Shadi Bartsch (born March 17, 1966) is an American historian and professor of classics at the University of Chicago.[ University of Chicago faculty directory of Classics: Shadi Bartsch Accessed 2009-01-03.] She has previously held professorships at the University of California, Berkeley[ Distinguished group joins the University's faculty, The University of Chicago Chronicle, 18(1), Oct. 1, 1998. Accessed 2009-01-03.] and Brown University where she was the MacMillan professor of classics from 2008 to 2009.[ Shadi Bartsch, Professor of Classics Today at Brown: News, people and events at the University, August 26, 2008. Accessed 2009-01-03.] From 2015 to 2024 she was the Director of the Institute on the Formation of Knowledge (IFK) at the University of Chicago.
Life
Bartsch, the daughter of a UN economist and a distant descendant of Persia's Qajar dynasty,
spent her childhood in London, Geneva (where she studied at the International School of Geneva),
Tehran,
Jakarta, and the
Fiji Islands. She earned a B.A.
summa cum laude from Princeton University in 1987 and a Ph.D. (1992) from the University of California, Berkeley in Classics. She was married to University of Chicago president and mathematician
Robert Zimmer from 2011 until his death in 2023.
Career
Bartsch's contributions have been to classical scholarship
[Edward Rothstein, CONNECTIONS; Eros and Its Dizzying Masks, The New York Times, March 10, 2001. Accessed 2009-01-03.] in the areas of the literature and culture of
Julio-Claudian Rome, the ancient novel, Roman
stoicism, and the classical tradition.
[Seth Sanders, Bartsch looks through eyes of classical thinkers, The University of Chicago Chronicle, 23(4), Nov. 6, 2003. Accessed 2009-01-03.] More recently, Bartsch has branched out into the effect of the ancient world on our modern one, especially in
Plato Goes to China: The Ancient Greeks and Chinese Nationalism. Bartsch is also the author of an acclaimed translation of
Virgil "
Aeneid." She was awarded the Quantrell Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching in the College in 2000 and the Faculty Award for Excellence in Graduate Teaching in 2006 at the University of Chicago. She won an
ACLS Fellowship in 1999
[[6] ACLS news] and a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2007.
[Josh Schonwald, Four Chicago faculty members are named Guggenheim fellows, The University of Chicago Chronicle, 26(14), April 12, 2007. Accessed 2009-01-03.] She served as chair of the Faculty Board of the University of Chicago Press from 2006 to 2008
[Jennifer Howard, U. of Chicago Press Looks to New Director for Strong Leadership, The Chronicle of Higher Education, 53(50): A16, August 17, 2007. Accessed 2009-01-03.] and editor-in-chief of both
Classical Philology and KNOW. She was appointed the inaugural director of the Institute on the Formation of Knowledge.
[University establishes Stevanovich Institute on the Formation of Knowledge,[9]] Bartsch is a Fellow of the British Academy and the American Academy of letters and Sciences.
She is the founding member of the interdisciplinary group
FIR.
Books or Edited Volumes
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Decoding the Ancient Novel: The Reader and the Role of Description in Heliodorus and Achilles Tatius (1989)
-
Actors in the Audience: Theatricality and Doublespeak from Nero to Hadrian (1994)
-
Ideology in Cold Blood: A Reading of Lucan’s Civil War. (1998)
-
Oxford Encyclopedia of Rhetoric. (as editor with Thomas Sloane, Heinrich Plett, and Thomas Farrell, 2001)
-
Erotikon: Essays on Eros, Ancient and Modern, (as editor with Thomas Bartscherer, 2005)
-
The Mirror of the Self: Sexuality, Self-Knowledge, and the Gaze in the Early Roman Empire (2006)
-
Ekphrasis (a special issue of Classical Philology, as editor with Jas Elsner, 2007)
-
Seneca and the Self, (as editor with David Wray, 2009)
-
Persius: A Study in Food, Philosophy, and the Figural (2015; winner of the Charles J. Goodwin award)
-
The Cambridge Companion to Seneca, as editor with Alessandro Schiesaro, 2015)
-
The Cambridge Companion to the Age of Nero, (as editor with Kirk Freudenburg and Cedric Littlewood, 2017)
-
The Chicago Seneca in Translation Series, (as series editor with Martha Nussbaum and Elizabeth Asmis, 2008–2017)
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Virgil's Aeneid: A New Translation (2021)
-
Plato Goes to China: The Greek Classics and Chinese Nationalism (2023)
External links