CADRECentre for Ancient Drama and its Reception
 

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Edmund Stewart

Assistant Professor in Ancient Greek History, Faculty of Arts

Contact

  • workRoom B5 (Office Hours: Monday 3-4, Wednesday 10-11) Humanities
    University Park
    Nottingham
    NG7 2RD
    UK
  • work+44 (0)115 95 14810

Biography

I am originally from London and I completed my first degree in Classics at the University of Edinburgh. After a brief spell in Oxford for my Masters, I began my PhD at Nottingham in 2009 on the subject of the dissemination of Greek tragedy during the fifth and fourth centuries BC, under the supervision of Patrick Finglass and Alan Sommerstein. I graduated in December 2013. I have taught Classics as a teaching associate at Warwick (2016/17), Nottingham (2012/13) and the University of Leeds (2013/14). In addition, I have taught English for Academic Purposes at the University of Lincoln and University College London. I am very pleased to now have rejoined my alma mater.

Expertise Summary

My research covers Greek social and economic history, the history of Greek drama and festival culture, Greek tragedy and Greek lyric.

Teaching Summary

I have taught modules on a wide range of subjects in the fields of both Greek and Latin languages, literature and ancient history. Modules I have developed and convened include: Greek Politics and… read more

Research Summary

My research has three main themes: 1) Greek drama, especially the performance of drama outside Athens and by non-Athenians, 2) ideas of skill and work in Greek literature and the ancient economy and… read more

Recent Publications

  • EDMUND STEWART, 2021. Tragedy and tyranny: Euripides, Archelaus of Macedon and popular patronage. In: SIAN LEWIS, ed., Tyranny: New Contexts Presses Universitaires de Franche Comté. 81-101
  • EDMUND STEWART, 2021. The Tyrant’s Progress: the meaning of the ΤΥΡΑΝΝΟΣ in Plato and Aristotle Polis: The Journal for Ancient Greek and Roman Political Thought. 38, 208-36
  • EDMUND STEWART, EDWARD HARRIS and DAVID LEWIS, eds., 2020. Skilled Labour and Professionalism in Ancient Greece and Rome Cambridge University Press.
  • EDMUND STEWART, 2020. Introduction. In: EDMUND STEWART, DAVID LEWIS and EDWARD HARRIS, eds., Skilled Labour, and Professionalism in Ancient Greece and Rome Cambridge University Press. 1-25

I have taught modules on a wide range of subjects in the fields of both Greek and Latin languages, literature and ancient history. Modules I have developed and convened include: Greek Politics and the Economy, Greek Religion, Greek Tyrants, Women in the Greek World, Wine and Song: Greek Lyric, Greek Tragedy: Orestes on stage in classical Athens, and Interpreting Ancient Literature.

I would be interested in supervising postgraduate dissertations on any subject within the fields of Greek political, economic and social history (especially on professionalism and work or festivals and festival culture), Greek drama and Greek lyric.

PhD Students:

Jason Porter: Slavery and Strategies of Slave Owning in Classical Athens (successfully completed 2019)

Malcolm Belfield: Tragic Tetralogies

Josh Webb: Greek Warfare

Current Research

My research has three main themes: 1) Greek drama, especially the performance of drama outside Athens and by non-Athenians, 2) ideas of skill and work in Greek literature and the ancient economy and 3) Greek tyranny in Greek history and political philosophy and the comparative history of authoritarian regimes in the ancient and modern world.

Past Research

The findings of my doctoral research were published by Oxford University Press in 2017 as a monograph entitled

  • EDMUND STEWART, 2021. Tragedy and tyranny: Euripides, Archelaus of Macedon and popular patronage. In: SIAN LEWIS, ed., Tyranny: New Contexts Presses Universitaires de Franche Comté. 81-101
  • EDMUND STEWART, 2021. The Tyrant’s Progress: the meaning of the ΤΥΡΑΝΝΟΣ in Plato and Aristotle Polis: The Journal for Ancient Greek and Roman Political Thought. 38, 208-36
  • EDMUND STEWART, EDWARD HARRIS and DAVID LEWIS, eds., 2020. Skilled Labour and Professionalism in Ancient Greece and Rome Cambridge University Press.
  • EDMUND STEWART, 2020. Introduction. In: EDMUND STEWART, DAVID LEWIS and EDWARD HARRIS, eds., Skilled Labour, and Professionalism in Ancient Greece and Rome Cambridge University Press. 1-25
  • EDMUND STEWART, 2020. The profession of Mousikē in classical Greece. In: EDMUND STEWART, DAVID LEWIS and EDWARD HARRIS, eds., Skilled Labour, and Professionalism in Ancient Greece and Rome Cambridge University Press. 269-92
  • EDMUND STEWART, 2019. Ion of Chios: The case of a foreign poet in classical Sparta. Classical Quarterly. 68(2), 394-407
  • EDMUND STEWART, 2019. Inner nature, outward appearance: the theme of nobility in Euripides’ Electra Phoenix. 73, 237-261
  • EDMUND STEWART, 2019. Carcinus. In: ALAN SOMMERSTEIN, ed., The Wiley-Blackwell Encyclopaedia of Greek Comedy Wiley-Blackwell.
  • EDMUND STEWART, 2019. Hieron I. In: ALAN SOMMERSTEIN, ed., The Wiley-Blackwell Encyclopaedia of Greek Comedy Wiley-Blackwell.
  • EDMUND STEWART, 2019. Dionysius I. In: ALAN SOMMERSTEIN, ed., The Wiley-Blackwell Encyclopaedia of Greek Comedy Wiley-Blackwell.
  • EDMUND STEWART, 2018. Ezekiel's Exagoge: A typical Hellenistic tragedy? Greek Roman and Byzantine Studies. 58, 223-52
  • 2018. Spartan choruses and foreign poets: an antidote to civil strife?. In: Conflict in the Peloponnese: Social, Military and Intellectual.: Proceedings of the 2nd CSPS PG and Early Career Conference Online Publication 4. The Centre for Spartan & Peloponnesian Studies. 111-32
  • STEWART, E, 2017. Greek tragedy on the move: the birth of a panhellenic art form c. 500-300 BC Oxford : Oxford University Press.
  • EDMUND STEWART, 2016. An ancient theatre dynastry: The elder Carcinus, the young Xenocles and the sons of Carcinus in Aristophanes Philologus. 160, 1-18
  • EDMUND STEWART, 2016. Professionalism and the poetic persona in archaic Greece Cambridge Classical Journal. 62, 200-223
  • EDMUND STEWART, 2014. Professionalism in Ancient Athletics Nikephoros: Journal of Sports and Culture in Antiquity. 27, 273-93

Centre for Ancient Drama and its Reception

Department of Classics and Archaeology
University of Nottingham
Nottingham, NG7 2RD

telephone: +44 (0)115 951 4800
fax: +44 (0)115 951 4811
email: Naomi Scott, CADRE Director