Fourteen Classics Graduate Students to Present at CAMWS 2016 (Williamsburg, VA)

March 16, 2016

The abstracts of fourteen Classics M.A. students have been accepted by The Classical Association of the Middle West and South (CAMWS):

(first year students)

Stephen Czujko, “It’s Rough Being Claudius: Rustication in the Templum Divi Claudii

Elizabeth Harvey, “Anatomizing the Archetype: Character Conflation in Book Four of Ovid’s Metamorphoses

Travis Hill, “‘They Make Themselves Immortal’: Worship of the Great God at the Greek Colony of Odessos”

Elizabeth Keyser, “There’s More to Me Than My Bum: Interpreting Both Sides of the Boston Skyphos”

Kelly Moss, “The Origins of the Temple Architecture and Cult of Apollo at Didyma”

Daylin Oakes, “Rape Glossed as Robbery: Avoiding or Addressing Difficult Topics in Introductory Latin”

William Ramundt, “Stamping Around in Italy: A New Arretine Stamp from the Villa del Vergigno”

Clare Rasmussen, “Identity Theft: Romano-Celtic Temples”

Catherine Schenk, “How to Get Away With Murder: Domitian’s Executions of Vestal Virgins”

(second year students)

Lauren Alberti, “Epicurious about the memento mori?: The Skeleton in Roman Feasting Contexts”

Ian Dahl, “A Galling Problem: The Cultural Identity of Galatians in Scholarship”

Shannon Ells, “From Wood to Stone: A Study in Forum Petrification at Sarmizegetusa, Dacia”

James Geach, “τῶν δ᾽ ἀδοκήτων πόρον: Surprise and the Function of Euripides’ Prologues”

Melanie Zelikovsky, "Mystery Men: A New Approach to the Gold Masks of Grave Circle A"

Each of these graduate students will present a paper at the organization's 112th Annual Meeting at the University of William and Mary (March 16-19, 2016). More information about the conference is available here