Dr Mar A Rodda
My main current interest is disability and gender in Greek literature. My postdoctoral research project focuses on the representation of disabled mythical characters in the works of Lucian of Samosata, how it reflects changes in the ancient world’s view of disability, and how the characterisation of disability intersects with gender, class, and ethnic identity.
My doctoral thesis (which I’m currently revising for publication) was a study of formulaic variation in early Greek hexameter poetry, conducted using quantitative methods and drawing on contemporary linguistic approaches such as Construction Grammar and Distributional Semantics. I used these approaches to identify patterns of variation that are unique to early Greek epic formulae and do not occur in later hexameter poetry.
My past and current research projects have a strong interdisciplinary outlook, with my current interests engaging closely with current research and activism in Disabilities Studies. I have co-organised the 'Neurodiverse Classics: Constructive Connections' panel at the 2022 Classical Association Conference (Swansea, 8-11 April 2022), and the 'Queering the Ancient Body' panel at the 2024 Celtic Conference in Classics (Cardiff, 9-12 July 2024). I’m also still working on the dialogue between current linguistics approaches (especially Discourse Analysis and Construction Grammar) and traditional philology. I maintain active interests in Hellenistic epic and Greek theatre, as well as Jewish literature and culture.
I use they/he pronouns.
Greek Literature options for Mods and Greats. I have past language teaching experience in both Latin and Greek.
- Rodda, M.A., and Greenstreet, H. forthcoming 2025. “Constellations: Working with fragments in adapting Euripides Andromeda.” In Domouzi, A. (ed.) Tragedy Resurrected. Reconstructing, Adapting and Staging Lost Greek Tragedy. Trends in Classics: Pathways of Reception. Berlin; Boston: de Gruyter.
- Rodda, M.A., and McGillivray, B. 2024. “Computational Valency Lexica and Homeric Formularity.” Journal of Greek Linguistics 24(2). Pre-print: https://arxiv.org/abs/2208.10795.
- Rodda, M.A. 2024. “Reconsidering the computer’s role in literary studies through Levison 1964.” Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies. https://doi.org/10.1093/bics/qbae013.
- Rodda, M.A. 2024. “Antoine Meillet et la langue homérique: Au-delà du «Parryisme».” In R. Meyer & S. Moret (eds.), Antoine Meillet: Regards linguistiques et historiques sur sa vie et son oeuvre. Études de lettres 322: 43-72. https://doi.org/10.4000/edl.6951.
- Rodda, M.A. 2023. “Becoming the octopus: Three variations on a metaphor.” TAPA 153 (2): 315-323. https://dx.doi.org/10.1353/apa.2023.a913462.
- Rodda, M.A. 2023. “Repetition as a meaningful element - (D.) Beck (Ed.) Repetition, Communication, and Meaning in the Ancient World. Orality and Literacy in the Ancient World, Vol. 13. (Mnemosyne Supplements 442.)” The Classical Review 73: 7–10. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0009840X22002621.
- Rodda, M.A., Probert, P., and McGillivray, B. 2019. “Vector space models of ancient Greek word meaning, and a case study on Homer.” TAL: Traitement Automatique des Langues 60 (3): 63-87
- Battezzato, L., and Rodda, M.A. 2018. “Particelle e asindeto nel greco classico.” Glotta 94: 3-37.
- Rodda, M.A., Senaldi, M.S.G., and Lenci, A. 2017. “Panta rei: Tracking semantic change with Distributional Semantics in ancient Greek.” Italian Journal of Computational Linguistics 3.1: 11-24.
- Rodda, M.A. 2017. Two contributions to http://geionline.sns.it/: edition, translation, and commentary of inscriptions GEI036A-B and GEI038 (DOIs: 10.25429/sns.it/lettere/GEI0036A, /GEI0036B, /GEI0038).
- Rodda, M.A. 2016. “L’Inno Omerico ad Afrodite (V) e la cronologia relativa dell'epica greca arcaica.” In Di Donato, R. (ed.), Comincio a cantare. Contributi allo studio degli Inni Omerici, 83–101. Anthropoi. Studi e materiali di Antropologia storica del mondo antico 13. Pisa: ETS