Let's Talk About Myths, Baby! Greek & Roman Mythology Retold
A podcast by Liv Albert and iHeartPodcasts
678 Episodes
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Gender Has Always Been Fluid, Just Ask Dionysus
Published: 6/18/2024 -
Conversations: The Love of a Good Woman, Translating Sappho w/ Brendon Zatirka
Published: 6/14/2024 -
When the Pythia Speaks, You Listen (Euripides’ Ion Part 4)
Published: 6/11/2024 -
Liv Reads Quintus Smyrnaeus: The Fall of Troy (Part 6)
Published: 6/7/2024 -
For Love or Possession, Defining Ancient Parenthood (Euripides’ Ion Part 3)
Published: 6/4/2024 -
Conversations: A Man of Many Turns, Odysseus & the Odyssey w/ Joel Christensen
Published: 5/31/2024 -
Keeping the Secrets of Apollo, Euripides’ Ion (Part 2)
Published: 5/28/2024 -
Liv Reads Quintus Smyrnaeus: The Fall of Troy Part 5
Published: 5/24/2024 -
Beware the Blood of a Gorgon, Euripides’ Ion (Part 1)
Published: 5/21/2024 -
Liv Reads Quintus Smyrnaeus: The Fall of Troy (Part 4)
Published: 5/17/2024 -
RE-AIR: There Once Was a Battle of Frogs & Mice, the Satirical Silliness of the Batrachomyomachia
Published: 5/14/2024 -
Conversations: Revisiting the Cultural Memory of the Bronze Age
Published: 5/10/2024 -
(Mostly) Archaic Myths as Cultural Memory of the Bronze Age
Published: 5/7/2024 -
Liv Reads Thucydides: Classical Greece's Mythical History
Published: 5/3/2024 -
Conversations: When the Network Went Down, the Bronze Age Collapse w/ Dr Eric H Cline
Published: 4/30/2024 -
Conversations: The Evidence is in the Thigh Bone, Climate and Collapse in the Bronze Age w/ Dr Flint Dibble
Published: 4/26/2024 -
Not With a Bang, but a Whimper, the Collapse of the Bronze Age Mediterranean
Published: 4/23/2024 -
Conversations: From Homer, With Love… The Evolution of Oral Storytelling w/ Dr Joel Christensen
Published: 4/19/2024 -
How History Becomes Mythology, Bronze Age Greece in the Wider Mediterranean
Published: 4/16/2024 -
Conversations: The Things They Found in Tombs, Bronze Age Mycenae w/ Dr Kim Shelton
Published: 4/12/2024
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.