Kathryn Stoddard

Teaching Professor
Undergraduate Supervisor
Kathryn Stoddard

Contact Information

Department
Program in Interdisciplinary Humanities

Dr. Stoddard is a specialist in ancient Greek poetry, with interests in New testament GREEK, ancient mythology, and Classical reception. She is the Undergraduate Director of the Program in Interdisciplinary Humanities at FSU. She regularly teaches undergraduate courses in Humanities, such as HUM2020 "The Art of Being Human," HUM2210 "Humanities from Pre-History to Late Antiquity," HUM2235 "Humanities from the Renaissance to the Enlightenment," New Testament Greek, and an Upper-Division Writing course entitled "Humanism and the Humanities." Dr. Stoddard holds a Ph.D. from the University of Virginia in Classics and a B.A. from the College of William and Mary in Classics, with a concentration in Greek Philology. Her publications include The Narrative Voice in the Theogony of Hesiod (Leiden 2004); “The Muses and the Mortal Narrator: How Gods Relate to Men in the Theogony” Helios 32 (2005) 1-28; “The Programmatic Message of the ‘Kings and Singers’ Passage: Theogony 80-103” TAPA 133.1 (2003) 1-16; “Turning the Tables on the Audience: Didactic Technique in Solon 13W” AJP 123.2 (2002) 149-68; “Thucydides, Lucretius, and the End of the De Rerum Natura” Maia 48 (1996) 107–28.