• Wedding Poetics in Early Greek Literature
    Jan 22 2025

    Andromache Karanika joins me in the Lesche to discuss how we can detect traces of wedding poetics in early Greek literature, especially poetry (hexamter and lyric). Andromache is the author of Wedding, Gender, and Performance in Ancient Greek Poetry (OUP 2024).

    Primary texts

    • Iliad, esp. the Teikhoskopeia (Book 3) and the Deception of Zeus (Book 14)
    • Odyssey, esp. the start of Book 6
    • Homeric Hymn to Demeter
    • Sappho 21 (virginity poem), 44 (Wedding of Hector and Andromache)
    • Pollux 9, on the "tortoise game"
    • The ballad of the 'bride who suffered misfortune' (της νύφης που κακοτύχησε/κακοπάθησε, Modern Greek folk song)

    Also mentioned

    • M. Alexiou, The Ritual Lament in Greek Tradition (2nd ed. Rowman and Littlefield 2002 [1st ed. 1975]).
    • A. Lardinois and L. McClure, eds., Making Silence Speak: Women's Voices in Greek Literature and Society (Princeton 2001).
    • J.H. Oakley and R. Sinos, The Wedding in Ancient Athens (Ann Arbor 1993).
    • R. Seaford, 1987. 'The tragic wedding', JHS 107: 106-30.


    About our guest
    Andromache Karanika is Professor of Classics at the University of California, Irvine. She is the author of Voices at Work: Women, Performance and Labor in Ancient Greece (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2014) and Wedding, Gender, and Performance in Ancient Greece (Oxford University Press), and co-editor of Emotional Trauma in Greece and Rome: Representations and Reactions (2020). She served as editor of TAPA (2018-2021) and President of CAMWS (2023-2024).

    ________________________________

    Thanks for joining us in the Lesche!

    Podcast art: Daniel Blanco
    Theme music: "The Song of Seikilos," recomposed by Eftychia Christodoulou using Sibelius

    This podcast is made possible with the generous support of Brown University’s Department of Classical Studies and the John Nicholas Brown Center for Advanced Study.

    Instagram: @leschepodcast
    Email: leschepodcast@gmail.com
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    56 mins
  • The Cambridge Greek Lexicon
    Jan 8 2025

    James Diggle joins me in the Lesche to discuss the 2021 Cambridge Greek Lexicon (2 vols.) of which he was editor-and-chief. We discuss why it was time for this sort of thing (and why it took 24 years to complete), how to use it, and why it improves on LSJ ... plus, how the team approached translating some of the naughtier words.

    Some links

    • 'Liddell and Scott' poem by Thomas Hardy (1843)
    • Cambridge Greek Lexicon project page, where you'll also find a video of the Faculty of Classics' publication celebration.
    • Alison Flood's review in The Guardian: English dictionary of ancient Greek ‘spares no blushes’ with fresh look at crudity
    • Peter Jones' review in The Spectator: The Cambridge Greek Lexicon is an eye-opener for classical scholars


    About our guest
    James Diggle, CBE, FBA, is Professor Emeritus of Greek and Latin at the University of Cambridge and a Fellow of Queens' College, where he was Director of Studies in Classics for over forty years. His publications include The Phaethon of Euripides (Cambridge, 1970), Flauii Cresconii Corippi Iohannidos Libri VIII (joint editor, Cambridge, 1970), Euripidis Fabulae (Oxford Classical Text, 3 vols., 1981–1994), Studies on the Text of Euripides (1981), The Textual Tradition of Euripides' Orestes (1991), Euripidea: Collected Essays (1994), Tragicorum Graecorum Fragmenta Selecta (1998), Theophrastus, Characters (Cambridge 'Orange' 2004; 'Green and Yellow' 22). He was University Orator at Cambridge for eleven years and has published a selection of his speeches (Cambridge Orations 1982–1993 (Cambridge, 1994)). He is also joint editor of The Classical Papers of A. E. Housman (Cambridge, 1972), joint author of Odysseus Unbound: The Search for Homer's Ithaca (Cambridge, 2005), and Editor-in-Chief of The Cambridge Greek Lexicon (Cambridge, 2021). He is a Fellow of the British Academy and a Corresponding Member of the Academy of Athens.


    ________________________________

    Thanks for joining us in the Lesche!

