Feminism & Classics IX: COMMUNITIES

When: May 7–10, 2026

Where: Cincinnati, Ohio AND the virtual conference platform

Who: all are welcome to attend and participate, including scholars, teachers, students, and enthusiasts of all ranks, affiliations, and subdisciplines, including independent scholars and K–12 teachers. This meeting of the conference is hosted by the Department of Classics at the University of Cincinnati.

Why: Feminism & Classics is a quadrennial conference dedicated to intellectual engagement with the study of antiquity from a variety of feminist-informed perspectives. It is also a welcoming and warm gathering place for interdisciplinary collaboration, mentorship, and community building within and beyond the discipline of Classics.

Our commitment to ACCESSIBILITY:

Feminism & Classics is committed to creating a welcoming and accessible hybrid conference that enables all attendees to engage fully with the program. We pledge to take concrete steps to support neurodivergent attendees and attendees with physical disabilities, mental illnesses, and/or chronic illnesses. If you require any accommodations to participate in this event, or have any questions or concerns related to access, please contact our Accessibility Team so that we can make sure your needs are met: femclas.accessibility@gmail.com


We will encourage all conference participants to consult the “Making SCS Presentations More Accessible” document here, created by Zoé Elise Thomas and Clara Bosak-Schroeder, to ensure that their conference presentations and materials are as broadly accessible as possible. As the conference gets closer, we will update this page with more detailed information about on-site and online accessibility.

Conference Events and Activities

  • Mentorship Matches

    Conference participants can sign up to be matched with a mentor and/or mentee based on shared interests. Matches will be put in touch with each other well in advance of the conference and will have structured time to meet during conference proceedings. This program will be available to online participants.

  • Keynote Addresses

    Caroline Cheung, Princeton

    Nandini Pandey, Johns Hopkins

    Both keynotes will be held at midday local time in order to make them accessible to online participants across time zones.

  • Community Feast

    An affordable, picnic-style community gathering (in lieu of the traditional ‘banquet’) with food catered by local businesses and opportunities to build community with other conference participants. Ticket costs will be at least partially subsidized for those in need of financial assistance, no questions asked.

  • Pre-Conference Events

    Special events hosted online in the months leading up to the conference, beginning with an Abstract Writing Workshop designed to offer guidance for junior scholars crafting their proposals for submission. Other events will offer advice on how to prepare for a professional conference and highlight foundational readings at the intersection of feminist theory and community studies.

  • Performance of Antigone

    A spectacular performance of Sophocles’ Antigone featuring the exceptional performers and production talent of UC’s College Conservatory of Music, alongside graduate and undergraduate students in Classics. Co-directed by Professors Anna Conser (Classics), Brant Russell (Acting), and Samuel Stricklen (Acting).

    Admission included with conference registration.

  • Celebration of Mothers

    The conference’s final day (Sunday, May 10) falls on Mother’s Day in the US, and will therefore feature programming celebrating the role that mothers, broadly defined, have played in the building of communities both ancient and modern.

CALL FOR PAPERS

The program committee for the next Feminism & Classics conference (May 7–10, 2026) invites submissions of abstracts, panels, roundtables, workshops, and innovative presentation formats related to the theme of “Communities.” Presentations for this hybrid conference may be delivered in person in Cincinnati, Ohio or on the virtual conference platform. For more details about the conference theme, see below.

In addition to traditional research papers, the committee is eager to receive proposals related to pedagogy, mentorship, hidden labor, accessibility, creative work, and beyond. We are enthusiastic about participation from K–12 teachers and independent scholars as well as faculty and students from all types of institutions. Grant funding from the Loeb Classical Library has been earmarked to provide registration waivers and other subsidies to students, K–12 teachers, contingent faculty, and others requiring financial assistance. Since this will be a hybrid conference, all participants will have the option to attend events in person, online, or in combination; proposals for both in-person and online presentations and events will be accepted. Thoughtful approaches to ensuring that in-person events are fully accessible to online participants are especially encouraged.

