Let's Talk About Myths, Baby! Greek & Roman Mythology Retold
En podcast af Liv Albert and iHeartPodcasts
656 Episoder
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The Bronze Age, Mythic Origins and the Real People Behind Them
Udgivet: 2.4.2024 -
Conversations: Charybdis, a Gaping, Hungry Hole; Fear of the Monstrous Woman w/ Cosi Carnegie
Udgivet: 29.3.2024 -
High Priestess of Ur, the World’s First Author, Enheduanna
Udgivet: 26.3.2024 -
LTAMB: The Bronze Age Collapse Coming April 2
Udgivet: 25.3.2024 -
Liv Reads Quintus Smyrnaeus: The Fall of Troy (Book 3)
Udgivet: 22.3.2024 -
BONUS: Selections from Conversations w/ Dr Melissa Funke and Dr Rebecca Futo Kennedy
Udgivet: 21.3.2024 -
Beloved of Aphrodite, the Lives & Legacies of Ancient Greek Sex Workers
Udgivet: 19.3.2024 -
Conversations: Better Off With Bears, Artemis & Goddess Worship w/ Dr Carla Ionescu
Udgivet: 15.3.2024 -
What Makes a Monster? What if Ovid's Medusa Was Thinly Veiled Misogyny
Udgivet: 12.3.2024 -
Conversations: On Circe's Island Anything is Possible, Queer Theory w/ Julia Perroni
Udgivet: 8.3.2024 -
Parthenogenesis, Prehistoric Goddesses, and the Threat of an Independent Woman
Udgivet: 5.3.2024 -
Conversations: The Feminism of Female Rage, Demeter's Winter Harvest w/ Ioanna Papadopoulou
Udgivet: 1.3.2024 -
Liv Reads Quintus Smyrnaeus: The Fall of Troy (Book 2)
Udgivet: 27.2.2024 -
A Full Cast Reading of Emperor Julian’s Symposium of the Caesars
Udgivet: 23.2.2024 -
Conversations: A Bunch of Rulers Sit Down for a Chat, Julian’s Symposium w/ Dr Jeremy Swist
Udgivet: 22.2.2024 -
But He’s Such a Nice Guy! Ovid’s Ars Amatoria in Mythological Practice
Udgivet: 20.2.2024 -
Conversations: When Ovid Invented Pick-up Artistry, the Ars Amatoria w/ Imogen Briscoe
Udgivet: 16.2.2024 -
He Is Not All That, Pygmalion the Misogynist Mythological Incel
Udgivet: 13.2.2024 -
Liv Reads Quintus Smyrnaeus: The Fall of Troy (Book 1)
Udgivet: 9.2.2024 -
You Can Learn All Greek Myth Has to Offer... & the Father Still Devours His Son
Udgivet: 6.2.2024
The most entertaining and enraging stories from mythology told casually, contemporarily, and (let's be honest) sarcastically. Greek and Roman gods did some pretty weird (and awful) things. Gods, goddesses, heroes, monsters, and everything in between. Regular episodes every Tuesday, conversations with authors and scholars or readings of ancient epics every Friday.