Classics in the News
For Reina Callier, learning Latin ‘is like lifting weights for your brain’
Five years after a devastating fire, Classics Professor Kirk Ambrose reflects on the significance of the renowned cathedral’s Dec. 7 reopening
Even if historical films like Gladiator II are inaccurate on key points, CU Classics Assistant Teaching Professor Travis Rupp sees value in them as a gateway to getting students interested in real history
University of Colorado Boulder scholars Yvona Trnka-Amrhein and John Gibert have deciphered and interpreted a papyrus they believe contains fragments of writings from the Greek tragedian Euripides.
Brown University Professor Johanna Hanink discuses the papyrus with John and Yvona on her podcast Λέσχη
CU Boulder Classics scholars identify previously unknown fragments of two lost tragedies by Greek tragedian Euripides
Professor Newlands shares what it's like to teach Horace during the pandemic on an Irish radio show!
Excellent research fuels exceptional teaching, and vice versa
One of Diane Conlin's goals is to encourage creative thinking among her students.
Gregory A. Petsko writes about why he, a scientist at another university, is alarmed by planned cuts in foreign language programs.