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Cover of Euripides' The Trojan Women: A Comic, by Rosanna Bruno and Anne Carson

Blog: “Can We Strangle the Muse?”: Carson and Bruno’s The Trojan Women

Christopher Trinacty, Emma Glen, Emily Hudson |

Blog: Come and Take It: The End of Eidolon

Sarah Bond |

Blog: What Are the Best Classics Books for Children?

Sarah Bond |

Blog: Working Together to Transcribe Ancient Documents During COVID-19

Sarah Bond |

Blog: How to Kill a Canon: Sourcebooks that Address the Silence

Sarah Bond |

Blog: Inscribed Memory, the Holocaust, and the Jewish Population of Rome

Sarah Bond |

Blog: Addressing the Divide Between Archaeology and Classics

Sarah Bond |

Blog: Addressing the Divide Between Biblical Studies and Classics

Sarah Bond |

Blog: The Art of Translation: An Interview with Poet Aaron Poochigian

Christopher Trinacty |

Blog: A Roundup of Reports, Reactions, and Reflections After the SCS Annual Meeting

Sarah Bond |

Blog: Predicting the Future of Classics

Christopher Trinacty |

Blog: Vox Populi: Podcasting and Equity at the SCS Annual Meeting

Curtis Dozier |
A white marble sculpture of a hand hold a long cylinder

Blog: A Guide to Pitching Your Book at a Conference

Erin Averett, Sarah Bond, Derek Counts, Bethany Wasik |
A stone sculpture of a face with an open mouth and furrowed brow

Blog: Siliquasparsiones: Podcasts in Latin

Curtis Dozier, Christopher Polt |

Blog: Ale Caesar! Classical Reception and the Art of the Beer Label

Sarah Bond |
Infant Hercules Strangling Two Serpents, late 15th–early 16th century. Bronze. Metropolitan Museum of Art. CC0 1.0.

Blog: Graphic Mythology: How Graphic Novels Visualize the Ancient World

Christopher Trinacty |
YouTube-TedEd screenshot from “A glimpse of teenage life in ancient Rome” animated by Cognitive Media and written and narrated by Ray Laurence (Image under a CC BY -- NC -- ND 4.0 International license).

Blog: Teaching Roman Daily Life Through Animation: Spotlight on Ray Laurence

Sarah Bond |
Photo by Christopher Trinacty and used by permission.

Blog: Music and Mythology: A Classics Playlist for the End of Summer

Christopher Trinacty |
Figure of the heavenly bodies - Illuminated illustration of the Ptolemaic geocentric conception of the Universe by Portuguese cosmographer and cartographer Bartolomeu Velho (?-1568). From his work Cosmographia, made in France, 1568 (Public Domain).

Blog: What Is "The West"? Addressing The Controversy Over HUM110 at Reed College

Sarah Bond |

Blog: Anno Domini: Computational Analysis, Antisemitism, and the Early Christian Debate Over Easter

Sarah Bond |