Classics Affiliated Faculty
               
                
               
               Suzanne Marchand
               
               Department of History, Boyd Professor
               
               
               
               Suzanne Marchand teaches courses on various topics in the history of Europe since
                  1500, including the history of the European city and the histories of art, literature,
                  philosophy, and scholarship.  Her research focuses on the history of the humanities
                  and social sciences, including the histories of archaeology, Near Eastern philology,
                  classics, and art history.  She is also keenly interested in the history of the decorative
                  arts and of consumption in early modern and modern Europe. 
               
               
               
                
               
                
               
               James Stoner 
               
               Department of Political Science 
               
               
               
               
                  
                  
                     
                     Hermann Moyse, Jr., Professor and Director of the Eric Voegelin Institute
                     
                     James Stoner teaches and writes about classical and modern political theory, with
                        a particular emphasis on American constitutionalism and the heritage of common law.
                         Director of the Eric Voegelin Institute, his current projects include a collaborative
                        study of Aristotle's corpus of writings and their relation, subject-by-subject, to
                        modern academic disciplines.
                     
                     
                     
                  
               
                
               
                
               
               Bradley Storin
               
               Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies 
               
               
               
               Bradley K. Storin grew up in Austin, Texas and received a B.A. in Religious Studies
                  and Classics from the University of Texas (2003). He also received an M.T.S. from
                  the Candler School of Theology at Emory University (2005) and a Ph.D. in Religious
                  Studies from Indiana University (2012). His research focuses on Christianity in late
                  antiquity (ca. 100-600 C.E.) with specific interest in issues of religious violence,
                  identity, community, and literary genre. I have published a book on Gregory of Nazianzus’s
                  letter collection, edited volumes on themes related to the study of Christianity in
                  late antiquity, peer-reviewed journal articles, and many translations of Greek, Latin,
                  and Syriac texts.
               
               