Michael Fontaine
Profesor in the Department of Classics at Cornell College of Arts & Sciences at eCornell
Biography
eCornell
Michael Fontaine is an associate professor in the Department of Classics. He came to Cornell in2004 after a year at Amherst College, where he taught while finishing his Ph.D. in Classics at Brown University. His scholarly specialization is the Latin language and literature of the late Roman Republic, particularly its drama. He has published a book on jokes, wordplay, and textual criticism in the comedies of Plautus (254-184 BC). He is now co-editing a handbook of Greek and Roman comedy and is completing an edition and translation of a neo-Latin play by a 17th c. German priest that he rediscovered in Copenhagen in summer 2010. His teaching includes courses on the gamut of classical Latin authors and, for undergraduates, a course on paranoia and conspiracy theory in ancient Greece and Rome. He has handled a number of administrative responsibilities within the Classics department. He has been Director of Graduate Studies since 2011, and he was Director of Undergraduate Studies from 2005-06 and again from 2008-10. Since joining the faculty in 2004 he has served as Cornell’s representative to several international study-abroad programs in Italy and Greece, having lived and studied in both countries previously. He also takes an active interest in meeting students from across the university. From 2004 through 2009 he led Cornell’s conversational Latin group, and he is currently a fellow of the Alice Cook House. In January 2012 he taught a mini-seminar on the Roman historian Sallust at Telluride House. Originally from outside New Orleans, he received his B.A. in Classics at Millsaps College in Jackson, Mississippi. He lives in Ithaca with his wife, daughter, and two Maltese dogs.
Videos
Mark Saltveit & Mike Fontaine, "The Tradition of Palindromes in Latin"- Paideia Online Lectures 2021
From Democracy to Authoritarianism: The Death of the Roman Republic
Classics Prof. Michael Fontaine discusses his Cornell CAU trip “Portugal: From Porto to Lisbon”
Michael Fontaine's Tips for New Faculty
Episode 31 Professor Michael Fontaine: What the ancient world can teach us about emotional distress
Consolatio: Coping with a Collapsing World
Michael Fontaine - How to Tell a Joke: An Ancient Guide to the Art of Humor
Ancient Wisdom for Modern Readers Panel – 192 Books
How to Tell a Joke—a conversation with Michael Fontaine (Ad Navseam Episode 40)
Michael Fontaine, Cicero, Quintilian and how to tell a joke
Vanden Heuvel and Fontaine: Faking wine and making millions ...
How to Tell a Joke by Marcus Tullius Cicero and translated with commentary by Michael Fontaine
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