Submission Instructions:

  1. Abstracts and proposals should be sent to feminism.classics@gmail.com by September 12, 2025 as anonymized attachments in Word or PDF format. Please remove all personally identifying information from the attached document, including from the file name. In the body of the message, please list your name, the title of your proposal, and the email address at which you would like to receive communications about the conference.

  2. Individual abstracts should be no more than 350 words (excluding bibliography) and should reflect plans for oral delivery of a paper lasting maximum 15 minutes.

    • Please indicate at the top of your abstract whether you intend to deliver the paper in person or online.

  3. Proposals (for panels, roundtables, workshops, or other innovative modes of delivery) should be no more than 350 words (excluding bibliography). Individual abstracts within proposed panels can each be up to 350 words in addition. 

    • Please indicate at the top of the proposal document whether you plan for your event to last 60, 90, or 120 minutes; the number of speakers; and whether each speaker will attend in person or online. Hybrid panels (with some in-person and some online participants) are absolutely acceptable. 

    • If you are proposing an innovative mode of delivery, please explain clearly what your plans are and how you will ensure accessibility for online participants. (This explanation can be excluded from the 350 word limit.)

Conference Theme: COMMUNITIES

The organizing theme for this meeting of Feminism & Classics will be COMMUNITIES. Communities formed around human connection and exclusion have long shaped social identities, enforcing or eliding differences in the pursuit of political, intellectual, artistic, or affective goals. In the modern world, when such connections can be made across vast distances at the speed of a computer click, we are primed to reflect on the formation, development, and impact of communities in antiquity—how and why did ancient people come together to collaborate over shared goals or commiserate over shared grievances? How did factors like sex, gender, civic status, social and political capital, disenfranchisement, disability, or ethnos influence the formation of communities? What physical spaces housed ancient communities? What material traces did they leave behind? How did those experiencing exclusion from certain communities respond to being denied the benefits or privileges of membership? 


Communities have a powerful influence on the unity or fragmentation of the people with whom they interact. Shared ideologies regularly generate extreme reactions, from empowerment and compassion to anger and fear. These affective conditions may precipitate actions upon other individuals or communities, resulting in increased division, hierarchical power differentials, and desires for resistance—considerations which have long been foundational to feminist scholarship in the Classics and beyond (see Rabinowitz and Richlin 1993, Weiss and Friedman 1995, McManus 1997). Community studies, as an interdisciplinary branch of sociological and anthropological investigations encompassing a number of frameworks and terminologies familiar to scholars in Classics (e.g., ethnography, social network analysis, liminality; see Blackshaw 2009), has also contributed a great deal in recent decades to explorations of antiquity. Scholars in Classics have examined the dynamics of ancient communities based on political networks (Brock and Hodkinson 2000; Broekaert et al. 2020), religious practices (Collar 2013; Muñiz-Grijalvo and Tejedor, 2023), urban infrastructure (Simelius 2024), education and class (Mosconi 2008), provinces and colonies (Christol 2010), women’s associations (Hirschmann 2003), and wealth disparities (Carlà-Uhink et al. 2023), often situating the peoples of antiquity within networks that transcend governed entities and elite social ranks (e.g., Taylor and Vlassopoulos 2015).

Aspirations toward communities of equality have long motivated feminist practitioners; importantly, historical failures of feminist movements to recognize intersectional oppressions and to acknowledge the contributions of women of color and trans women have inhibited the formation of accessible communities within both academic disciplines and political movements. This conference’s focus on communities will therefore necessarily escape the temporal bounds of the ancient Mediterranean world, as disciplinary discourses reflect ongoing concerns about the formation and continuity of a truly accessible global community for the study of antiquity.

