Faculty
Name | Area | Contact |
Associate Professor | Greek literature (tragedy, Hellenistic literature, especially epigram); literature and gender; classical myth; reception studies; myth in popular culture. |
Office: Clearihue B420 |
Professor and Department Chair, and Acting Undergraduate Advisor | Greek archaeology; Aegean Prehistory; Anatolian archaeology; currently Andrew W. Mellon Professor of Classical Studies at ASCSA | |
Associate Professor | Early Greek poetry: Homer, Hesiod, the Homeric Hymns, and archaic lyric; particular interest in narrative and gender theory. | on administrative leave |
Associate Professor | Greek and Roman social, economic, and political history, most notably democracy and oligarchy; economic development, particularly agriculture, living standards, nutrition, housing, and trade; social inequality, social welfare, slavery and labour exploitation; and ideologies of social inequality, most notably capitalism, racism, and colonialism |
Office: Clearihue B421 |
Professor and Associate Dean (Graduate Studies) | Silver Latin poetry, especially Senecan tragedy and Roman satire. |
Office: Clearihue B424 |
Associate Teaching Professor and Graduate Advisor | Greek and Latin language pedagogy; Imperial Greek literature; Greek and Latin novels, esp. Petronius; gender and sexuality in Greek and Roman culture; reception studies, esp. historical fiction and film |
Office: Clearihue B428 |
Associate Professor | Interests: Roman History:Greek and Latin epigraphy, Roman public and private law, Jewish and early Christian history. |
Office: Clearihue B430 |
Associate Professor | Research focus: the study of ancient colonialism and the social, economic and cultural history of the Iberian Peninsula during the Iron Age and the Roman era. Most notably, mobility and demography, religion, daily practices, cultural change and identity formation, pre-Roman languages, archaeometry, and archaeological method and theory. |
Office: Clearihue B423 |
Sessional instructor | ||
Sessional instructor | PhD research compares slavery in ancient Greece and Rome with that in colonial North America, Brazil, and the Caribbean. My focus is these slaveries’ intersection with race and ethnicity. |
Emeritus faculty
Adjunct faculty
- Keith Bradley,
- Michael Chase
- Patricia A. Clark
- T. Wade Richardson
- Trevor Van Damme
Faculty at UVic in related disciplines
Mediterranean art and archaeology:
- Dr. Evanthia Baboula
- Dr. Marcus Milwright (on leave until Feb.2027)