Darrel Janzen
Assistant Professor of Practice
PhD, Classics, Brown University 2018
BA, Classical Studies and History, University of British Columbia 2011
Office: CMLL 272
dajanzen@ttu.edu
Darrel is a scholar of ancient Greek and especially Roman literature and society,
specializing in Roman literature and thought of the early Roman Empire (1st-2nd centuries
CE). His research has three main focuses: the relationship between Roman space, culture,
and identity; Roman environmental thought, and most recently, knowledge and ignorance
as social phenomena in the Roman world. He is currently working on a book entitled
‘Seeking Solitude in Early Imperial Roman Literature from Tiberius to Hadrian', a
wide-ranging study of voluntary solitude-seeking as a paradoxically social behavior
of the Roman upper classes in the literature of the early Roman empire. Recent and
forthcoming work has analyzed pollution in the landscapes of Lucan's epic poetry,
Lucan's intertextual engagement with Virgil's Aeneid, the absent presence of enslaved people in Roman literary depictions of the solitary
villa landscapes of upper-class men, social epistemology in Plautus' Poenulus and an acrostic reference to the Hebrew Bible in Virgil's Aeneid. A pair of upcoming articles will investigate Seneca's thoughts on ecology and the
end of the world.
At Texas Tech, Darrel teaches courses on Latin and Greek language and literature,
as well as courses on Classical Civilization. He has experience using communicative,
spoken methods in his Latin and Greek language teaching and is interested in developing
his language pedagogy further in this direction. Darrel holds a Ph.D. in Classics
from Brown University and most recently taught for several years at the University
of Victoria in British Columbia.
Academic Publications
Journal Articles and Book Chapters
- “A New Dimension to Faunus Ambiguous Prophecy: A Noah-acrostic at Aeneid 7.96-101” Classical Philology, forthcoming (co-authored with Jonathan Granirer)
- "Two Allusions in Lucan's Bellum Civile to the proem and conclusion of Vergil's Aeneid (BC 3.133-34 ~ Aen. 12.945-47 and BC 7.847-51 ~ Aen. 1.8-11)" Vergilius 69 (2023) 79-106.
- “Solastalgia, Future Memory, and Polluted Landscapes in Lucan's Bellum Civile 7” in Christopher Schliephake and Evi Zemanek (eds.) Anticipatory Environmental(Hi)Stories: Narratives of Coming Nature(s) from Antiquity to the Anthropocene. Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield, 2023, 227-46.
- “Elite Solitude, Slavery, and Social Privilege at the Imperial Roman Villa” in Rafal Matuszewski (ed.) Being Alone in Antiquity: Greco-Roman Ideas and Experiences of Misanthropy, Isolation, and Solitude. De Gruyter, 2021, 71-98.
Reviews
- Review of Fitzgerald, William and E. Spentzou (eds.) The Production of Space in Latin Literature. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018. Classical Review 69.1 (Apr. 2019), 97-99.
Select Honours and Awards
- Charles Edwin Wilbour Fellowship in Latin (2015-16)
- William Michaelides Graduate Fellowship in Greek Studies (2011-12)

CMLL Classics
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Address
CMLL Building, 2906 18th St, Lubbock, TX 79409 -
Phone
806.742.3145