The Herodotus Encyclopedia. Группа авторов

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by individuals who migrate between these states.

      Niki Karapanagioti is a Teacher of Classics at Oxford High School GDST, in Oxford. She has a PhD in Classics from Reading University. Her PhD thesis is entitled An Exploration of Women and Revenge in Herodotus’ Histories. Her next research projects concern the reception of Herodotus’ Histories in nineteenth‐century Greece and the management of anxiety and underperformance in secondary school pupils who study Latin.

      Klaus Karttunen (b. 1951), PhD, is the former Professor of South Asian Studies at the University of Helsinki, now a research scholar at the same working on a monograph about the relations between India and Rome and the literary image of India in the West. He has published monographs on India in Early Greek Literature (1989), India and the Hellenistic World (1997), and Yonas and Yavanas in Indian Literature (2015), as well as many articles on Sanskrit philology, Indo‐Western relations, and the history of learning (plus several books in Finnish).

      Danielle Kellogg is Associate Professor of Classics at Brooklyn College and the Graduate Center, CUNY. Her research focuses on the political history and epigraphy of Attica. In addition to several articles on Athenian epigraphy and history, her publications include Marathon Fighters and Men of Maple: Ancient Acharnai (Oxford, 2013). Her current research project is focused on migration and its effects on our understanding of Athenian demography and democratic processes.

      Rebecca Futo Kennedy is Associate Professor of Classics at Denison University. Her research and teaching interests include Athenian tragedy; social and political history of Athens in the fifth and fourth centuries BCE; race, ethnicity, and gender in the ancient Mediterranean; and the reception of ancient concepts of race and ethnicity in modern contexts. She has recently published the monograph Immigrant Women in Athens (Routledge, 2014), co‐edited The Routledge Handbook of Identity and Environment in the Classical and Medieval Worlds (Routledge, 2016), and edited Brill’s Companion to the Reception of Aeschylus (Brill, 2018).

      Hyun Jin Kim is Lecturer in Classics, Discipline of Classics and Archaeology, at the University of Melbourne, Australia. His research interests include Greek history, Inner Asian history, comparative literature, and late antiquity. He is the author of Ethnicity and Foreigners in Ancient Greece and China (Duckworth, 2009) and The Huns, Rome and the Birth of Europe (Cambridge University Press, 2013).

      Julia Kindt is Professor of Ancient History in the Department of Classics and Ancient History at the University of Sydney. She is currently director of the Centre for Classical and Near Eastern Studies of Australia and an ARC Future Fellow (2018–22). Her research interests include ancient Greek history (from the archaic period through to Roman Greece), ancient Greek religion and the interdisciplinary study of religions, ancient anthropology and human/animal relations, historiography (ancient and modern) as well as Herodotus. Her publications include Revisiting Delphi (Cambridge University Press, 2016) Rethinking Greek Religion (Cambridge University Press, 2012).

      Athena Kirk is Assistant Professor of Classics at Cornell University. Her research interests include Greek literature and its connections to epigraphic texts, and ancient animal studies. Her current book project is called The Tally of Text: Catalogues and Inventories in Ancient Greece.

      Elizabeth Kosmetatou is Associate Professor of History at the University of Illinois–Springfield. She specializes in classical and Hellenistic history, archaeology, epigraphy, and numismatics, while her interests also include Political Science and Political Psychology.

      Michael Kozuh is an Associate Professor of History at Auburn University. He specializes in the economic, social, and political history of Mesopotamia in the first millennium BCE and is the author of The Sacrificial Economy: Assessors, Contractors, and Thieves in the Management of Sacrificial Sheep at the Eanna Temple of Uruk (Eisenbrauns, 2014). His next project is a social history of the Mesopotamian plowteam.

      Jeremy LaBuff is Senior Lecturer in History at Northern Arizona University and the author of Polis Expansion and Elite Power in Hellenistic Karia (Lexington Books, 2016). His current project is a history of Hellenistic Asia Minor through the lenses of indigeneity, ethnicity, and race.

      Alison Lanski has wide ranging‐interests, from pragmatics and narratology to learning analytics and data science. She has held various roles at the University of Notre Dame since completing her dissertation on Herodotean emissaries in 2013 (University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign), including positions in the Department of Classics, Kaneb Center for Teaching and Learning, Office of Information Technologies, and Institutional Research.

      Donald Lateiner Professor Emeritus of Humanities and Classics at Ohio Wesleyan University, became interested in Herodotus because of his obsession with Thucydides, Herodotus’ competitor and perhaps contemporary. He has published many articles and one book on him: The Historical Method of Herodotus (Toronto, 1989). His interests digressed from traditional historiographical analysis to nonverbal behaviors in historiography and epic, and methods of narration in ancient fictions. Recent studies include the emotions of disgust (Ancient Emotion of Disgust, Oxford University Press (2017), co‐editor D. Spatharas) and hope, embarrassment, protocols of humiliation, and the human senses, especially smell and taste, in Greek historiography and Greek and Latin fictions.

      Brian M. Lavelle is Professor in Classical Studies at Loyola University Chicago. His focuses are Peisistratid tyranny at Athens, Herodotus, Archilochus and his age, and the history of archaic Greece in general. He is the author of The Sorrow and the Pity: A Prolegomenon to a History of Athens under the Peisistratids, c. 560–510 B.C . (Steiner, 1993), Fame, Money and Power: The Rise of Peisistratos and “Democratic” Tyranny at Athens (Michigan, 2005), and Archaic Greece: The Age of New Reckonings (Wiley‐Blackwell, 2020). He is completing a history of Athens under the younger Peisistratids.

      John W. I. Lee is Associate Professor of History at the University of California, Santa Barbara. His research interests include Greece and Achaemenid Persia, ancient warfare, and the history of African‐American classical scholarship. He is the author of A Greek Army on the March: Soldiers and Survival in Xenophon’s Anabasis (Cambridge University Press, 2008).

      Jeremy B. Lefkowitz is Associate Professor of Classics at Swarthmore College. He received his PhD from the University of Pennsylvania in Classical Studies and was awarded a Rome Prize from the American Academy in Rome in 2015–16. His recently published work on the ancient fable includes “Innovation and Artistry in Phaedrus’ Morals” (Mnemosyne 70.3 (2017) 417–35); “Grand Allusions: Vergil in Phaedrus” (American Journal of Philology 137 (2016) 487–509); and “Aesop and Animal Fables” (The Oxford Handbook of Animals in Classical Thought and Life, ed. G. Campbell, Oxford (2014) 1–23).

      Michael Lloyd is Professor of Greek Language and Literature at University College Dublin, Ireland. He is the author of The Agon in Euripides (1992), Euripides’

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