Panoussi / 1 VASSILIKI PANOUSSI CURRICULUM VITAE Department of Classical Studies P.O. Box 8795 The College of William and Mary Williamsburg VA, 23185-8795 Phone: (757) 221-2993 Fax: (757) 221-2133 e-mail: [email protected] http://www.wm.edu/as/classicalstud ies/faculty/panoussi_v.php EDUCATION 1998 Ph.D. in Classics, Brown University 1989 B.A. in Greek Philology, University of Athens, Greece EMPLOYMENT 2009-present Associate Professor of Classical Studies, The College of William and Mary 2005-2009 Assistant Professor of Classical Studies, The College of William and Mary 1999-2005 Assistant Professor of Classics, Williams College 1997-1999 Lecturer in Classics and Modern Greek, University of Virginia 1991-1996 Teaching Fellow, Brown University 1989-1991 Secondary School Teaching, Athens, Greece RESEARCH INTERESTS • Latin Literature (Late Republic, Augustan Age, Early Empire) • Greek Literature (Tragedy, Historiography, Hellenistic Poetry) • Intertextuality and Literary Criticism • Cultural Anthropology and Religion of the Ancient World • Sexuality and Gender in Antiquity • Ideology and Identity in Antiquity FELLOWSHIPS AND HONORS • CAMWS Development Award (2016) • Plumeri Award for Faculty Excellence, The College of William and Mary (2015) • Robert and Sara Boyd Term Distinguished Associate Professorship, The College of William and Mary (2011-2014) Panoussi / 2 • • • • • • • • Suzann Wilson Matthews Summer Research Award, The College of William and Mary (2008) Summer Research Award, The College of William and Mary (2007) Summer Research Award, The College of William and Mary (2006) Phi Beta Kappa (1998) Brown University Endowment / Manning Presidential Fellowship (1997) Michaelides Fellowship, Brown University (1996) “Alexander S. Onassis” Foundation Fellowship (1996-1997, declined) Brown University Fellowship (1991-1992) WORK IN PROGRESS 1. The Goddess Isis in Roman Literature, book-length study 2. Emotional Trauma in Greece and Rome, edited volume with Andromache Karanika 3. “The Warrior’s Rampage in Roman Epic,” article 4. “Poetry and Fate in Roman Epic,” article 5. “Sulpicia’s Gendered Poetics,” article 6. “Herodotus’ Funerary Epigrams,” article 7. “Harry Potter and Vergil’s Aeneid,” article PUBLICATIONS BOOKS 1. Brides, Mourners, Bacchae: Women’s Rituals in Roman Literature [currently under review] 2. Greek Tragedy in Vergil’s Aeneid: Ritual, Empire, and Intertext. Cambridge University Press: Cambridge. 2009; Paperback edition: January 2014. [Reviews: BMCR http://bmcr.brynmawr.edu/2009/2009-09-53.html; Vergilius 55 (2009): 126-31; NECJ 37 (2010): 225-6; Arktos 44 (2010): 302-3; JRS 101 (2011): 279-80; Comparative Literature 63 (2011): 331-5; Phoenix 65 (2011): 181-3; Latomus 72 (2013): 558-9]. ARTICLES 1. “From Adultery to Incest: Messalina and Agrippina as Sexual Aggressors in Tacitus’ Annales,” Complex Inferiorities, S. J. Harrison and S. Matzner, eds. (volume under review at Oxford University Press). 2. “Spinning Hercules: Gender, Religion, and Geography in Propertius 4.9,” Classical World 109 (2016): 179-94. 3. “Race, Class, and Ethnicity: Roman World,” The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Bible and Gender Studies, J. O’Brien, chief ed., Oxford University Press: Oxford (2014): 128-34. Panoussi / 3 4. “Dancing in Scyros: Masculinity and Young Women’s Rituals in Statius’ Achilleid,” in Religion and Ritual in Flavian Epic, A. Augoustakis, ed. Oxford University Press: Oxford 2013: 335-51. 5. “Aeneas’ Sacral Authority,” in A Companion to Vergil’s Aeneid and its Tradition, J. Farrell and M. Putnam, eds. Wiley-Blackwell: Oxford 2010: 52-65. 6. “Roman Cultural Identity in Cicero’s Pro Archia,” in Ἀντιφίλησις: Studies on Classical, Byzantine and Modern Greek Literature and Culture in Honour of JohnTheophanes A. Papademetriou, E. Karamalengou and E. Makrygianni, eds. Franz Steiner Verlag: Stuttgart 2009: 516-23. 