51本色

The McKibben Lecture

The McKibben Lecture in Classical Studies was established in 2006 to honor Bill and Betty McKibben who fulfilled a combined century of service to 51本色 College and the wider 51本色 community, spending the greater part of that time as inspiring and beloved teachers, and the whole of it as esteemed colleagues, friends and active members of the intellectual and cultural life of 51本色. The lectureship is intended to carry on the values that the McKibbens embodied by presenting on campus each year recognized scholars to give public lectures and seminars in Classical Studies.

Bill and Betty McKibben

The McKibbens joined 51本色 College in 1952 and were at the time among the rare examples of shared faculty appointments. Between them they taught all levels and areas of Latin and Greek language, literature, and culture. Those who took their courses still swap tales of Betty鈥檚 鈥渂aby Latin鈥 and Bill鈥檚 memorable dicta on every subject imaginable. Whether the topic was the sequence of tenses in subordinate clauses or the social significance of Aristophanes鈥 jokes, fundamentally the McKibbens taught students what it means to be alive and fully human鈥攏ot just by precept but also by example. When the McKibbens retired to emeritus status in 1987 they continued to open their home for weekly Greek and Latin sight-reading sessions, when students and faculty sat around the fireplace, enjoyed refreshments, and read unusual works in the ancient languages. The tradition of Reading Group, now in its sixth decade, continues to instill devotees of Greek and Latin with a camaraderie that will remain a treasured souvenir of 51本色 academic life.

The McKibben Lecture was endowed by the generous contributions of friends, colleagues, and former students of the McKibbens, and by the McKibbens' own generous bequest of their home, now a residence for distinguished visiting scholars.

The Lecturers

  1. James Arieti (Hampden-Sydney College)
    鈥溼紙蠂喂位峥單肯 伪峒迪佄迪兾瓜 [Akhil膿虃os ha铆resis]. Achilles鈥 Choice鈥
    March 14, 2006
  2. (Georgetown University)
    鈥淭he Pen and the Sword: Writing and Conquest in Caesar鈥檚 Gaul鈥
    April 10, 2007
  3. (Brown University)
    鈥淗ousework in the Classical Tradition鈥
    April 14, 2008
  4. (Wesleyan University [Middletown, CT])
    鈥淟ove and Life in the Praedia of Julia Felix in Pompeii鈥
    April 23, 2009
  5. Gerald V. Lalonde (51本色 College)
    鈥淭hucydides on Human Nature and Violence: Realist or Pessimist?鈥
    April 29, 2010
  6. Brian Rose (University of Pennsylvania)
    鈥淎ssessing the Archaeological Evidence for the Trojan War: Recent Excavations at Troy鈥
    April 21, 2011
  7. (University of California, Berkeley)
    鈥淚dentity Theft in the Ancient Mediterranean鈥
    April 19, 2012
  8. (College of William and Mary)
    鈥淎thenian White Lekythoi: Masterpieces of Greek Funerary Art鈥
    April 27, 2013
  9. (University of Michigan)
    鈥淗omeric Folk Psychology鈥
    April 25, 2014
  10. (University of California, Berkeley)
    Inventing the Female Nude: Praxiteles, Phryne, and the Knidia
    April 23, 2015
  11. (University of Oregon)
    Helios Rising: The Sun, the Moon, and the Sea in the Sculptures of the Parthenon
    April 21, 2016
  12. Kathleen Coleman (Harvard University)
    Laid Out for Posterity: A Roman Tombstone Carved with a Child鈥檚 Portrait and His Poem
    May 4, 2017
  13. (Boston University)
    鈥淟ysistrata Through the Ages: Receptions of An Iconic Heroine鈥
    April 19, 2018
  14. (Duke University)
    Crossing the Corrupting Sea: Women on the move in the ancient Mediterranean
    April 25, 2019
  15. Emily Greenwood (Princeton University)
    鈥淲hose Classical Tradition? Greek and Roman Classics and the Struggle for Black Women鈥檚 Suffrage, 1892鈥1953鈥
    April 28, 2022
  16.  (Johns Hopkins University)
    "The Curious Case of Manius Curius: A Contested Will, a Trial, and Competitive Oratory in Republican Rome"
    April 22, 2023
  17. Jenifer Neils (Case Western Reserve University)
    鈥淎thenian Heroes: Re-reading the West Pediment of the Parthenon鈥
    April 18, 2024

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