics 7211 Dwinelle Hall [email protected] (510) 642-9207

Nikolaos Papazarkadas Associate Professor of Classics — Director of the Sara B. Aleshire Center for the Study of Greek Epigraphy 7207 Dwinelle Hall [email protected] (510) 642-7201

J. Theodore Peña Professor 7308 Dwinelle Hall [email protected] (510) 643-8964

James I. Porter Chancellor's Professor of Rhetoric and Classics [email protected]

Dylan Sailor Associate Professor of Classics 7214 Dwinelle Hall [email protected] (510) 642-4787

Kim Shelton Associate Professor of Classics, Director of Nemea Center for Classical Archaeology, Undergraduate Advisor 7209 Dwinelle Hall [email protected] (510) 642-4218; fax: (510) 643-2959

Andrew Stewart Nicholas C. Petris Professor in Greek Studies, Professor of Art History and Classics; Director, UC Berkeley excavation team, Tel Dor, Israel 412 Doe Library [email protected] (510) 642-4524; alternate: (510) 643-7290; fax: (510) 643-2185

Mario Telò Professor of Classics 7212 Dwinelle [email protected]

derram ago

https://archive.is/cGLLH :

Professor of ancient Greek and Roman sexuality imprisoned for child porn | New York Post

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Celticgirlonamission ago

https://classics.georgetown.edu/faculty

List of all faculty that teaches Greek studies

Dr. Catherine Keesling Catherine M. Keesling is Associate Professor in the Department of Classics. She has received fellowships from the NEH, the Archaeological Institute of America, the American School of Classical Studies at Athens, the Fulbright Foundation, and the Mellon Foundation. She is currently President of the American Society of Greek and Latin Epigraphy and Chair of the Admissions and Fellowships Committee of the ASCSA. Her publications include The Votive Statues of the Athenian Acropolis (Cambridge 2003), as well as articles and book chapters on Greek sculpture and epigraphy of the Archaic, Classical, and Hellenistic periods. La Barbera Dr. Sandro La Barbera Professor La Barbera's interests lie predominantly in the field of Latin literature, especially poetry from Mid-Republic to the first centuries of the Empire, usually keeping an eye or two on Greek literature. He does not disdain occasional incursions into the Latin literature of Late Antiquity and the Renaissance since his perspective on ancient texts encompasses both the study of how ancient texts survived and the literary interactions between authors and genres during the history of literature. You may contact Professor La Barbera at [email protected]. Lamb Professor Ismini Lamb Ismini Lamb directs the Modern Greek Studies Program where she teaches all levels of Modern Greek language and courses on Greek culture, including an introduction to Byzantine History and Civilization and a course on The Orthodox Faith in Greek Culture. Ismini cultivates student appreciation of the Greek language and culture and its continuity from antiquity to the present. Her special interests include the profound influence of Greek media and political ethos on Greek national identity and expression, and social and humanitarian issues in contemporary Greece. Ismini is the long-standing advisor to Georgetown’s student Hellenic association and also a C.S. Lewis Fellow. Currently she is writing a biography of the American philhellene, author, diplomat and activist, George Horton. McNelis Dr. Charles McNelis Professor McNelis primarily teaches courses in Greek and Roman literature, both in translation and in the original languages. He is particularly interested in the epic poetry of authors such as Homer and Vergil and their portrayals of human endeavor within political and religious contexts. The literature in translation courses take as a starting point the ways in which other ancient artists (e.g. Euripides, Ovid, Lucan, Apuleius) and/or literary genres (elegy, satire, drama) poignantly responded to and transformed these culturally powerful texts. Study of stylistic and thematic points of these texts in Greek and Latin affords an even deeper understanding of these works. These kinds of intellectual concerns are reflected in many of his publications, including his book entitled 'Statius' Thebaid and the Poetics of Civil War' (Cambridge, 2007) and his ongoing commentary on Statius' Achilleid, a poem which takes as its subject Achilles, the greatest Greek hero. Nichols Dr. Marden Nichols Professor Nichols primarily teaches courses in Latin literature and Roman art and archaeology. Her published research concerns Roman domestic decor and the moral discourse of luxury, the authorial personae of Horace and Vitruvius, the satirist Persius, and the reception history of plaster cast replicas of classical art. Her first book, on Vitruvius’ De architectura, is forthcoming from Cambridge University Press. Osgood Dr. Josiah Osgood Professor Osgood’s research covers many areas of Roman history and Latin literature, with a special focus on the late Roman Republic and early empire. He is the author of several books, including Caesar's Legacy: Civil War and the Emergence of the Roman Empire (Cambridge, 2006), which explores the civil war that followed the assassination of Julius Caesar and the way it was treated in contemporary literature, and Turia: A Roman Woman's Civil War (Oxford, 2014), which argues that Roman women had a distinctive experience of civil war. He is presently working on a historical survey, Rome from Republic to Empire (150 BC - AD 20). Professor Osgood enjoys teaching Latin at all levels and in 2011 published a textbook A Suetonius Reader in the Bolchazy-Carducci Latin Readers series. Each year in collaboration with Georgetown's Office of Global Education he leads a two-week study tour in Rome.

Pedrick Dr. Victoria Pedrick Professor Pedrick primarily teaches courses in Greek and Latin language and literature, with a particular interest in Archaic and Classical Greek literature and culture. She also teaches an introduction to Classical myth. In all her courses, she encourages students to focus on the audience and cultural contexts for ancient texts, including when appropriate modern engagement. She has published essays on Homer, Greek Tragedy, and Latin Lyric as well as two volumes on tragedy, one a collection of essays and the other a study of Euripides and Freud. Philbrick Dr. Rachel Philbrick Professor Philbrick primarily teaches courses in Latin language and literature, as well as courses on Classical literature in translation. Her research interests lie in the poetry of the Hellenistic and early Imperial periods, especially literary constructions of and responses to the geography of empire. She has written most extensively on the poetry of Ovid, including his treatment of myth and his exilic works. Sens Dr. Alexander Sens Professor Sens primarily teaches courses in Greek and Latin language and literature. He is particularly interested in the way that poets locate themselves in an ongoing literary tradition by alluding to and engaging with the works of their predecessors. In courses in translation, he is interested in introducing students to the ways in which ancient authors both created and played with the boundaries of genre. His goal is for students at all levels to be able to think independently about the ways in which ancient authors defined their own projects against the background of the various literary traditions they were working with.