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Publications

  • The Tools of Asclepius
  • Cover of Dynamic Epigraphy with stone-cut inscription
  • View looking out from a cave, a print by Edward Dodwell
  • Journal Cover
Author/Titlesort descending Research Type Related Fields
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

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