    Podcast art: Daniel Blanco
    Theme music: "The Song of Seikilos," recomposed by Eftychia Christodoulou using Sibelius

    This podcast is made possible with the generous support of Brown University’s Department of Classical Studies and the John Nicholas Brown Center for Advanced Study.

    Instagram: @leschepodcast
    Email: leschepodcast@gmail.com
    Suggest a book using this form

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    54 mins
  • The Longue Durée of the Greek Polis
    Dec 25 2024

    John Ma joins me in the Lesche to discuss the longue durée of the Greek polis. John is the author of the new, monumental, and much anticipated book Polis: A New History of the Ancient Greek City-State from the Early Iron Age to the End of Antiquity (Princeton 2024).

    Happy Holidays!

    About our guest
    John Ma was born in New York of Chinese parents. He grew up in Geneva, where he studied Greek and Latin at school and outside school. He went on to study Classics, then ancient history at Oxford. He has taught ancient history in Classics Departments at Princeton, Oxford, and Columbia. Ma is deeply interested in studying Greek history, especially in the Hellenistic period, using documentary and material sources.

    Ancient texts

    • Archaic poetry
    • Aristotle, Politics
    • Xenophon, Hellenica
    • And many more...


    Also mentioned
    Too many to list! But I'll note:

    • Josiah Ober, Mass and Elite in Democratic Athens: Rhetoric, Ideology, and the Power of the People (Princeton 1989).
    • Mogens Herman Hansen and Thomas Heine Nelson, An Inventory of Archaic and Classical Greek Poleis (Oxford 2004).
    • Mogens Herman Hansen, Polis: An Introduction to the Ancient Greek City-State (OUP 2006)
    • The Polis Inventory App

    ________________________________

    Thanks for joining us in the Lesche!

    Podcast art: Daniel Blanco
    Theme music: "The Song of Seikilos," recomposed by Eftychia Christodoulou using Sibelius
    Social media: Meg Sanglikar

    This podcast is made possible with the generous support of Brown University’s Department of Classical Studies and the John Nicholas Brown Center for Advanced Study.

    Instagram: @leschepodcast
    Email: leschepodcast@gmail.com
    Suggest a book using this form

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    1 hr
  • SPECIAL: Pasolini's THE RETURN, with Homerist Barbara Graziosi
    Dec 13 2024

    (Spoiler alert! This episode is jam-packed with plot spoilers for THE RETURN.) Homeric scholar Barbara Graziosi joins me in the Lesche to discuss Umberto Pasolini's THE RETURN, a film dramatization of the second half of the Odyssey starring Ralph Fiennes as Odysseus and Juliette Binoche as Penelope.

    About our guest
    Barbara Graziosi is Department Chair and Professor of Classical Studies at Princeton, holding the C. Ewing Chair of ancient Greek. Graziosi attended Oxford University (Corpus Christi College B.A. and MSt in Classics) and Cambridge University (Ph.D. in Classics) and taught at Oxford, Reading, and Durham before joining the faculty at Princeton in 2018. She also held various visiting positions in Italy. She has written widely on ancient Greek literature (especially Homer) and its reception, as well as more autobiographical pieces on how we make ancient literature our own. Her latest books are Homer (OUP 2018) and Classics, Love, Revolution: The Legacies of Luigi Settembrini, with Andrea Capra (OUP 2024).

    Ancient texts
    Homer's Iliad and Odyssey

    Also mentioned
    Emily Wilson's discussions of the murder of the "disloyal" enslaved women in Odysseus' household -- and the sexual politics of translation. See, e.g., Wilson's New Yorker article: "A translator's reckoning with the female characters of the Odyssey" (Dec. 18, 2017).


    ________________________________

    Thanks for joining us in the Lesche!

    Podcast art: Daniel Blanco
    Theme music: "The Song of Seikilos," recomposed by Eftychia Christodoulou using Sibelius
    Social media: Meg Sanglikar

    This podcast is made possible with the generous support of Brown University’s Department of Classical Studies and the John Nicholas Brown Center for Advanced Study.

    Instagram: @leschepodcast
    Email: leschepodcast@gmail.com
    Suggest a book using this form

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    47 mins
  • (Imperial) Greek Epic
    Dec 11 2024

    Emma Greensmith and Tim Whitmarsh join me in the Lesche to discuss how Imperial Greek epic fits into our understanding of Ancient Greek epic as a whole. Emma has just edited the Cambridge Companion to Ancient Greek Epic, and she was also a member of the research project Greek Epic of the Roman Empire: A Cultural History, which Tim directed.