With these considerations in mind, we invite submissions to Feminism & Classics IX that reflect on the concept of Communities, broadly conceived. In formulating their proposals for this conference, authors are invited to understand “feminism” from an intersectional perspective that embraces numerous theoretical approaches as relevant and important to the conference’s mission. These may include queer theory, critical race theory, disability studies, ecocriticism, and postcolonial theory, among many others. Possible topics and approaches to the theme of Communities include (but are by no means limited to):

  • How social, political, and economic forces shaped ancient communities (and sub-communities) into hierarchical, oligarchic, aristocratic, democratic, and/or autocratic structures

  • How access to education, texts, and convivial gatherings contributed to the construction of elite and exclusive communities of literacy in antiquity; how those denied access to such resources still built or maintained communities engaged with storytelling, narrative, and oral traditions

  • Communities of care, whether in the ancient world or in our modern discipline (e.g., fostering mentorship, empathy, accessibility, and growth in academia, especially for junior and contingent teachers and scholars)

  • Communities of choice, as aligned with or divergent from communities of birth

  • Gendered communities, with consideration of the ways in which communities form or exclude based on social perceptions and constructions of gender

  • Community building(s), including both the action of forming communities and the physical spaces that may house those communities

  • The spaces and tools of community: how sites, objects, and interactions between them constructed or affected communities

  • Communities and social identity, with consideration of in-group/out-group identities, or how/whether individuals fit into certain communities

  • Strategies for community-building within and beyond the discipline, including outreach or engagement with the public, collaboration between academia and other spheres, and networks of communal pedagogy

Works Cited

Blackshaw, Tony. 2009. Key Concepts in Community Studies. SAGE.

Brock, Roger and Stephen Hodkinson (ed.). 2000. Alternatives to Athens: varieties of political organization and community in ancient Greece. Oxford University Press.

Broekaert, Wim, Elena Köstner, and Christian Rollinger (eds.). 2020. The Ties that Bind: Ancient Politics and Network Research. Journal of Historical Network Research 4. Luxembourg. 

Carlà-Uhink, Filippo, Lucia Cecchet, and Carlos Machado (eds.). 2023. Poverty in Ancient Greece and Rome: Realities and Discourses. Routledge. 

Christol, Michel. 2010. “L’organisation des communautés en Gaule méridionale (Transalpine, puis Narbonnaise) sous la domination de Rome.” Pallas 84: 15–36.

Collar, Anna. 2013. Religious Networks in the Roman Empire: The Spread of New Ideas. Cambridge University Press.

Hirschmann, V. E. 2003. “Methodische Überlegungen zu Frauen in antiken Vereinen.” In de Ligt, L., E. A. Hemelrijk, and H. W. Singor (eds.), Roman Rule and Civic Life: Local and Regional Perspectives: Proceedings of the Fourth Workshop of the International Network Impact of Empire (Roman Empire, c.200 B.C. – A.D. 476), Leiden, June 25–28, 2003. Brill: 401–414.

McManus, Barbara. 1997. Classics and Feminism: Gendering the Classics. The Impact of Feminism on the Arts and Sciences. Twayne. 

Mosconi, Gianfranco. 2008. “‘Musica & Buon Governo’: paideía aristocratica e propaganda politica nell’Atene di V Sec. a.c.” Rivista di Cultura Classica e Medioevale 1: 11–70.

Muñiz-Grijalvo, Elena and Alberto del Campo Tejedor (ed.). 2023. Processions and the construction of communities in antiquity: history and comparative perspectives. Routledge.

Rabinowitz, Nancy Sorkin and Amy Richlin. 1993. Feminist Theory and the Classics. Routledge.

Simelius, Samuli. 2024. “Networks of Inequality: Access to Water in Roman Pompeii.” Journal of Computer Applications in Archaeology 7: 54–74. 

Taylor, Claire and Kostas Vlassopoulos. 2015. Communities and Networks in the Ancient Greek World. Oxford University Press. 

Weiss, Penny A., and Marilyn Friedman. 1995. Feminism and Community. Temple University Press.

Contact

Organizer
Caitlin Hines
caitlin.hines@uc.edu

Abstract/Proposal Submissions

feminism.classics@gmail.com

Accessibility Team

femclas.accessibility@gmail.com