Thomas E. Jenkins holds a Ph.D. in classical philology from Harvard University, Massachusetts, and is Professor and Chair of the Department of Classical Studies at Trinity University, Texas. He has published widely on classical texts, including his book Intercepted Letters: Epistolarity and Narrative in Greek and Roman Literature (2006), as well as articles on Ovid, Euripides, Homer, and especially classical reception. He has been a Fellow of the Center for Hellenic Studies in Washington, DC, and winner of the inaugural Paul Rehak Award for his article on Lucian's Dialogues of the Courtesans. In 2013, Jenkins premiered a new stage version of Plautus' The Haunted House at the Overtime Theater in San Antonio, Texas.
1. Introduction
2. It's Greek to them: gay and lesbian receptions of the ancient world
3. Classics and ideology
4. September 11th on the Western stage
5. From the borders: contemporary identity, community, and the ancient world
6. Power, the canon, and the unexpected voice
Conclusion: on fractures and fracturing.