Judith Mossman (classicist)
Judith Mossman is Pro-Vice Chancellor for Arts and Humanities and Professor of Classics at Coventry University. She is the President of the Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies.Career
Mossman was educated at Woldingham School, before reading Classics at Corpus Christi College, Oxford. She received a D.Phil from Oxford University for a thesis entitled Euripides' Hecuba: A Re-evaluation, With Special Reference to Dramatic Technique. She held a Junior Research Fellowship at Christ Church and taught at Trinity College, Dublin before moving to the University of Nottingham in 2004. Mossman was appointed to Coventry University in 2017. She was a governor of Woldingham School from 1990-93.
In 2017 Mossman was elected President of the Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies, having previously been Chair of the Joint Association of Classical Teachers Classical Civilisation Committee. Having held the latter role, in 2011 she wrote to the Parliamentary Education Select Committee, urging that Classical Civilisations be included among the humanities subjects deemed acceptable for the English Baccalaureate.
Mossman specialises in Greek literature in the fifth century BC and the second/third century AD. Her work on Euripides' Hecuba has been praised for its "integrity" and "balance", and described as "judicious and thought-provoking." She is a passionate advocate for the Arts.
In November 2019, Mossman delivered the Nineteenth Dorothy Buchan Memorial Lecture in Ancient History at the University of Leicester. Her title was ‘At Home in Chaironeia: Domestic Detail in Plutarch’. She gave the keynote presentation at the Women's Classical Committee Annual General Meeting, 24 April 2020. Her title was 'Grass roots, Green shoots...is everything in the garden lovely?’ She is the third woman to hold the position of President of the Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies, succeeding Professor P. E. Easterling and Professor Dorothy Tarrant.Selected publication
- 2001. "Women's speech in Greek tragedy: the case of Electra and Clytemnestra in Euripides' Electra", Classical Quarterly, 51, 374-384.
- 2005. "Women's Voices". In: Gregory, J, A Companion to Greek tragedy Oxford. Blackwell. 352-65.
- 2005. "Taxis ou barbaros: Greek and Roman in Plutarch's Pyrrhus", Classical Quarterly, 55, 498-517.
- 2011. Euripides, Medea. Aris and Phillips.
- 2012. "Women's Voices in Sophocles". In: Markantonatos, A. The Brill Companion to Sophocles. Brill. 491-506.
- 2016. "Shakespeare and the Classics", Omnibus 72, 1-3.