This volume explores how the study of antiquity can be made relevant and inclusive for a diverse range of 21st century students by bringing together perspectives from colleagues working in higher education at different career stages, roles, and from different backgrounds in the US, UK, and Greece.
This collection of chapters addresses issues related to inclusive practice and diversity in Classics Higher Education, especially in the US and the UK. Recent debates within the discipline have highlighted inequality of access to traditional classical education, and a growing number of initiatives and projects have begun to address the range of sources and topics that form part of a modern classical education. The discipline is wide-ranging, including study of ancient Greek and Latin language and literature (the traditional core of Classics), as well as opportunities to study the ancient history, philosophy, religion, mythology, material culture and archaeology of the Greco-Roman period. Significant progress has been made over recent years in incorporating the study of gender and sexuality within classical degree programmes, and increasingly programmes are being enriched through broadening the geographical reach of topics on the curriculum beyond Europe. More care is also being taken over selection of scholarly reading to represent more fully the range of voices contributing to the discipline. But more work remains to be done.
Diversity and the Study of Antiquity in Higher Education is of interest to anyone teaching Classics, especially in the US and UK, as well as scholars and researchers in the field who are interested in issues of diversity.
Edited by:
Daniel Libatique,
Fiona McHardy
Imprint: Routledge
Country of Publication: United Kingdom
Dimensions:
Height: 216mm,
Width: 138mm,
Weight: 280g
ISBN: 9781032235134
ISBN 10: 1032235136
Series: Classics In and Out of the Academy
Pages: 144
Publication Date: 29 November 2024
Audience:
College/higher education
,
Professional and scholarly
,
Primary
,
Undergraduate
Format: Paperback
Publisher's Status: Active
Introduction: Diversity and the Study of Antiquity in Higher Education – Daniel Libatique and Fiona McHardy; 1. Affectionate Ties: The Discipline of the Classics and the College or University Mission - Patrice Rankine; 2. Digging Deeper: Towards a More Inclusive Archaeology of the Ancient Mediterranean Nadhira Hill; 3. ‘Classics Beyond Whiteness’: Race and Antiracism in Departmental Curriculum - T. H. M. Gellar-Goad and Caitlin Hines; 4. Race, Roman Law Courts, and the Colonized Subject: Teaching Cicero’s Pro Fonteio - Denise McCoskey; 5. A Classical Studies Pedagogy for the Future: An Introspective Look - Eleni Bozia; 6. Looking Up, Looking Online: Gender, Representation, and Bias in Classics - Victoria Leonard; 7. ‘Biting the Hand that Feeds You’? Responding to Racialisation in UK Classics - Samuel Agbamu; 8. Teaching Visual / Material Culture and Museums in Terms of Disability Access - Ellen Adams; 9. ‘Reaching Out with Eurydice’: The Myth and Voice Initiative - Efi Spentzou; 10. Inclusive Classics and Pedagogy: Teachers, Academics and Students in Conversation - Barbara Goff and Alexia Petsalis-Diomidis; 11. Embedding Diversity in Classics Teachers’ Training: A Case Study at a Greek University - Marisa Fountopoulou and Effrosyni Kostara.
Daniel Libatique is Vincent J. Rosivach Professor of Classical Studies at Fairfield University, USA. Fiona McHardy is Professor of Classics at University of Roehampton, UK.
Reviews for Diversity and the Study of Antiquity in Higher Education: Perspectives from North America and Europe
""This broad collection of essays is a welcome addition to the ongoing, pressing conversations about what can and should be done to promote greater diversity within the field of ancient Mediterranean studies... The volume includes a number of deeply thoughtful and insightful reflections on the state of the field and what can be done to increase diversity, and it will be a useful resource for people at all career stages who are invested in these questions."" - Classical Review