CHS Online Open House | Sparta and Its Continuing Myth, with Paul Cartledge
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kL9eom5vbjs… Read more
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kL9eom5vbjs… Read more
Poet Charlotte Wetton, this year’s winner of the “Michael Marks Award for Poetry Pamphlets” in London, shares four of her poems with the CHS community. Read more
This prize recognizes outstanding contributions to public engagement made by non-academic works about the ancient Greek and Roman world. Read more
The Center for Hellenic Studies (CHS) is now accepting fellowships applications for the 2019-20 academic year. The application deadline is October 1, 2018. Read more
The Development of Commentary from Ancient Mesopotamia to the Age of Information August 8-9, 2018 Sponsored and hosted by the Center for Hellenic Studies Organized by Joel P. Christensen (Brandeis University) and Jacqueline Vayntrub (Yale University) About the conference Commentary on the written word is nearly as old as writing itself and has developed alongside scholarship, literature and the writing cultures in critical and influential ways. As an activity,… Read more
Poet Leonard McDermid, this year’s winner of the “Michael Marks Award for Poetry Pamphlets” in Edinburgh, shares two of his poems with the CHS community. Read more
"However, I was even more fortunate as a post-doctorate applicant of the Center for Hellenic Studies, in its first official collaboration with Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, when my research proposal on “Aristotle as a name-giver from a cognitive linguistic aspect” was embraced by the CHS a little more than a year ago." Read more
"However, I was even more fortunate as a post-doctorate applicant of the Center for Hellenic Studies, in its first official collaboration with Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, when my research proposal on “Aristotle as a name-giver from a cognitive linguistic aspect” was embraced by the CHS a little more than a year ago." Read more
“Beginning with thee, O Phoebus, I will recount the famous deeds of men of old, who, at the behest of King Pelias, down through the mouth of Pontus and between the Cyanean rocks, sped well-benched Argo in quest of the golden fleece.” In July and August CHS community members will be reading the complete Argonautica by Apollonius of Rhodes. Read more