7. “Sexuality and Ritual: Catullus’ Wedding Poems,” in A Companion to Catullus, M. Skinner, ed. Wiley-Blackwell: Oxford 2007: 276-92. 8. “Threat and Hope: Women’s Rituals and Civil War in Roman Epic,” in Finding Persephone: Women’s Rituals in the Ancient Mediterranean, M. Parca and A. Tzanetou, eds. Indiana University Press: Bloomington 2007: 114-34. 9. “Polis and Empire: Greek Tragedy in Rome,” in A Companion to Greek Tragedy. J. Gregory, ed. Wiley-Blackwell: Oxford 2005: 413-27. 10. “Virgil and Epic Topoi in Lucan’s Massilia,” in Being There Together: Essays in Honor of Michael C. J. Putnam, P. Thibodeau and H. Haskell, eds. Afton Historical Society Press: Afton, MN 2003: 222-39. 11. “Ego Maenas: Maenadism, Marriage, and the Construction of Female Identity in Catullus 63 and 64,” Helios 30 (2003): 101-26. 12. “Vergil’s Ajax: Allusion, Tragedy, and Heroic Identity in the Aeneid,” Classical Antiquity 21 (2002): 95-134. 13. “Sophoclean Vergil: The Figure of Ajax in the Aeneid,” in Acta, First Panhellenic and International Conference on Ancient Greek Literature (23-26 May 1994), J.-Th. Papademetriou ed., Hellenic Society for Humanistic Studies. International Centre for Humanistic Research: Athens, Greece. Studies and Researches 38 (1997): 691-71 ENCYCLOPEDIA ENTRIES The Virgil Encyclopedia, R. Thomas and J. Ziolkowski, eds. Wiley-Blackwell: Oxford (2013). 1. furor 2. Furies 3. Greek tragedy Panoussi / 4 4. Roman tragedy BOOK REVIEWS 1. Reproducing Rome: Motherhood in Virgil, Ovid, Seneca and Statius, by Mairéad McAuley. Classical World (forthcoming 2017). 2. Memory in Vergil’s Aeneid: Creating the Past, by Aaron M. Seider. New England Classical Journal 42.2 (2015): 132-25. 3. Virgil: Aeneid Book XII, by R. Tarrant. American Journal of Philology 135.2 (2014): 291-95. 4. Virgil, by R. Alden Smith, Vergilius 57 (2011): 125-27. 5. Pastoral Inscriptions: Reading and Writing in Virgil’s Eclogues, by Brian Breed, New England Classical Journal: 35.1 (2007): 64-66. 6. Vergil’s Aeneid and the Argonautica of Apollonius Rhodius, by Damien Nelis, Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2002.11.19. 7. Roman Presences. Receptions of Rome in European Culture, 1789-1945, by Catharine Edwards, ed., Classical and Modern Literature 20/3 (2000): 81-87. 8. Ideology in Cold Blood. A Reading of Lucan’s Civil War, by Shadi Bartsch, Classical Journal 95 (2000): 409-12. 9. Odysseus Elytis. From the Golden to the Silver Poem, by Andonis Decavalles, The Literary Review 40 (1997): 354-56. INVITED LECTURES 1. “Love and Fate in Virgil’s Aeneid and Berlioz’s The Trojans,” Boshell Foundation Lecture Series, The Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL (2016) 2. “Poetry and Fate in Roman Epic,” Symposium The Fate of Rome’s Fatum, University of Virginia and Humboldt Foundation, Charlottesville, VA (2016) 3. “Cougars in Rome? Older Women, Younger Men in Roman Literature,” University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA (2015) 4. “Isis at a Wedding: Gender and Ethnicity in Rome,” David H. Porter Lecture, Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, NY (2015) 5. “Isis at a Roman Wedding: Ritual and Ethnicity in Ovid’s Metamorphoses 9,” Matyskiela Lecture, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA (2015) Panoussi / 5 6. “Mourning Becomes Orpheus? Poetry and Women’s Rituals in Ovid’s Metamorphoses 10 and 11,” Keynote Address, Undergraduate Symposium Women in Antiquity, Randolph-Macon College, Ashland, VA (2014) 7. “From Adultery to Incest: Messalina and Agrippina as Sexual Aggressors in Tacitus’ Annals,” Conference Complex Inferiorities: The Poetics of the Weaker Voice in Roman Literature, Corpus Christi College, University of Oxford, UK (2014) 8. “Priapic Weddings: Quartilla’s Rituals in Petronius’ Satyrica,” Ohio Wesleyan