Radcliffe Edmonds
Contact
and by appointment
Department/Subdepartment
Education
Ph.D., University of Chicago
Areas of Focus
Greek social and intellectual history, with particular focus on mythology, religion, magic, and Platonic philosophy
Biography
Personal Statement
I love teaching in the atmosphere of 草榴成人社区: the small community of earnest and eager graduate and undergraduate students, the faculty鈥檚 mix of disciplines and perspectives, the fantastic resources for research, not to mention the idyllic setting and beautiful traditions that surround us all. My research and teaching interests center on Greek social and intellectual history, with particular focus on mythology, religion, magic, and Platonic philosophy. I enjoy the opportunity to teach courses on some of the less familiar aspects of ancient Greek culture, such as ancient Greek ideas of cosmos, magic, and mystery cults, as well as courses on the language, mythology, and history of ancient Greece.
My current research interests include death and the afterlife in the Greek imagination, Plato and the history of myth interpretation, as well as the marginal categories of magic and Orphism within Greek religion. In addition to my work on Myths of the Underworld Journey, I have published a study entitled Redefining Ancient Orphism, in which I argue that it was not a coherent movement but a label given to a variety of religious practices that deliberately departed from the norm, elaborating on and altering traditional myths and rituals in innovative ways, while appealing to the authority of tradition by invoking the name of Orpheus, the greatest of poets. I have edited a volume of essays on Plato and the Power of Images, exploring the way Plato makes powerful use of various kinds of images, while at the same time mounting devastating critiques against the power of images. Most recently, I edited a volume on Magic and Religion in the Ancient Mediterranean World, with essays on a range of topics focusing on cross-cultural contacts in the ancient Mediterranean, especially the material aspects of magic and religion. My most recent monograph, Drawing Down the Moon, is a study of the discourse of magic in the ancient Greco-Roman world, in which I survey the different things labeled as 鈥榤agic鈥, from curses and erotic spells to healing and divination, including such esoteric practices as astrology, theurgy, and alchemy.
In addition to scholarship here, I have been enjoying directing the Greek Plays on May Day and singing with the 草榴成人社区 Renaissance Choir.
Recent Publications
- edited by Radcliffe Edmonds, Carolina L贸pez-Ruiz, Sof铆a Torallas-Tovar, Routledge (2024)
- "Magicians and Mendicants: New Light from the Marmarini Inscription,鈥 in Magic and Religion in the Ancient Mediterranean World. Ed. R. Edmonds, C. L贸pez Ruiz, S. Torallas Tovar, Routledge (2023), pp. 227-248.
- "The Many Faces of Dionysus in the Hexameters of the Sinai Palimpsest (Sin. Ar. Nf 66).鈥 The Classical Quarterly 72, no. 2 (2022), pp. 532鈥40.
- "Contingent Catastrophe or Agonistic Advantage: The Rhetoric of Violence in Classical Athenian Curses,鈥 Greece & Rome 69 Special Issue 1: Curses in Context IV: Curse Tablets in the Wider Realms of Execrations, Commerce, Law, and Technology, (2022), pp. 8-26.
- "A Path Neither Simple Nor Single: The Afterlife as Good to Think with鈥 in Aspects of Death and the Afterlife in Greek Literature, ed. Hopper, A. and Gazis, G., Liverpool University Press (2021): 11-32.
- "Orphic Eschatologies?鈥 in Eschatology in Antiquity: Forms and Functions, ed. Hilary Marlow, Helen Van Noorden, and Karla Pollmann, Routledge (2021), pp. 117-130.
- "The Song of the Nightingale: Word Play on the Road to Hades in Plato鈥檚 Phaedo,鈥 Transactions of the American Philological Association 150.1 (2020), pp. 65-83.
- "First-Born of Night or Oozing from the Slime? Deviant Origins in Orphic Cosmogonies鈥 in The Values of Nighttime in Classical Antiquity: Between Dusk and Dawn. ed. James Ker and Antje Wessels, Brill: Leiden & Boston (2020), pp. 46-69.
- "The Ethics of Afterlife in Ancient Greece,鈥 in Early Greek Ethics, ed. David Wolfsdorf, Oxford University Press (2020), pp. 545-565.
- "And You Will Be Amazed: The Rhetoric of Authority in the Greek Magical Papyri,鈥 Archiv f眉r Religionsgeschichte Volume 21-22 (2020): Issue 1, pp. 29-49.
- , Princeton University Press, 2019.
- , edited by Radcliffe Edmonds and Pierre Destr茅e, Brill, 2017.
- Cambridge University Press, 2013.
- , Cambridge University Press, 2011.
- , Cambridge University Press, 2004.
- 鈥淢isleading and Unclear to the Many: Allegory in the Derveni Papyrus and the Orphic Theogony of Hieronymus鈥, in The Derveni Papyrus: Unearthing Ancient Mysteries, ed. Marco Antonio Santamaria, Brill (2019), pp. 77-99.
- 鈥淒eviant Origins: Hesiodic Theogony and the Orphica,鈥 in Oxford Handbook of Hesiod, eds., A. Loney & S. Scully, Oxford University Press (2018), pp. 225-242.
- 鈥淎lcibiades the Profane: Images of the Mysteries in 笔濒补迟辞鈥檚&苍产蝉辫;Symposium,鈥&苍产蝉辫;笔濒补迟辞鈥檚&苍产蝉辫;Symposium: A Critical Guide, ed. Pierre Destr茅e & Zina Giannopoulou, Cambridge University Press (2017), pp. 194-215.
- 鈥淲hen I walked the dark road of Hades: Orphic katabasis and the katabasis of Orpheus,鈥 in Kat谩basis in Greek Literary Tradition and Religious Thought, ed. Bonnechere & Cursaru. Les 脡tudes Classiques 83 (2015), pp. 261-279.
- 鈥淚magining the Afterlife in Greek Religion鈥 in Oxford Handbook of Ancient Greek Religion, eds. Eidinow, Esther & Julia Kindt, Oxford University Press (2015), pp. 551-563.