Classicisms in the Black Atlantic
Edited by Ian Moyer, Adam Lecznar, and Heidi Morse
Author Information
Ian Moyer, Associate Professor, Department of History, University of Michigan,Adam Lecznar, Honorary Research Fellow, Department of Greek and Latin, University College London,Heidi Morse, Lecturer, University of Michigan
Ian Moyer is Associate Professor in the Department of History at the University of Michigan. He is the author of Egypt and the Limits of Hellenism (CUP, 2011), as well as articles on cultural and intellectual interactions between ancient Greece and Egypt. His other interests include ancient religion and magic, as well as modern receptions of ancient civilizations and cultures. In his current research, he is examining the gates and forecourt areas of Egyptian temples in the Ptolemaic period as sites of cultural and political translation.
Adam Lecznar is currently an Honorary Research Fellow in UCL's Department of Greek and Latin. His research interests range across classical reception studies and he has published on Friedrich Nietzsche's reception of Plato and Prometheus, the classicism of James Joyce, and the reception of Hesiod. He has taught at UCL, Bristol, Royal Holloway, and Oxford since the submission of his doctorate on Wole Soyinka's reception of Euripides' Bacchae in 2013, and is currently completing a monograph entitled Dionysus after Nietzsche: The Birth of Tragedy in Twentieth-Century Literature and Thought.
Heidi Morse is a Lecturer at the University of Michigan, where she was a 2014-2016 Du Bois-Mandela-Rodney Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Afroamerican and African Studies. Her book-in-progress, titled Teaching and Testifying: Black Women's American Classicism, theorizes a new cultural history of the relationship between classical rhetoric and race in nineteenth-century America. She has also authored articles on American women's poetry, slave narratives, and African American print and visual culture which have appeared or are forthcoming in venues including Comparative Literature, Legacy: A Journal of American Women Writers, and The Wiley-Blackwell Companion to World Literature.
Contributors:
Kimathi Donkor is an artist, curator, and educator based in London.
Emily Greenwood is Professor of Classics at Yale University.
Adam Lecznar is an Honorary Research Fellow in the Department of Greek and Latin at University College London.
Justine McConnell is Lecturer in Comparative Literature at King's College London.
Heidi Morse is a Lecturer at the University of Michigan.
Ian Moyer is Associate Professor in the Department of History at the University of Michigan.
Dan-el Padilla Peralta is Assistant Professor of Classics at Princeton University.
Patrice D. Rankine is Professor of Classics and Dean of the School of Arts & Sciences at the University of Richmond.
Michele Valerie Ronnick is Professor in the Department of Classical and Modern Languages at Wayne State University.
Tracey L. Walters is Associate Professor of Literature and Chair of the Department of Africana Studies at Stony Brook University.
Margaret Williamson is Associate Professor Emerita of Classics and Comparative Literature at Dartmouth College.