Recent Publications by Our Members
2025
- Arden A and B Cassell (2025, forthcoming), 'The Renewal of Spartan Society: Cognitive and Embodied Experience in the Hyakinthia', The Journal of Cognitive Historiography.
- Cassell, B (2025, forthcoming), 'Recalling a Heroic Death: Cognitive and Embodied Approaches to the Aglaurion and Ephebic Oath', Mnemosyne.
- Mackin Roberts, E (2025), '(Re)appraising the Parthenon Frieze: Divinespace and Mortalspace', The Classical Quarterly, FirstView, 1–23
- Mackin Roberts, E (2025), 'The Cave of Laughlessness, Sensory Deprivation, and Cognitive Depletion at Eleusis', Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies, 67 (1), 64-74.
- Wilson, D (2025, forthcoming), 'Pausanias and Polygnotus' Delphi Paintings: A Religious Experience?, The Journal of Cognitive Historiography
- Wilson, D (2025), 'Making Gods Real Through Choral Dance', Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies
2024
- Bednarek, B (2024), 'Nonverbal Behaviour in Ancient Literature: How to be Sympotikos and what it Actually Means', in Andreas Serafim and Sophia Papaioannou (eds.), Athenian Dialogues III (De Gruyter), 207–36
- Bednarek, B (2024), 'The uses of stolls in classical Athens: diphrophoroi in the Parthenon frieze, old comedy, Attic vases and beyond', The Cambridge Classical Journal, 70, 1–25
- Bednarek, B (2024), 'Single males among wild women? Gender trouble in the parodos of Euripides’ Bacchae', Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies, 67 (1), 56–63.
- Bednarek, B (2024), 'Μέχρι σπλάγχνων. When is that?', in Jan-Mathieu Carbon and Gunnel Ekroth (eds.), From snout to tail. Exploring the Greek sacrificial animal from the literary, epigraphical, iconographical, archaeological, and zooarchaeological evidence (Athens: Swedish Institute at Athens), 151–64.
- Cassell, B (2024), 'Experiencing Athenian pasts on Delos: Resource depletion, embodied cognition, and synchronized arousal in the geranos dance', Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies, Advance Article, 1-19
- Mackin Roberts, E (2024), 'Embodied Wearing: Clothing for Artemis in Ancient Athenian Religion', Material Religion, 20 (4), 257-282.
- Smith, TJ (2024), 'Resistant, Willing, and Controlled: Sacrificial Animals as ‘Things’ on Greek Vases', in Matthew Haysom, Maria Mili, and Jenny Wallensten (eds.), The stuff of the gods. The material aspects of religion in ancient Greece (Athens: Swedish Institute at Athens), 83–95.
- Smith, TJ (2024), 'Taking the Bull by the Horns: Animal Heads in Scenes of Sacrifice on Greek Vases', in Jan-Mathieu Carbon and Gunnel Ekroth (eds.), From snout to tail. Exploring the Greek sacrificial animal from the literary, epigraphical, iconographical, archaeological, and zooarchaeological evidence (Athens: Swedish Institute at Athens), 93-109.
- Smith, TJ (2024), 'Visualizing the Sacred: The 'Religious Art' of Ancient Greece' in D Ning (ed.), Art: Vividly Visualized History (Guilin: Guangxi Normal University Press), 319-347.
2023
- Ford, JC (2023), Atheism at the Agora: A History of Unbelief in Ancient Greek Polytheism (London: Routledge)
2022
- Deacy, S (2022), 'Problems with Athena: god of nothing', Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies, 65 (2), 176–86
- McGlashan, V (2022), 'The Bacchants Are Silent: Using Cognitive Science to Explore the Experience of the Oreibasia', in Esther Eidinow, Armin W. Geertz, and John North (eds.), Cognitive Approaches to Ancient Religious Experience (Ancient Religion and Cognition; Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), 145–66.
2021
- Smith, TJ (2021), Religion in the Art of Archaic and Classical Greece (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press).
- Smith, TJ (2021), 'Bodies in Motion: Dance, Gesture, and Ritual on Greek Vases', Greek and Roman Musical Studies, 9 (1), 49–84.