Tulane Classical Studies alums presented papers at the 2019 Joint Annual Meeting of the Archaeological Institute of America (AIA) and Society for Classical Studies (SCS) in San Diego, January 2-6:
- Tom Keeline (B.A., Tulane '06; Ph.D., Harvard), assistant professor, Washington University-St Louis : "Aut Latine Aut Nihil? A Tertium Quid," in SCS Session 38, What Can 'Active' Latin Accomplish?
- Dylan Rogers (B.A., Tulane '08; Ph.D., Virginia), assistant director, American School for Classical Studies in Athens: "Damaskenos at the American School: Revisiting Notions of Identity and Death in Roman Athens," in AIA Session 3B, Provincial Identities in the Roman Empire.
- Timothy Shea (B.A., Tulane '11), Ph.D. candidate in art history at Duke University: "The Funerary Topography of Metics in Archaic Athens," in AIA Session 6G, Death in the Polis: Context and Identities in Greek Mortuary Practice (Colloquium).
- Rachel Love (B.A., Tulane '13), Ph.D. candidate in classics at Yale University: "Epitome in the Age of Empire: Florus and the (Re-)Written Republic," in SCS Session 27, Didactic Prose.
- Julia Judge (B.A., Tulane '14), Ph.D. candidate in classical archaeology at Harvard University: "Mimesis and Memory in the Tiber Island Sanctuary of Asclepius," in AIA Session 6A, The Archaeology and Architecture of Cult in the Roman Empire.