Dear all,

The Critical Antiquities Network is pleased to announce that the 2026 Critical 
Antiquities Public Lecture will be delivered by Page Dubois, Distinguished 
Professor of Classics and Comparative Literature at the University of 
California, San Diego. The title of her lecture is, ‘Blind Spot: Marxism in 
U.S. Classics.’

The event will be held on Wednesday, 25 February 2026, 9:30-11:30 (Sydney, 
Melbourne, Canberra time).

Here is the time and date in other locations:


  *
Los Angeles/Vancouver: Tuesday, 24 February, 14:30
  *
Chicago/Mexico City: Tuesday, 24 February, 16:30
  *
New York: Tuesday, 24 February 17:30
  *
Santiago/Buenos Aires/Rio de Janeiro: Tuesday, 24 February, 19:30
  *
Dublin/Belfast/London: Tuesday, 24 February, 22:30
  *
Paris/Berlin/Rome: Tuesday, 24 February, 23:30
  *
Johannesburg/Athens/Cairo: Wednesday, 25 February, 00:30
  *
Beijing/Singapore/Perth: Wednesday, 25 February, 06:30
  *
Tokyo: Wednesday, 25 February, 07:30
  *
Darwin: Wednesday, 25 February, 08:00
  *
Brisbane: Wednesday, 25 February, 08:30
  *
Adelaide: Wednesday, 25 February, 09:00

To register, please sign up for the Critical Antiquities Network mailing list 
to receive Zoom links and CAN announcements: 
https://signup.e2ma.net/signup/1930251/1916146

Here is the abstract for Page’s lecture:


              G.E.M de Sainte-Croix, in his massive text The Class Struggle in 
the Ancient Greek World, makes a crucial point about the avoidance of the term 
class in the work of historians of Greek and Roman antiquity: "Whereas 
descriptions of ancient society in terms of some category other than 
class--status, for instance--are perfectly innocuous, in the sense that they 
have no direct relevance to the modern world . . . an analysis of Greek and 
Roman society in terms of class, in the specifically Marxist sense, is indeed . 
. . something threatening, something that speaks directly to every one of us 
today and insistently demands to be applied to the contemporary world, of the 
second half of the twentieth century." (The Class Struggle, p. 45) The original 
first edition of this book contained a reproduction of Van Gogh's Potato 
Eaters, an image of the poverty and desolation of the exploited and wretched of 
the earth.

              What I am concerned with in this lecture is the threat that de 
Sainte Croix sees, and the attempt to thwart it, the hostility to Marxist 
theory, to anarchism, socialism, communalism and communism, that characterize 
the history of the United States of America, and the consequences for 
immigrants, people of color, women, queers, for university education, the 
humanities, and the discipline of classical studies in particular. In this 
moment, when the US is being wracked by new leadership's descent into 
neofascism and return to unbridled imperialism, it's time to enrich critique 
with the legacy of Marxist critical theory. This lecture derives from work in 
progress on the progressive voices in classical studies in the twentieth and 
twenty-first centuries. I consider some examples of US responses to Marxism in 
classics, including the cases of Moses Finley and Jean-Pierre Vernant, then ask 
briefly: Could we use the theory of Antonio Gramsci to read Euripidean tragedy 
differently?



We hope to see you there,

Tristan Bradshaw
Ben Brown
Tom Geue
Andy Poe


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