Department of Classics Professor Fields: Latin historiography and epic poetry; the reception of the Classics in the U.S.
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CV (PDF) 罈 | Email: tjoseph@holycross.edu |
Biography
Tim Joseph graduated from 17勛圖厙 with a B.A. in Classics in 1998 and then taught Latin at Cresskill Junior-Senior High School in New Jersey from 1998 to 2001. He went on to earn a Ph.D. in Classical Philology from Harvard University. Tim has been back at 17勛圖厙 teaching on Fenwick 4 since the fall of 2006. He has taught several years in the Montserrat first-year seminar program and served as the director of Montserrats Divine Cluster in 201920 and 2020-21.
Tims research concentrates on Latin historiography and epic poetry, with a focus on the literature of the early Roman empire. His is the author of Tacitus the Epic Successor (Brill, 2012), and Thunder and Lament: Lucan on the Beginnings and Ends of Latin Epic (Oxford University Press, 2022). For more information, see the Academia.edu profile at:. On occasion Tim has written for The Conversation about topics such as and echoes of Roman history in the ongoing transformation of the and . In 2017 and 2018 he served as the director of the Classical Association of New England's at Brown University and served as the president of in 2022-23.
Recent and Upcoming Courses
- Latin 1012 Introduction to Latin
- Latin 213 Intermediate Latin 1 (Pliny's Letters)
- Latin 214 Intermediate Latin 2 (Latin epic)
- Latin 320 Sallust and Livy
- Latin 321 Tacitus
- Latin 334 Lucretius
- Latin 358 Virgils Aeneid
- Latin 399 Julius Caesar in the Roman Literary Imagination
- Latin 399 Literature in the Age of Nero
- Greek 1012 Introduction to Greek
- Greek 213 Intermediate Greek 1 (Plato's Apology)
- Greek 214 Intermediate Greek 2 (Homer's Odyssey)
- Classics 103 Greek and Roman Epic
- Classics 120 Classical Mythology
- Classics 145
- Montserrat (Divine Cluster) Immortality in Ancient Greece & Rome
Select Publications
Books
Virgil, Lucan, and the Narrative of Civil War in the Histories. Mnemosyne Supplements. Monographs on Greek and Latin language and literature, vol. 345. Brill, 2012.
. Oxford University Press, 2022.
. Co-edited with Caroline Johnson Hodge and Tat-siong Benny Liew. SBL Press, 2023.
Articles and Book Chapters
The Metamorphoses of Tanta Moles: Ovid, Met. 15.765 and Tacitus, Ann. 1.11.1, Vergilius 54 (2008): 2436.
The Disunion of Catullus Fratres Unanimi at Virgil, Aeneid 7.3356, Classical Quarterly 59.1 (2009): 274278.
Ac rursus noua laborum facies: Tacitus Repetition of Virgils Wars at Histories 3.2634, in John F. Miller and A. J. Woodman, eds., Latin Historiography and Poetry in the Early Empire: Generic Interactions (Brill, 2010), 155簫169.
Tacitus and Epic, in Victoria E. Pag獺n, ed., A Companion to Tacitus (Blackwell, 2012), 369385.
Repetita bellorum ciuilium memoria: The remembrance of civil war and its literature in Tacitus, Histories 1.50, in Jonas Grethlein and Christopher Krebs, eds., Time and Narrative in Ancient Historiography: The Plupast from Herodotus to Appian (Cambridge University Press, 2012), 156174.
The Death of Almo in Virgils Latin War, The New England Classical Journal 39.2 (2012): 99112.
The Boldness of Maternus First Speech (Tacitus, Dialogus 1113), in Olivier Devillers, ed., Les opera minora et le d矇veloppement de lhistoriographie tacit矇enne (Ausonius ditions, 2014), 131145.
Pharsalia as Romes day of doom in Lucan, American Journal of Philology 138.1 (2017): 107141.
"The Verbs Make the Man: A Reading of Caesar, Gallic War 1.7 and Civil War 1.1 and 3.2," The New England Classical Journal 44.3 (2017): 150-161.
"Caesar in Vergil and Lucan," in Luca Grillo and Christopher Krebs, eds., The Cambridge Companion to the Writings of Julius Caesar (Cambridge University Press, 2017), 289-303.
East and West in the Histories of Herodotus and Tacitus, in Mary English and Lee Fratantuono, eds., Pushing the Boundaries of Historia (Routledge, 2018), 6985.
"The Figure of the Eyewitness in Tacitus' Histories," Latomus 78 (2019): 68101.
"'One city captures us': Lucan's Inverted Disaster Narrative," in Virginia Closs and Elizabeth Keitel, eds., Urban Disasters and the Roman Imagination (De Gruyter, 2020), 33-48.
Agrippinas (Un-)Augustan anger: Tacitus, Annals 12.22.3 and Ovid, Tristia 2.127,&紳莉莽梯;Classical Quarterly 73.1 (2023): 1-8.