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职称:Professor
所属学校:Boston University
所属院系:Graduate School of Arts & Sciences
所属专业:Classics and Classical Languages, Literatures, and Linguistics, General
联系方式:617-353-4530
Herbert Golder is Professor of Classical Studies at Boston University and Editor-in-Chief of Arion: A Journal of Humanities and the Classics, for which he has received the Phoenix Award for Significant Editorial Achievement from the Council of Editors of Learned Journals as well as the inaugural Outreach Award from the American Philological Association for bringing the classics to a broader audience. He has written extensively on Greek drama and numerous other classical and modern subjects, as well as translated and adapted Greek drama for the stage, and also served as General Editor of The Greek Tragedy in New Translations series published by Oxford University Press. He was educated at Boston, Oxford, and Yale Universities and taught at Syracuse, Emory, and Yale before joining the Boston University faculty. Beyond his career in academia, he has also worked in film, most notably in collaboration with legendary filmmaker Werner Herzog on ten films. His most recent feature film, co-written with Herzog, entitled My Son, My Son, What Have Ye Done, was inspired by the true story of a man who acted out a Greek tragedy in real life, and the film had its world premiere at the 2009 Venice Film Festival, where it was nominated for a Golden Lion.His latest film project, a documentary entitled The Lotus that Went to the Sea, received the 2014 Walt Ratterman Humanitarian Award at its Columbia Gorge International Film Festival world premiere. In his courses he especially enjoys exploring with his students the connections between the classics and subsequent intellectual developments, such as in his course on Nietzsche and the Classics, as well as their links with living culture, and has designed a number of courses, such as Greek Tragedy and Film, with that in mind. This semester he will be teaching a course on Greek and comparative mythology, looking at the way we can understand how the habits of mind we identify as “Western” evolve out of the very specific ways—different from that of other mythopoeic peoples—the Greeks tell their stories. In the spring he will be returning to one of his favorite courses and his two great loves, Greek tragedy and film.
Professor of Classical Studies, Boston University (2004– ). Adjunct Professor of Film Studies, College of Communication, Boston University (2008). Associate Professor of Classical Studies, Boston University (1993–2004). Assistant Professor of Classical Studies, Boston University (1988–93). Assistant Professor of Classics, Emory University (1985–87). Director of Undergraduate Studies for Classics and Classical Studies (1985–87); Adjunct Professor of Comparative Literature (1985–87). Visiting Assistant Professor of Classics, Emory University (1984–85). Assistant Professor of Classics, Syracuse University (1982–85). Teaching Fellow/Instructor in Classics, Yale University (1977–80).