“Hercules Cross-Dressed, Hercules Undressed: Unmasking the Construction of the Propertian Amator in Elegy 4.9,” American Journal of Philology 119.1 (1998) 43-66.“I Am Dressed, Therefore I Am?: Vertumnus in Propertius 4.2 and in Metamorphoses 14.622-771,” Ramus 27.1 (1998) 27-38.“Omnia Vincit Amor: Or, Why Oenone Should Have Known It Would Never Work Out (Eclogue 10 and Heroides 5),” Materiali e discussioni per l’analisi dei testi classici 44 (2000) 83-101.“To Be Or Not To Be A New Formalist: Ovidian Studies in 2003,” Vergilius 49 (2003) 135-151.“Pomona’s pomarium: The ‘Mapping Impulse’ in Metamorphoses 14 (and 9),” in Transactions of the American Philological Association 140.1 (2010) 163-194. ![]() “What’s Love Got To Do With It?: Mapping Cynthia in Propertius’ Paired Elegies 1.8A-B and 1.11-12,” American Journal of Philology 132.4 (2011) 633-665.“Expanding Geographies and Unbounded Subjects in Catullus,” in Empire, Travel and Geography in Latin Poetry, Routledge, forthcoming.“Playing the Dido (Ariadne, Oenone, Laodamia, Penelope, Hypsipyle, Medea) Card in Heroides 2,” in Current Trends in Ovid’s Heroides, forthcoming.Prior to joining the Foundation, Sara administered both federal. Her father, a prosperous grain-merchant, fell under the influence of H ovevei Zion, joining its first. Mail and Female: Epistolary Narrative and Desire in Ovid’s Heroides, University of Wisconsin Press, 2003. She has been in the grantmaking field for more than 15 years and with the Foundation since 2008. Sarah Aaronsohn was born on January 5, 1890, in the agricultural colony ( moshavah) of Zikhron Ya’akov on Mount Carmel, the fifth of six children and older daughter of Efraim Fischel (18491939) and Malka (ne Glatzano) of Bacau, Romania.New Essays on Homer: Language, Violence, and Agency (co-edited with Helen Morales), Cambridge University Press = a special issue of Ramus 2015.Latin Elegy and the Space of Empire, Oxford University Press, forthcoming 2021.She welcomes inquiries from prospective students on Latin poetry, gender studies, psychoanalysis and geography, empire and literature. She has just finished a book that explores the ways in which Latin elegiac poetry, widely defined as ranging from Catullus to the exilic epistles of Ovid, participates in a new cultural preoccupation with space that emerges in the late Republic and becomes an obsession with Augustus’ consolidation of power and empire. ![]() Her first book, Mail and Female: Epistolary Narrative and Desire in Ovid’s Heroides, explores the representation of feminine desire in the collection of poetic letters from heroines of ancient myth and literature to the heroes who have abandoned them. Her research focuses on Latin poetry of the Augustan Age, primarily through the lens of gender and psychoanalytic theory. Sara Lindheim, Associate Professor of Classics, earned an undergraduate degree in Classics at Amherst College and a graduate degree in Classics at Brown University. Joining Hands Child and Family Counseling Services, LLC Aug 2010 - Present11 years 8 months I provide diagnositc assessments and play interventions for children ages 3-12. Associate Professor Office: HSSB 4054 Office Hours: or by appointment Time Period: Fall 2020 Email: About:
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |