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Ashli Baker: “Sex and Subjunctive: gender, the body, and Roman imperialism in Ovid’s ‘love’ poetry.” – February 14, 2015

In the reign of the first Roman emperor, elite women became the objects of political and legal reforms that linked the wellbeing of Rome to their chastity and fertility.  At the same time, Roman imperialism was often depicted as the subjugation of women representing ethnic groups conquered by Rome’s armies.  In this talk Professor Baker will argue that Ovid, the Latin poet par excellence of this historical moment, uses the dominant rhetoric of gender hierarchy – including depictions of violence against women – to explore his own anxieties about the nature of empire and his place in it.  

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Allen Tran: “The anxieties of romantic and unrequited love in post-reform Ho Chi Minh City Vietnam” – November 11, 2014

What Ho Chi Minh City residents worry about as they fall in and out of love reflects neoliberal reconfigurations of the relation between self and society in which both romantic love and anxiety are produced by changing discourses of romance and the powers of the self that have emerged out of economic reforms. I present a close analysis of two case studies in order to understand how individuals draw from and reinvent tropes associated with romance to claim their own versions of a modern identity.  

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Kevin Daly: “Ancient Eyes, and Dis(abilities): Classical Greek Perspectives on Physical Difference” – February 4, 2014

This presentation reviews recent contributions of disability studies to Classics and Classics to disability studies. Via a few test cases, Daly will argue that to date the two disciplines have to some degree misheard each other. The interaction between the fields is important to scholars of both fields, but the evidence for ancient conceptions of difference has often been conflated with the evidence for the influence of the reception of Classics on modern perceptions. Daly will also consider whether the concept of race in Classical Studies might prove a useful analog to considering matters of disability.  

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