    About our guests
    Emma Greensmith is Associate Professor of Classical Languages and Literature at the University of Oxford and Fellow of St John’s College. She is the editor of Omnibus and an associate editor for the Yearbook of Ancient Greek Epic. She specialises in imperial Greek literature, particularly epic poetics and religious culture. Her 2020 book, The Resurrection of Homer in Imperial Greek Epic, offers a new reading of the role of epic and the reception of Homer in the Graeco-Roman world. She has written many articles on ancient Greek literature and has co-edited a volume on ‘Writing Homer Under Rome’ (2022). She works on several public engagement initiatives with the charity Classics for All, and recently filmed a documentary on Homer’s Odyssey and its cultural legacy.

    Tim Whitmarsh FBA is Regius Professor of Greek at the University of Cambridge, and Fellow of Trinity College. A specialist in the literature, culture and religion of ancient Greece, he is the author of 10 books, including Battling the Gods: Atheism in the Ancient World (Knopf 2015), and over 100 academic articles. He has contributed to newspapers such as The Guardian, the Times Literary Supplement and the London Review of Books, and to BBC radio and TV.

    Ancient texts
    Homer's Iliad and Odyssey
    Triphiodorus, Sack of Troy
    Quintus of Smyrna, Posthomerica
    Anon., Vision of Dorotheus
    Nonnus, Dionysiaca
    Eudocia, Homeric Centones
    Colluthus, Abduction of Helen

    Also mentioned
    Jasper Griffin, "Greek Epic," in the Cambridge Companion to the Epic (Cambridge 2010).

    ________________________________

    Thanks for joining us in the Lesche!

    Podcast art: Daniel Blanco
    Theme music: "The Song of Seikilos," recomposed by Eftychia Christodoulou using Sibelius

    This podcast is made possible with the generous support of Brown University’s Department of Classical Studies and the John Nicholas Brown Center for Advanced Study.

    Instagram: @leschepodcast
    Email: leschepodcast@gmail.com
    Suggest a book using this form

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    55 mins
  • Translating the Iliad, with Emily Wilson
    Nov 27 2024

    Emily Wilson, acclaimed translator, joins me in the Lesche to discuss the challenges and pleasures of translating the Iliad.

    We discuss the Greek of two passages in detail: Book 6 lines 482-502 and Book 22 lines 199-204 (lines as in the OCT).

    About our guest

    Emily Wilson is Department Chair and Professor of Classical Studies at the University of Pennsylvania, holding the College for Women Class of 1963 Term Professor in the Humanities. Wilson attended Oxford University (Balliol College B.A. in Classics and Corpus Christi College M.Phil. in Renaissance English Literature) and Yale University (Ph.D. in Classics and Comparative Literature). She has been named a Fellow of the American Academy in Rome in Renaissance & Early Modern scholarship, a MacArthur Fellow, and a Guggenheim Fellow.

    Emily's substack
    Emily on Blue Sky

    Ancient texts

    • Homer's Iliad and Odyssey
    • Plato, Hippias Minor
    • Longinus, On the Sublime (ch. 9)


    Also mentioned

    • Karen Emmerich, Literary Translation and the Making of Originals. Bloomsbury 2017.
    • "Munro's Law", i.e., D. B. Munro's observation that there is no overlap in the content of the Iliad and the Odyssey (more info here).
    • Norton Anthology of World Literature, Vol. A (5th ed.)
    • Johanna's review of Emily's translation of the Iliad for Slate (here)

    ________________________________

    Thanks for joining us in the Lesche!

    Podcast art: Daniel Blanco
    Theme music: "The Song of Seikilos," recomposed by Eftychia Christodoulou using Sibelius
    Social media: Meg Sanglikar

    This podcast is made possible with the generous support of Brown University’s Department of Classical Studies and the John Nicholas Brown Center for Advanced Study.

    Instagram: @leschepodcast
    Email: leschepodcast@gmail.com
    Suggest a book using this form

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    58 mins
  • The Athenian Funeral Oration
    Nov 13 2024

    David M. Pritchard joins me in the Lesche to discuss what appears to have been, in Nicole Loraux's famous words, a "very Athenian invention": the epitaphios logos, or funeral oration given over the war dead at their public burial. Both the Athenian funeral oration and the legacy of Nicole Loraux's pioneering study of it are the subjects of David's new edited volume The Athenian Funeral Oration: After Nicole Loraux.

