All Stories

  1. Pater figure: leaders, emperors and fathers in Seneca and Stoicism
  2. How are classical monsters used in popular culture?
  3. Objects, identity and the life course in family archives over time.
  4. We Are What We Keep: The “Family Archive”, Identity and Public/Private Heritage
  5. How Seneca thinks the family should operate according to the principles of Stoicism.
  6. How women at Newnham College became professional classicists
  7. INSIGHTS INTO WOMEN IN PUBLIC LIFE. E.A. Hemelrijk Hidden Lives, Public Personae. Women and Civic Life in the Roman West. Pp. xxii + 610, figs, maps, pls. New York: Oxford University Press, 2016. Cased, £55, US$85. ISBN: 978-0-19-025188-8.
  8. Book review: The Oxford Anthology of Roman Literature
  9. Show Me the Way to Go Home: A Reconsideration of Seneca’s De Consolatione ad Polybium
  10. Reading Rape in Ovid’s Metamorphoses: A Test-Case Lesson
  11. Freedwomen at Trimalchio's Dinner Party