What follows is a listing of the scholarly works of the faculty in the Department of Classics. You will appreciate the breadth of scholarship represented and you will recognize the importance of scholarship in our community.
Submissions from 2015
Collaborators Amongst the Opposition?: Deconstructing the Imperial Cursus Honorum, Thomas E. Strunk
Socrates and St. Ignatius: The Madman, the Monk, and the Philology of Liberation, Thomas E. Strunk
Submissions from 2014
A Companion To the Ancient Novel, Shannon N. Byrne and Cueva P. Edmund
Rape and Revolution: Tacitus on Livia and Augustus, Thomas E. Strunk
Submissions from 2013
Domitian's Lightning Bolts and Close Shaves In Pliny, Thomas E. Strunk
Submissions from 2012
Pliny the Pessimist, Thomas E. Strunk
Submissions from 2010
A Philology of Liberation: Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. as a Reader of the Classics, Thomas E. Strunk
Offending the Powerful: Tacitus' Dialogus de Oratoribus and Safe Criticism, Thomas E. Strunk
Saving the Life of a Foolish Poet: Tacitus on Marcus Lepidus, Thrasea Paetus, and Political Action under the Principate, Thomas E. Strunk
Submissions from 2009
Jesuit Education and the Classics, Shannon N. Byrne, Frederick Joseph Benda, and Edmund P. Cueva
Achilles in the Alleyway: Bob Dylan and Classical Poetry and Myth, Thomas E. Strunk
Submissions from 2007
Maecenas and Petronius' Trimalchio Maecenatianus, Shannon N. Byrne
Submissions from 2006
Petronius and Maecenas : Seneca's calculated criticism, Shannon N. Byrne
Authors, Authority, and Interpreters in the Ancient Novel. Essays in Honor of Gareth L. Schmeling, Shannon N. Byrne and Edmund P. Cueva
Submissions from 2005
Longus' Daphnis & Chloe : Introduction, Greek Text, Notes, Shannon N. Byrne and Edmund P. Cueva
Submissions from 2004
Martial's fiction : Domitius Marsus and Maecenas, Shannon N. Byrne