Category: Events

Posted on March 5th, 2024 by Elizabeth W. Thill

In modern times, people are increasingly concerned by the effects their gardens have on the environment around them (invasive non-native species, anyone?). But this issue is hardly new. Since ancient times, cultures have expressed their imperial ambitions by collecting and transporting specimens of exotic plants. And just like today, those exotic plants have had a …

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Posted on September 9th, 2023 in Events, Local by Elizabeth W. Thill

When you think of “kites,” do you think of Mary Poppins, because you spent way too much time on Disney+ during COVID? Did you know “kites” can also refer to large-scale architectural constructions, engineered by hunters 8,000 years ago to funnel animals together for the slaughter? These sort of structures, found from the Middle East …

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Posted on August 7th, 2023 in Classics at the Kan-Kan, Events by Elizabeth W. Thill

Looking for the film adaptation of The Odyssey that stays truest to the spirit of Homer’s original epic poem? No, it’s not that Kirk Douglas monstrosity Ulysses, where the only thing more cheesy and frightening than the Cyclops is Douglas’ Odysseus hitting on a way-too-young-looking Princess Nausicaa. No, it’s not the French film The Odyssey, …

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Posted on August 7th, 2023 in Classics at the Kan-Kan, Events by Elizabeth W. Thill

Making the ancient myth of Hercules into a kid’s movie was always going to take some adjusting. Case in point: in making their 1997 movie Hercules, Disney revamped the goddess Hera from “insulted wife desperately trying to kill husband’s bastard child” into “loving mom who mostly just stands there smiling” (presumably she’s also not her …

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Posted on July 24th, 2023 in Events, Local, We Have Thoughts On That... by Elizabeth W. Thill

Recently, Classical Studies Program Director Dr. Elizabeth Thill did something she had not done in years: she attended a newly released movie, in the theater, where the aim was not to keep her children entertained (although she did bring her children, a somewhat questionable decision). What movie could coax her out of her self-imposed movie-theater …

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Posted on April 13th, 2023 in Classics at the Kan-Kan, Events by Elizabeth W. Thill

Before there was Troy, or 300, or somehow two Hercules movies in 2014, or whatever that Jon Snow Pompeii movie was, there was Gladiator. In an age where 1960s movies about Ancient Greece and Rome had become synonymous with incoherent scripts and short-short tunics, Ridley Scott and Russel Crowe delivered a sophisticated film that used Imperial …

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Posted on April 13th, 2023 in Classics at the Kan-Kan, Events by Elizabeth W. Thill

Ever wonder what it would look like if time-traveling Ancient Greeks made a movie? Forget Brad Pitt in Troy or Dwayne Johnson in Hercules: nothing captures the machismo, misogyny, and sculpted men found in Homer and Herodotus quite like 300. Kings who shout about freedom while treating everyone around them like dirt? Check. Illogically breaking …

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Posted on April 11th, 2023 in Events, Local by Elizabeth W. Thill

Unfortunately, the priests have consulted the relevant viscera, and declared tomorrow, April 25th, to be non fas (Latin for “a no-go”) for our scheduled lecture. Translation: unforeseen circumstances have raised their ugly heads, and sadly we will have to postpone the lecture to a later date. But check back for announcements on when we will …

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Posted on March 20th, 2023 in Events, Local by Elizabeth W. Thill

Recently, Classical Studies Program Director Dr. Elizabeth Thill attended a performance of Oedipus at the Indiana Repertory Theater in downtown Indy. It was amazing! Dr. Thill came home overly excited, chattered incoherently about it to her husband (who gave her the tickets for her birthday, accompanied her, had seen what she’d seen, and probably didn’t …

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Posted on February 2nd, 2023 in Announcements, Events, Local by Elizabeth W. Thill

In 79 CE, Mt. Vesuvius erupted on a massive scale, burying a large swath of the prosperous Bay of Naples area under meters of rock, ash, and mud. Cities such as Pompeii and Herculaneum were snuffed out, preserved for millennia until they were rediscovered in the modern era. Almost overnight, Pompeii became one of the …

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