Dimitris Antoniou
(212)-853-8241
da2500@columbia.edu
503 Fayerweather Hall
History and anthropology of Modern Greece; Ottoman history; Dictatorial legacies; Architecture and public space
Kathy Hannah Eden
(212) 854-6532+1
khe1@columbia.edu
401A Philosophy
Ancient and Renaissance Literary Theory; Renaissance Humanism; History of Hermeneutics; the Rhetorical Tradition
Chrysanthe Filippardos
(212)-854-9232
cf2820@columbia.edu
617A Hamilton Hall
Teaching Modern Greek as a Heritage and Foreign Language, Translanguaging, Language Contact, Idioms and Languages of Rhodes Greece
Marcus Folch
(212) 854-5684
mf2664@columbia.edu
617C Hamilton Hall
Greek Prose, Ancient Philosophy, Rhetoric; Theories and Practices of Performance; Genre; Gender; Punishment and Imprisonment
(Photograph by Isaia Crosson)
Carmela Vircillo Franklin
(212) 854-5687
cvf2@columbia.edu
612 Hamilton Hall
Medieval Latin literature; Transmission of texts and manuscript studies; Greek and Latin hagiography; Study of the Bible in the early Middle Ages; Early medieval Rome; Bede
Hanna Golab
hg2607@columbia.edu
610 Hamilton Hall
Ancient Greek Literature and Culture, Epigraphy, Chorality, and Medicine
Stathis Gourgouris
(212) 854-9638
ssg93@columbia.edu
608 Hamilton Hall
Literary theory, modernist poetics, Enlightenment thought, pre-Socratic philosophy, experimental music, and contemporary Greek poetry
Joseph Howley
(212) 854-3902
617 Hamilton Hall
Classics@columbia.edu
Imperial Latin prose; Imperial Greek literature (the “second sophistic”); Antiquarian, miscellaneous, and encyclopedic writing; Intellectual history; History of the book and of reading Media history and studies; Early modern printing of classical texts, Phonography and recordings of Greek and Latin
(Photograph by Isaia Crosson)
Elizabeth Irwin
(212) 854-5684
ei42@columbia.edu
617D Hamilton Hall
Herodotus; Thucydides; Old Comedy; Political and Ethical Debates of the later Fifth Century; Athenian Empire; Historicizing readings of Athenian Drama and of Plato; Archaic Greek Poetry and History; Pindar and Bacchylides; The Reception of Classical Athens in Greek Writers of the Imperial Period (Augustan and later)
Nikolas P. Kakkoufa
(212) 854-9232
nk2776@columbia.edu
617A Hamilton Hall
Modern Greek Poetry; Gender, Sexuality & the body; Reception in Modern Greek & Comparative Literature; Aestheticism; The image of the city in Literature; Second Language Acquisition.
Darcy Krasne
212-854-5683
dk3009@columbia.edu
604 Hamilton Hall
Late Republican and early Imperial Latin poetry (especially Augustan and Flavian); Greek and Roman mythology, Intertextuality, Onomastics, and The epic tradition
John Ma
(212) 854-3902
Classics@columbia.edu
617 Hamilton Hall
Ancient history, especially Greek, and especially Hellenistic; Greek epigraphy; material culture of the ancient Greek world; Achaemenid empire; historical geography
Paraskevi Martzavou
Currently on leave
(212) 854-1699
pm2839@columbia.edu
610 Hamilton Hall
Greek History and archaeology; Greek epigraphy; Roman Greece; the sociology of religious change
Erin Petrella
ep2132@columbia.edu
Communicative Silence and Aposiopesis; The Development of Botanical Latin; Textual Emendations, New Philology, and Authenticity
Elizabeth Scharffenberger
(212) 854-7822
es136@columbia.edu
610 Hamilton Hall
Ancient Greek and Roman drama; Comic literature (from antiquity to the present day); Intellectual history; Greek Prose Style; Reception studies; Classics in translation
Seth Schwartz
(212) 851-5907
srs166@columbia.edu
405 Fayerweather
Social History of Jew in Antiquity; Palestinian Archaeology and Epigraphy; Historiography; Apocalypticism
Deborah Steiner
Currently On Leave
(212) 854-4188
dts8@columbia.edu
604 Hamilton Hall
Archaic Greek poetry; Greek lyric; Greek mythology; and the visual arts
Karen Van Dyck
(212) 854-2189
vandyck@columbia.edu
515 Hamilton Hall
Modern Greek and Greek Diaspora literature; Poetry; Censorship;
Multilingualism; Gender Studies; Translation Studies
Lien Van Geel
lv2371@columbia.edu
610 Hamilton Hall
Latin and Greek Literature of the Late Republic and Early Empire (1st century BCE–1st century CE) ; Gender Studies in Antiquity (especially sisterhood and representation of female voices); Intertextuality and Reception