University, Delaware, OH (2013) 9. “Power, Poetry, and Women’s Rituals in Ovid’s Metamorphoses 10, 11,” Father Cotter Lecture, Seton Hall University, South Orange, NJ (2013) 10. “Whatever Happened to Thoas? Hypsipyle’s Rituals in Valerius and Statius,” Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies Brownbag Lecture, The College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, VA (2013) 11. “Ajax and Dido: A Greek Tragic Hero in a Roman Epic,” Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH (2012) 12. “Power, Poetry, and Women’s Rituals in Ovid’s Metamorphoses 10, 11,” Williams College, Williamstown, MA (2012) 13. “Whatever Happened to Thoas? Hypsipyle’s Rituals in Valerius and Statius,” University of Richmond, Richmond, VA (2012) 14. “Mourning Orpheus: Poetry and Women’s Rituals in Ovid’s Metamorphoses,” Fink Fund Lecture, Kenyon College, Gambier, OH (2012) 15. “Hercules and the Founding Mothers: Rome’s Early History and Women’s Rituals in Augustan Poets,” Conference Gendered Issues in the Ancient World: Texts and Material Culture, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA (2011) 16. “Dancing in Scyros: Women’s Rituals in Statius’ Achilleid,” Conference Religion and Ritual in Flavian Epic, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Champaign, IL (2010) 17. “Women’s Rituals and Roman Cultural Identity in Ovid's Metamorphoses,” Symposium Identity and Religion in the Ancient Mediterranean, The College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, VA (2010) 18. “Funeral Games, Lessons in Mourning: Creating a New Nation in Vergil’s Aeneid 5,” University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA (2007) Panoussi / 6 19. “Of Goddesses and Men: Tragedy and Reconciliation in Vergil’s Aeneid,” Shilpa Raval Annual Memorial Lecture, Drew University, Madison, NJ (2006) 20. “Of Gods and Men: Tragedy and Reconciliation in Vergil’s Aeneid,” Fink Fund Lecture, Kenyon College, Gambier, OH (2005) 21. “Mourning Glory: Ritual Lament and Roman Civic Identity in Vergil’s Aeneid,” Smith College, Northampton, MA (2005) 22. “Mourning Glory: Ritual Lament and Roman Civic Identity in Vergil’s Aeneid,” SUNY Buffalo, Buffalo, NY (2004) 23. “Threat and Hope: Women’s Rituals and Civil War in Roman Epic.” Conference: “Women’s Rituals in Context,” University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign, IL (2002) 24. “Married to Bacchus: Maenadism and Marriage in Catullus,” Brown University, Providence, RI (2002) 25. “Turnus’ Deuotio: Ritual and Closure in Vergil’s Aeneid,” Yale University, New Haven, CT (2002) 26. “Turnus’ Deuotio: Ritual and Closure in Vergil’s Aeneid,” Boston University, Boston MA (2001) 27. “Towards a Tragic Epic?” Response to Karl Galinsky, “Homer and Tragedy in Vergil’s Aeneid,” Respondent, Christopher Roberts Lecture, Dickinson College, Carlisle, PA (1999) 28. “Sacrificial Violence: Patterns of Scapegoating in the Aeneid,” Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH (1998) 29. “Sacrificial Violence: Patterns of Scapegoating in the Aeneid,” University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ (1998) 30. “Drama and Sacrifice: the Aeneid and the Oresteia,” Brown University, Providence, RI (1997) 31. “Sophoclean Vergil: The Figure of Ajax in the Aeneid,” First Panhellenic and International Conference on Ancient Greek Literature, Hellenic Society for Humanistic Studies, Athens, Greece (1994) CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS 1. “Rape, Ritual, and Trauma: Ovid’s Philomela Reconsidered (Ovid’s Metamorphoses 6.424-674),” Emotional Trauma in Greek and Roman Culture: Panoussi / 7 Representations and Reactions, International Conference, Delphi, Greece (2016) 2. “She Who Shall Not Be Named: Isis and the Politics of Religion in Vergil’s Aeneid,” Symposium Cumanum, “Revisiting Vergil and Roman Religion,” Cuma, Italy (2015) 3. “From Adultery to Incest: Women as Sexual Aggressors in Roman Literature,” annual meeting, CAAS, Baltimore, MD (2014) 4. “Stupra et caedes: Homosexuality, Women’s Rituals, and the State in Livy’s Bacchanalian Narrative,” Classics Celtic Conference, Edinburgh, UK (2014) 5. “Stupra et caedes: Homosexuality, Women’s Rituals, and the State in Livy’s Bacchanalian Narrative,” Lambda Classical Caucus panel, annual meeting, APA, Chicago, IL (2014) 6. “Ritual Power and Male Impotence: Quartilla’s Rites in Petronius’ Satyrica,” annual meeting, CAMWS, Iowa City, IA (2013) 7. “Hypsipyle’s ‘Greek’ Rituals in Valerius Flaccus and Statius,” Flavian Literature and its Greek Past, International Conference, Delphi, Greece (2012) 8. “Whatever Happened to Thoas? Hypsipyle’s Rituals in Valerius and Statius,” annual meeting, CAMWS, Baton Rouge, LA (2012) 9. “Dancing in Scyros: Women’s Rituals in Statius’ Achilleid,” annual meeting, CAMWS, Grand Rapids, MI (2011) 10. “Power, Poetry, and Women’s Rituals in Ovid’s Metamorphoses 10, 11,” annual meeting, CAMWS, Norman, OK (2010) 11. “Spinning Hercules: Gender, Religion, and Geography in Propertius’ 4.9,” Women’s Classical Caucus panel East and West, annual meeting APA, Anaheim, CA (2010) 12. “Harry Potter and the Mythology Class,” CAMWS, Tucson, AZ (2008) 13. “Pacem aeternam pactosque hymenaeos: Juno, Venus, and Concordia in Vergil’s Aeneid 4,” Vergilian Society Panel, Reconciliation and Concord in Vergil, annual meeting, APA, Montréal, Canada (2006) 14. “Death and the City: Vergil’s Dido and Euripides’ Alcestis,” annual meeting, CAMWS, Madison, WI (2005) Panoussi / 8 15. “Roman Cultural Identity in Cicero’s Pro Archia,” annual meeting, CAMWS, Austin, TX (2002) 16. “Ritual Closure in Vergil’s Aeneid,” Vergilian Society Panel, Surgamus! Vergilian Closure, annual meeting APA, San Diego, CA (2001) 17. “Dido’s Ritual Slaughter,” annual meeting, CAMWS, Knoxville, TN (2000) 18. “The Poet and the Pythia: Vergilian Allusion in Lucan’s Delphic Episode,” Vergil and Post-Augustan Poetry panel, annual meeting, CAMWS, Cleveland, OH (1999) 19. “Ego maenas: The Construction of Female Sexuality in Catullus 63,” annual meeting, APA, December 27-30, 1998, Washington, DC (1998) 20. “Resisting the Male: Two Tragic Bacchants in the Aeneid,” annual meeting, CAMWS, Charlottesville, VA (1998) 21. “The Landscape of Poetic Creation in Lucan’s Bellum Civile,” spring meeting, CAAS, Baltimore, MD (1996) TEACHING THE COLLEGE OF WILLIAM AND MARY (2005-present) 1. Latin 101: Introduction to Latin 2. Latin 102: Introduction to Latin 3. Latin 201: Seneca and Pliny (intermediate reading in Latin) 4. Latin 202: Catullus and Vergil (intermediate reading in Latin) 5. Greek 201: Xenophon and Lysias (intermediate reading in Greek) 6. Greek 202: Homer and Lysias (intemediate reading in Greek) 7. Greek 202: Herodotus and Euripides (intermediate reading in Greek) 8. Greek Tragedy (advanced reading in Greek) 9. Greek Historians (advanced reading in Greek) 10. Greek Lyric (advanced reading in Greek) 11. Vergil (advanced reading in Latin) 12. Imperial Latin Literature: The Rhetoric of Cruelty (advanced reading in Latin) 13. Latin Lyric and Elegiac Poetry (advanced reading in Latin) 14. Roman Historians (advanced reading in Latin) 15. Women in Antiquity (classical civilization course in translation) 16. Greek Mythology (classical civilization course in translation) 17. Greek Civilization (classical civilization course in translation) 18. Ritual, Authority, and Power in Roman Literature (classical civilization seminar) 19. The Voyage of the Epic Hero (classical civilization course in translation) 20. When Odysseus Met Harry Potter: Classical Myth in Youth Literature (freshman seminar) 21. The Ancient City (Summer Study Abroad Program in Greece) 22. Research Methods in Classical Studies (Post-Baccalaureate Pro-Seminar) Panoussi / 9 WILLIAMS COLLEGE (1999-2005) 1. Homer and Herodotus (intermediate reading in Greek) 2. Herodotus (advanced reading in Greek) 3. Greek Tragedy (advanced reading in Greek) 4. Introduction to the Latin Language 5. Livy and Ovid (intermediate reading in Latin) 6. Cicero and Seneca (intermediate reading in Latin) 7. Vergil’s Aeneid (advanced reading in Latin) 8. The Rhetoric of Cruelty (advanced reading in Latin) 9. Women in Greece and Rome (classical civilization course in translation) 10. Roman Literature (classical civilization course in translation) 11. Hollywood Classics (classical civilization course in translation) 12. Archaeological Tour of Greece (winter study travel course) UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA (1997-1999) 1. Vergil’s Aeneid (advanced reading in Latin) 2. Catullus (advanced reading in Latin) 3. Greek Tragedy (advanced reading in Greek) 4. Herodotus and Euripides (intermediate reading in Greek) 5. Roman Women: Gender, Power, and Violence (Latin undergraduate seminar) 6. Greek Tragedy and the Athenian Polis (Classics course in translation) 7. Intermediate Modern Greek 201, 202 (language instruction) BROWN UNIVERSITY (1992-1996) 1. Introduction to Modern Greek 1 2. Introduction to Modern Greek 2 3. Intermediate Modern Greek 1 4. Intermediate Modern Greek 2 5. Greek Mythology THESIS STUDENTS DIRECTOR: 1. Abigail Simon, Sulpicia’s Elegies (2016-17) 2. Victoria Jansson, Out of Good Fortune: The Economics of Tragedy in the House of Atreus (2014-15) 3. Brett Evans, Looking for Reality in Latin Love Elegy (2012-13) 4. Irene Morrison-Moncure, 13 Recommendations for the Teaching of Elementary Latin at the Collegiate Level (2010-11) 5. Barbara Blythe, The Rape of the Bough: The Persephone Myth in Vergil’s Aeneid (2007) 6. Marcos Gouvêa, The Voyage of the Argonauts: The Epic Hero’s Journey from Homer to Apollonius of Rhodes (2004-2005) 7. Lydia Haile, Omnes ante me auctore secutus: Livy, Augustus, and the Manipulation of History (2001-2002) 8. Elizabeth Spear, Why Dido? Gender and Genre, Personal and Political in Vergil’s Aeneid (2001) Panoussi / 10 OTHER PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES COLLEGE OF WILLIAM AND MARY 1. Co-Chair, Local Committee, Annual Meeting CAMWS (2015-16) 2. Organizer and Participant, Mellon Seminar for the new COLL curriculum (2014) 3. First Year Seminars, in The Annual President’s Report, http://youtu.be/pvALnoDlrzc (2014) 4. Participant, Mellon Seminar, “First-Years Seminars: Making them Work” (2013) 5. Face 2 Face, http://www.wm.edu/as/dean/face_2_face/index.php (2012) 6. Panelist: Work/Life Balance for Academic Parents, workshop organized by the Provost’s office (2012) 7. Participant, W&M Raft Debate, http://www.wm.edu/as/history/news/fishertalks-his-way-off-the-island.php (2011) 8. Panelist, W&M as a Liberal Arts University in the 21st century (2009) 9. Scholar, National Endowment for the Humanities Program Page and Stage: http://www.pageandstage.org (2009) 10. Facilitator, Workshop on Integrating the Blackwell Companion to Catullus into Secondary and College Classrooms, CAAS annual meeting, Princeton, NJ (2008) 11. Participant, University Teaching Project (2008) 12. Participant, Mellon Faculty Grant Writing Workshop (2007) ANONYMOUS REFEREE JOURNALS • Acta Classica • American Journal of Philology • Classical Journal • Classical Philology • Classical World • Helios • Illinois Classical Studies • International Journal of the Classical Tradition • New England Classical Journal • Phoenix Panoussi / 11 • • Transactions of the American Philological Association Vergilius ACADEMIC PRESSES • Wiley-Blackwell • Focus Publishing NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCES & PANELS ORGANIZED 1. International Conference Co-organizer, Emotional Trauma in Greek and Roman Culture: Representations and Reactions, European Cultural Center in Delphi, Greece, June 23-26, 2016. 