Sarah Culpepper Stroup. "Invaluable Collections: the Illusion of Poetic Presence in Martial’s Xenia and Apophoreta" Flavian Poetry. Brill: 2005. |
Publications, Essays |
Critical Theory, Culture, Latin Literature, Poetry and Poetics, Post-Augustan, Roman History and Culture |
Sarah Culpepper Stroup. "Making Memory: Ritual, Rhetoric, and Violence in the Imperial Roman Triumph.” Belief and Bloodshed: Religion and Violence across Time and Tradition. Rowman & Littlefield: 2007. |
Publications, Essays |
Culture, History, Imperial Rome, Roman History and Culture, Sociology |
Sarah Culpepper Stroup. "When I read my Cato, it is as if Cato speaks: The Evolution of Cicero’s Dialogic Voice." The Author’s Voice in Classical and Late Antiquity. Oxford: 2014. |
Publications, Essays |
Ancient, Culture, Latin Literature, Oratory, Rhetoric and Composition, Roman History and Culture |
Sarah Culpepper Stroup. “Without Patronage: Fetishization, Representation, and the Circulation of Gift-Texts in the Late Roman Republic.” The Gift in Antiquity. Wiley-Blackwell: 2013. |
Publications, Essays |
Ancient, Critical Theory, Culture, Philology, Poetry and Poetics, Roman History and Culture, Sociology |
Sarah Levin-Richardson and Deborah Kamen. “Epigraphy and Critical Fabulation: Imagining Narratives of Greco-Roman Sexual Slavery.” In Dynamic Epigraphy: New Approaches to Inscriptions. Ed. E. Cousins. Oxford: Oxbow Books, 2022. 201-221. |
Publications, Essays |
Archaeology, Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies, Greek History and Culture, Roman History and Culture |
Sarah Levin-Richardson and Deborah Kamen. “Revisiting Roman Sexuality: Agency and the Conceptualization of Penetrated Males.” In Sex in Antiquity: Exploring Gender and Sexuality in the Ancient World. Eds. M. Masterson, N. Rabinowitz, and J. Robson. Routledge, 2015. 449–460. |
Publications, Essays |
Roman History and Culture, Latin Literature, Body, Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies |
Sarah Levin-Richardson and Deborah Kamen. "Lusty Ladies in the Roman Imaginary." In Ancient Sex: New Essays. Eds. R. Blondell and K. Ormand. Columbus: Ohio State University, 2015. 231-252. |
Publications, Essays |
Roman History and Culture, Latin Literature, Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies |
Sarah Levin-Richardson. "Calos graffiti and infames at Pompeii." Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik 195 (2015): 274-282. |
Publications, Essays |
Roman History and Culture, Archaeology, Classics, Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies |
Sarah Levin-Richardson. "Bodily Waste and Boundaries in Pompeian Graffiti." In Ancient Obsenities. Eds. D. Dutsch and A. Suter. Univeristy of Michigan Press, 2015. 225–254. |
Publications, Essays |
Roman History and Culture, Archaeology, Body, Classics, Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies |
Sarah Levin-Richardson. "Vernae and Prostitution at Pompeii." Classical Quarterly 73.1 (2023): 250-256 [available open access] |
Publications, Essays |
Classics, Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies, Roman History and Culture |
Sarah Levin-Richardson. Il lupanare di Pompei: Sesso, classe e genere ai margini della società romana. Carocci editore, 2020. |
Publications, Books |
Archaeology, Body, Classics, Feminism and Feminist Theory, Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies, Roman History and Culture, Visual Culture |
Sarah Levin-Richardson. The Brothel of Pompeii: Sex, Class and Gender at the Margins of Roman Society. Cambridge University Press, 2019. |
Publications, Books |
Ancient, Archaeology, Architecture, Art History, Classics, Feminism and Feminist Theory, Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies, Roman History and Culture |
Sarah Levin-Richardson. “Facilis hic futuit:Graffiti and Masculinity in Pompeii’s ‘Purpose-built’ Brothel.” Helios 38.1(2011): 59–78. |
Publications, Essays |
Roman History and Culture, Archaeology, Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies, Queer Studies |
Sarah Levin-Richardson. “fututa sum hic: Female Subjectivity and Agency in Pompeian Sexual Graffiti.” Classical Journal 108.3 (2013): 319–45. |
Publications, Essays |
Roman History and Culture, Archaeology, Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies |
Sarah Levin-Richardson. “The Public and Private Lives of Pompeian Prostitutes.” In Women’s Lives, Women’s Voices: Roman Material Culture and Female Agency in the Bay of Naples, ed. B. Longfellow and M. Swetnam-Burland. Austin: University of Texas Press, 2021. 177–198. |
Publications, Essays |
Archaeology, Classics, Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies, History, Imperial Rome, Roman History and Culture |
Sarah Levin-Richardson. “‘Gay’ Pompeii: Pompeian Art and Homosexuality in the Early Twentieth Century.” In Ancient Rome and the Construction of Modern Homosexual Identities. Ed. J. Ingleheart. Oxford University Press, 2015. 197–213. |
Publications, Essays |
Roman History and Culture, Archaeology, Classics, Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies, Queer Studies, Reception Studies |
Stephen E. Hinds. "Between Formalism and Historicism." in A. Barchiesi and W. Scheidel, eds., The Oxford Handbook of Roman Studies. Oxford: OUP: 2010. 369-85. |
Publications, Essays |
Roman History and Culture, Latin Literature, Literary Criticism |
Stephen E. Hinds. "Claudianism in the De Raptu Proserpinae." Generic Interfaces in Latin Literature, eds. T.D. Papanghelis, S.J. Harrison, S. Frangoulidis. Berlin: De Gruyter, 2013. 169-92. |
Publications, Essays |
Roman History and Culture, Latin Literature, Late Antiquity |
Stephen E. Hinds. "The self-conscious cento." Chapter in Decadence: 'Decline and Fall' or 'Other Antiquity.' Heidelberg: Winter: 2014. 171-97. |
Publications, Essays |
Late Antiquity, Latin Literature, Roman History and Culture |
The Tools of Asclepius. Surgical Instruments in Greek and Roman Times. |
Publications, Books |
Greek History and Culture, Roman History and Culture, Archaeology, Medicine |