During the fourth and third centuries BCE, Roman expansion into Italy reshaped the peninsula’s Archaic societies and prompted new political relationships, economic practices, and sociocultural structures. Rural landscapes and urban spaces throughout Latium saw intensified use amidst novel principles of land management, animal husbandry, and architectural design. Join scholar and author Dan-el Padilla Peralta as he offers fresh perspectives on these transformations by embracing a wide range of approaches to Middle Republican history and the historical and contemporary implications of the discipline of Classics.
Dan-el Padilla Peralta is Associate Professor of Classics and associated faculty in African American Studies and affiliated faculty in the Programs of Latino Studies and Latin American Studies at Princeton University. He researches and teaches the histories of the Roman Republic and Empire, global histories of slavery and citizenship, classical reception in the colonial and postcolonial Caribbean, and critical race theory’s contribution to the study of classics and classicism. He is the author of Undocumented: A Dominican Boy’s Odyssey from a Homeless Shelter to the Ivy League (Penguin 2015) and Divine Institutions: Religions and Community in the Middle Roman Republic (Princeton 2020); and he has co-edited Rome, Empire of Plunder: The Dynamics of Cultural Appropriation (Cambridge 2017) and Making the Middle Republic: New Approaches to Rome and Italy, c. 400 – 200 BCE (Cambridge 2023). He is currently working on a manuscript entitled Classicism and Other Phobias, the subject of his 2022 W.E.B. Du Bois Lectures at Harvard. He is a volume co-editor for The Cambridge History of the African Diaspora and sits on the board of the RaceB4Race collective. With Sasha-Mae Eccleston, he co-founded Racing the Classics.
Organized by Museum of Fine Arts, St. Petersburg