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Notes on Contributors

Carol Atack

teaches Classics at Newnham College, University of Cambridge. She is the author of The Discourse of Kingship in Classical Greece (London, 2020) and has written widely on Plato, Xenophon and topics in classical Greek political thought.

Jed Atkins

is the E. Blake Byrne Associate Professor of Classical Studies and Associate Professor of Philosophy and Political Science at Duke University. He is the author of Cicero on Politics and the Limits of Reason (Cambridge, 2013), Roman Political Thought (Cambridge, 2018) and The Christian Origins of Tolerance (Oxford, forthcoming). Along with Thomas Bénatouïl, he is editor of The Cambridge Companion to Cicero’s Philosophy (Cambridge, 2022).

Robert A. Ballingall

is Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Maine, and the author of Plato’s Reverent City: The Laws and the Politics of Authority (London, 2023).

Tony Burns

is Professor of Political Theory at the University of Nottingham. He is author of Aristotle and Natural Law (London, 2011). He is working on the third volume of a trilogy devoted to the theme of Social Institutions and the Politics of Recognition in the history of political thought from the ancient Greeks to the present.

David Carter

teaches Classics at the University of Reading. He is the author of The Politics of Greek Tragedy (Exeter, 2007) and editor of Why Athens? A Reappraisal of Tragic Politics (Oxford, 2011).

Alan Cromartie

is Professor of the History of Political Thought at the University of Reading. He is author of The Constitutionalist Revolution (Cambridge, 2006) and of numerous shorter studies of the history of political thought.

Ioannis D. Evrigenis

is Alice Tweed Tuohy Professor of Government and Ethics at Claremont McKenna College. He is the author of Fear of Enemies and Collective Action (Cambridge, 2008) and Images of Anarchy: The Rhetoric and Science in Hobbes’s State of Nature (Cambridge, 2014). He is the co-editor, with Daniel Pellerin, of Johann Gottfried Herder’s Another Philosophy of History and Selected Political Writings.

Rachel Foxley

is Associate Professor in Early Modern History at the University of Reading. She is the author of The Levellers: Radical Political Thought in the English Revolution (Manchester, 2013) and has written widely on classical republicanism in the seventeenth century.

Barbara Goff

is Professor Emerita of Classics at the University of Reading. She has published widely on tragedy, its reception, and divers other aspects of antiquity in the modern world. She is the co-editor of Classicising Crisis: The Modern Age of Revolutions and the Greco-Roman Repertoire (London, 2020).

Rebecca Kingston

is Professor of Political Science at the University of Toronto. Her most recent book is Plutarch’s Prism: Classical Reception and Public Humanism in France and England 1500–1800 (Cambridge, 2022).

Paschalis M. Kitromilides

is Professor Emeritus of Political Science at the University of Athens and a member of the Academy of Athens, where he holds the chair of the History of Political Thought. He has written in Greek and English on both ancient and modern political thought. His book, Modern Political Theory: Theories of Liberty (Athens, 2023), has appeared in its seventh edition.

Alexandra Lianeri

works at the classics department of the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki. Her research focuses on the intellectual and cultural trajectories of Greek and Roman classics in modern and contemporary European thought. She is editor (with V. Zajko) of Translation and the Classic (Oxford, 2008). She has also edited The Western Time of Ancient History (Cambridge, 2011), Knowing Future Time in and through Greek Historiography (Berlin, 2016) and (with R. Armstrong) the Blackwell Companion to the Translation of Classical Epic (Oxford, 2024).

Neville Morley

is Professor of Classics and Ancient History at the University of Exeter. He is the author of Thucydides and the Idea of History (London, 2014), and of numerous articles on the modern reception of Thucydides.

Tomasz Mróz

is Associate Professor at the Institute of Philosophy in the University of Zielona Góra, Poland, and a part-time research fellow at the Philosophical Faculty in the University of Hradec Králové, Czech Republic. He is the author of Plato in Poland 1800–1950 (Baden-Baden 2021), and has founded the Ancient Philosophy Reception research group at his home university.

Liz Sawyer

was an Associate Researcher at the Ioannou Centre for Classical and Byzantine Studies at Oxford University until 2021. Her translation of selected writings by Plutarch is forthcoming in the Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought series.

Arlene W. Saxonhouse

is the Caroline Robbins Collegiate Professor of Political Science, Emerita, at the University of Michigan. She is the author of Free Speech and Democracy in Ancient Athens (Cambridge, 2006) and has published widely on ancient Greek and early modern political thought.

Vasileios Syros

is a Distinguished Fellow at the Centre for Military History and Conflict Studies at the United Service Institution of India (USI). He holds concurrent appointments as Senior Research Fellow at the Institute for European Global Studies at the University of Basel (Switzerland) and Director of the Early Modern Greek Culture Program at The Medici Archive Project (Florence, Italy).

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