1st Edition
Emotional Trauma in Greece and Rome Representations and Reactions
Introduction Andromache Karanika and Vassiliki Panoussi
Part 1: War Trauma
1. Aspects of Violence, Trauma, and Theater in Sophocles’ Ajax Trigg Settle
2. Combat Trauma in Vergil’s Aeneid Vassiliki Panoussi
Part 2: Women and Trauma
3. Repetition, Civic Status, and Remedy: Women and Trauma in New Comedy Sharon L. James
4. Subaltern Women, Sexual Violence, and Trauma in Ovid’s Amores Jessica Wise
Part 3: Collective Trauma
5. The Acropolis Burning! Reactions to Collective Trauma in the Years After 480/79 BCE Marion Meyer
6. Historiographical Trauma: The Case of Polybius Susan C. Jarratt
Part 4: Natural Disasters, Exile, Captivity
7. Non est facile inter mala magna consipere: Trauma, Earthquakes, and Bibliotherapy in Seneca’s Naturales Quaestiones Christopher Trinacty
8. Ovid and the Trauma of Exile Sanjaya Thakur
9. Philo’s Flaccus: Trauma, Justice, and Revenge Philip R. Bosman
Part 5: Communicating Trauma
10. Learning to Bear Witness: Tragic Bystanders in Sophocles’ Trachiniae Erika L. Weiberg
11. Oedipus’ Lament: Waking and Refashioning the Traumatic Past in Sophocles’ Oedipus at Colonus Laurialan Reitzammer
12. Troy as Trauma: Reflections on Intergenerational Transmission and the Locus of Trauma Andromache Karanika.
Index
Biography
Andromache Karanika is Associate Professor of Classics at the University of California, Irvine, U.S.A. She is the author of Voices at Work: Women, Performance and Labor (2014) and has co-authored a textbook on Modern Greek.
Vassiliki Panoussi is Professor of Classical Studies at William & Mary, U.S.A. She is the author of Vergil’s Aeneid and Greek Tragedy: Ritual, Empire, and Intertext (2009), and Brides, Mourners, Bacchae: Women’s Rituals in Roman Literature (2019).






