Frank M. Snowden Jr. | A Retrospective and Future Directions


A panel discussion with Carolivia Herron, Molly Levine, and Dan-el Padilla Peralta 
with moderator Caroline Stark
Friday, February 15 at 3:00 pm
Registration is limited.
Please register at Eventbrite by February 14.
This event will be live-streamed at
https://media.video.harvard.edu/core/live/harvard-chs-live.html
(best viewed with Safari or Firefox).
Directions and Visitor information
This dialogue is part of the Black Classicists Exhibition Event Series.

Speakers
Carolivia Herron

Carolivia Herron is an African American Jew and a Senior Faculty Scholar Coach and Adjunct Lecturer in the Classics Department of Howard University. She primarily teaches literature courses that connect ancient epics of Europe, Africa and Asia with stories, novels, and poetry written today. She is also the author of several books including including, Thereafter JohnnieAlways An OliviaPeacesong DCAsenath, and Nappy Hair. As an undergraduate Carolivia was a student of Dr. Frank M. Snowden, Jr. at Howard University
Mayor Muriel Bowser presented Dr. Herron the “Exceptional Woman in the Arts Award” for writing the libretto for the opera, Let Freedom Sing: The Story of Marian Anderson. The music was composed by Bruce Adolphe.
Carolivia loves epic poetry and epic stories, especially epics about cities, and she hosts a weekly radio show, Epic City, on WOWD-LP Takoma Park radio.
In addition to Howard University Dr. Herron has been a professor at Harvard University, Mount Holyoke College, Chico State University, the College of William and Mary, and Arizona State University. As Senior Faculty Scholar Coach at Howard University Carolivia is creating a multimedia interactive version of her novel, Asenath and Our Song of Songs. This work will be an educational and storytelling gateway for interconnecting the creative works of artists and scholars. Carolivia is also a member of Tifereth Israel Congregation of Washington, DC.

Molly Levine

Molly Myerowitz Levine holds a Ph.D in Classics from Bar-Ilan  University, an M.Phil. in Classics from Yale University, and a BA in Classics from Harvard University.  She holds the rank of professor at Howard University where she has taught since 1984. She divides her teaching between the Department of Classics and the Honors Program of the College of Arts and Sciences.
Among her major publications are  Ovid’s Games of Love (Wayne State University Press, l985); The Challenge of Black Athena, Special Volume of Arethusa (Guest editor) (1989); and “Ovid’s Evolution,” in The Art of Love: Bimillennial Essays on Ovid’s Ars Amatoria and Remedia Amoris (Oxford 2006). She has written, taught, and lectured widely on topics including the Black Athena controversy, Latin poetry, and early Christianity and Rabbinic Judaism.

Dan-el Padilla Peralta

Dominican by birth and New Yorker by upbringing, Dan-el Padilla Peralta was graduated summa cum laude in Classics with a WWS certificate at Princeton, held the Daniel M. Sachs Class of 1960 Graduating Scholarship to read for the M. Phil. in Greek and Roman History at Oxford (2008), and earned his Ph.D. in Classics from Stanford in 2014. After a two-year postdoctoral fellowship at Columbia’s Society of Fellows, he returned to Princeton.
His research focuses on Reception Studies, especially classical receptions in the Black Atlantic; Greek and Roman Religion; and Roman History, specifically the Roman Republic and Empire. He is author of the memoir, Undocumented: A Dominican Boy’s Odyssey from a Homeless Shelter to the Ivy League (Penguin Press, 2015) and co-editor of Rome, Empire of Plunder: The Dynamics of Cultural Appropriation (Cambridge University Press, 2017), a collection of essays from philologists, historians, and archaeologists that examines Roman cultural appropriation as a hydra-headed phenomenon through which Rome made and remade itself, as a Republic and as an Empire, on Italian soil and abroad.

About the Moderator
Caroline Stark

Caroline Stark received a PhD in Classics and Renaissance Studies from Yale University and is Assistant Professor of Classics at Howard University. Her research interests include ancient cosmology, anthropology, ethnography, and the reception of classical antiquity in Medieval and Renaissance Europe and in Africa and the African Diaspora. She is co-editing A Companion to Latin Epic 14-96 CE for Wiley-Blackwell and has published numerous articles on the reception of classical antiquity in the literature and art of Medieval and Renaissance Europe and in African American literature and film.