GreekandLatinUCL
The Department of Greek and Latin at UCL is one of the premier Classics departments in the UK. It offers study programmes at the BA, MA and PhD level, produces high-quality research and is keen to share its expertise with the general public.
UCL Greek & Latin has more than ten permanent members of staff as well as part-time staff and postgraduate researchers with diverse backgrounds and a variety of research interests. We are a vibrant community that covers all the main areas of ancient Greek and Latin language and literature as well as aspects such as philosophy, palaeography, linguistics and the reception of the ancient world in the modern period.
For more information on the Department visit: http://www.ucl.ac.uk/classics/
Reyna Jani, "Female Sexuality: The Obscurification of Female Same-Sex Relations within Classics"
Professor Isabelle Torrance
In conversation with Emily Wilson
In conversation with Rosa Andújar
Episode Four: Music, Dance and Greek Tragedy
Episode Three: Translation, Adaptation, and Greek Tragedy
Episode Two: Set, Props, and Costumes and Greek Tragedy
The Reception of Euripides' Electra in Michael Cacoyannis' work (Dr Anastasia Bakogianni)
Staging Greek Tragedy: Then and Now / Episode One: Dramaturgy and Greek Tragedy: Then and Now
Nero in Ancient and Modern Culture
UCL Greek and Latin; Degree Programmes Introduction
UCL BA Ancient World (January 2021)
Professor Ellen Oliensis (UC Berkeley): ‘The trials of Latona in Ovid’s Metamorphoses’
The Beginning of Oedipus the King (Oedipus Tyrannos): Professor Miriam Leonard
Studying at UCL Greek and Latin
Between Oedipus and the Sphinx: Freud and Egypt
Homeric Meditations Intro and Sample Practice
Greek Papyri
Phiroze Vasunia, 'A god in translation? Dionysus from Lucian to Gandhara'
Gandhi and the Reception History of Plato's Apology
The Purpose of Plato's Apology
Socrates' Rhetoric in Plato's Apology
Socrates in Plato's Apology
Plato's Apology and the Genre of Greek Rhetoric
Introduction to Plato's Apology
Ovid's Amores 1.1
Ovid's Puellae
Amores 2.7 and 2.8
Introduction to Ovid's Heroides