Cleopatra: Performing Power

Alison Futrell
Spring 2024
Wednesdays |  
6 PM - 8 PM
March 13, 20, 27, April 3, and 10, 2024
Course Format: Hybrid
Location: Main Campus
Tuition: $165

 

This course focuses on Cleopatra VII (69-30 BCE), the far-famed last ruler of Ptolemaic Egypt and a key powerbroker during a period of important political change. Her legacy in the western world emphasizes her actions as a “romantic” agent, a deployer of “feminine wiles”, a hostile representation drawn by her opponents. A broader examination of Cleopatra’s context demonstrates her connections to a number of dynamic royal women in the Hellenistic world, all image-makers in their own right, wielding female authority and patronage in a cosmopolitan, multicultural world. This course will sift through the evidence for Cleopatra VII, both the contentious (and largely hostile) material on her Mediterranean activities as well as the Egyptian record, which incorporates the specific efforts of the queen herself to assert her legitimate imperial authority and structure her collaboration with major stakeholders in the Hellenistic East.

 

Meet Your Instructor

Associate Professor

ALISON FUTRELL focuses on the performance and imagery of power in imperial Rome, with special interest in spectacle, gender, and pop culture. She has authored and edited Blood in the Arena; The Roman Games; and The Oxford Handbook of Sport and Spectacle in the Ancient World, as well as pieces on Viking Queen (1967), Spartacus (1960 and 2010-13), HBO’s Rome (2005, 2007) and Xena: Warrior Princess (1995-2001). She appeared as a talking head most recently for National Geographic, BBC History Extra, and the History Channel’s eight-part series “Colosseum”. 

Location

POETRY CENTER
Dorothy Rubel Room
1508 E Helen
Tucson, AZ 85721
United States

Located on the SE corner of Helen Street and Vine Avenue, one block north of Speedway and three blocks west of Campbell Ave.

Street map image of Poetry Center

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