    About our guest

    David M. Pritchard is Associate Professor of Greek History at the University of Queensland in Australia. He is well known internationally for researching the symbiosis between war, democracy and culture in classical Athens. He has held some fifteen fellowships in Australia, Europe and the US. Associate Professor Pritchard speaks on radio and regularly writes for newspapers around the world.

    Ancient texts

    Athenian funeral orations

    • "Historical” texts: Thucydides 2.34-46, Demosthenes 60, Hyperides' Funeral Oration
    • "Literary" examples: Gorgias' fragmentary funeral oration, Lysias 2, Plato's Menexenus, Isocrates' Panegyricus


    Also mentioned

    • Cornelius Castoriadis, L'institution imaginaire de la société (Paris 1975).
    • Nicole Loraux, L'invention d'Athènes: Histoire de l'oraison funèbre dans la "cité classique" (Paris 1981 [1st ed.]; 1993 [2nd abridged ed.), translated into English by Alan Sheridan as The Invention of Athens: The Funeral Oration in the Classical City (HUP 1986/reprint PUP 2006)
    • Nicole Loraux, Les enfants d'Athéna. Idées athéniennes sur la citoyenneté et la division des sexes (Paris 1984), translated into English by Caroline Levine as The Children of Athena: Athenian Ideas about Citizenship and Division Between the Sexes (PUP 1993).

    ________________________________

    Thanks for joining us in the Lesche!

    Podcast art: Daniel Blanco
    Theme music: "The Song of Seikilos," recomposed by Eftychia Christodoulou using Sibelius
    Social media: Meg Sanglikar

    This podcast is made possible with the generous support of Brown University’s Department of Classical Studies and the John Nicholas Brown Center for Advanced Study.

    Instagram: @leschepodcast
    Email: leschepodcast@gmail.com
    Suggest a book using this form

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    1 hr and 2 mins
  • Alexander in the East
    Oct 23 2024

    Rachel Kousser joins me in the Lesche to discuss Alexander III of Macedon's post-Persepolis campaigns in Asia (330-323 BCE), the subject of her recent book Alexander at the End of the World: The Forgotten Final Years of Alexander the Great.

    About our guest

    Rachel Kousser writes and teaches about Alexander the Great, the destruction of monuments in ancient Greece, and the representation of gender and power in the Mediterranean world. For her work, she has received fellowships from the National Endowment of the Humanities, the Getty Research Institute, and the Center for the Advanced Study of the Visual Arts. She’s published articles in Art Bulletin, American Journal of Archaeology, and Res: Archaeology and Aesthetics, as well as two books with Cambridge University Press. Rachel is currently the chair of the Classics Program at the Graduate Center, City University of New York and a professor of ancient art and archaeology at Brooklyn College. She has a B.A. in Classics and Art History from Yale University and a Ph.D. in Classical Art and Archaeology from New York University’s Institute of Fine Arts.

    Ancient texts

    • Polybius, Histories
    • Diodorus, Bibliotheca
    • Curtius, Historiae Alexandri Magni
    • Plutarch, Life of Alexander
    • Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri

    Also mentioned

    • Brooke Allen, "Alexander the Great: Or the Terrible?" The Hudson Review, Vol. 58, No. 2 (Summer, 2005), pp. 220-230.
    • Pierre Briant, The First European: A History of Alexander in the Age of Empire (translated from the French by Nicholas Elliott), Harvard 2017.
    • Michael Kulikowski, "A Very Bad Man: Julius Caesar, Génocidaire." London Review of Books, 18 June 2020.
    • Alexander scholarship by W. W. Tarn, Ernst Badian, and Brian Bosworth.

    ________________________________

    Thanks for joining us in the Lesche!

    Podcast art: Daniel Blanco
    Theme music: "The Song of Seikilos," recomposed by Eftychia Christodoulou using Sibelius
    Social media: Meg Sanglikar

    This podcast is made possible with the generous support of Brown University’s Department of Classical Studies and the John Nicholas Brown Center for Advanced Study.

    Instagram: @leschepodcast
    Email: leschepodcast@gmail.com
    Suggest a book using this form

    Show More Show Less
    50 mins