2. International Conference Organizer, Greece Inside and Out: Authors’ and Translators’ Visions of Hellenism, March 27, 1999, Department of Classics, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA. 3. International Conference Organizer, Myth and History in Modern Greek Literature, November 22, 1997, Department of Classics, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA. 4. Graduate Student Conference Organizing Committee Member, Viva Voce: Echoes of Performance in Ancient Texts, February 7-8, 1997, Department of Classics, Brown University, Providence, RI. MEMBERSHIPS • Society for Classical Studies (SCS) • Classical Association of the Middle West and South (CAMWS) • Vergilian Society of America • Women’s Classical Caucus • American Institute of Archaeology (AIA) SERVICE DEPARTMENT OF CLASSICAL STUDIES (2005-PRESENT) • Director, Post-Baccalaureate Program in Classical Studies (2014-present) • Classical Studies Department Nomination Awards Committee (2015-present) • Departmental Webmaster (2006-2014) • Communications Initiative (2012-2014) • Major advising (Classical Studies and European Studies, 2005-present) THE COLLEGE OF WILLIAM AND MARY (2005-PRESENT) • Plumeri Award Advisory Committee (2015, 2016) • Faculty Assembly (2015-16, elected member) o Ad hoc committee on Title IX policy Member (2016) o Faculty Affairs Committee Member (2014-15) Panoussi / 12 • • • • • • • • • • • o Academic Affairs Committee Member (2014-15) Faculty Assembly (2012-2015, elected member) o Chair, Academic Affairs Committee, Faculty Assembly (2014-15) o Liaison Committee Member (2014-2015) o Executive Committee Member (2014-2015) o COPAR/FUPC Member (2012-14) o Academic Affairs Committee Member (2013-14) o Faculty Affairs Committee Member (2012-13) Personnel Committee, Program in Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies (2015-present) PBK John D. Rockefeller Jr. Faculty Awards Committee (2013-2015) Arts & Sciences Faculty Awards for Teaching Excellence Committee (2014-15) Chair, Dean of Educational Policy Search Committee (2012) Educational Policy Committee (2011-14, elected member) o Participated in curricular reform § Chair, ad hoc committee on Domains (2014) § Chair, ad hoc committee on Additional Requirements (2014) New Faculty Mentor (2011-12) Faculty Affairs Committee/Faculty Assembly (2010-11, elected member) European Studies Program Faculty Committee (2005-present) Women’s Studies Program Curriculum Committee (2007-2012) Freshman advising (2006-2014) WILLIAMS COLLEGE (2000-2005) • Honor Committee (2001-02) • Discipline Committee (2001-02) • Faculty Review Panel (2001-03) (elected member) • Lecture Committee (2000-01) • First-year student advising (2000-2005) NATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS • Annual Fund Committee, Society for Classical Studies (2017-2020) • Ethics Committee, Society for Classical Studies (2016-2018; elected member) • Professional Matters Committee, Society for Classical Studies (2015-2018; elected member) • Development Committee, Society for Classical Studies (2014-2017) • Committee on Translation of Classical Authors, Society for Classical Studies (20142017) • Committee on the Status of Women and Minority Groups, American Philological Association (2006-2009) REGIONAL ORGANIZATIONS • Co-chair, Local Committee, Annual Meeting, Classical Association of the Middle West and South (2015-16) Panoussi / 13 • • • Membership Committee, Member, Classical Association of the Middle West and South (2015-present) Nominating Committee, Member, Classical Association of the Middle West and South (2012-15) Executive Committee, Member at Large, Classical Association of the Middle West and South (2009-2012)
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