Monstrous Interviews

Adapting Ancient Myth: “HANGRY HARPIES”

We here at The Ancient Monsters Blog recently had an exciting opportunity: the chance to discuss the development of an upcoming television series, Hangry Harpies. Our guests are Rebecca Lauren, Creator/Producer/Actor, and Meredith Ginsburg, Director of the pilot episode. The mythological Harpies are best known from the story of Jason and the Argonauts, in which… Read more Adapting Ancient Myth: “HANGRY HARPIES”

Working on Egyptian monsters

Today we’re speaking with Leanna Boychenko, Associate Professor of Classical Studies at Loyola University Chicago. One of her main interests is Ptolemaic Egypt and the cultural and literary connections between Egypt and Greece. She has written a chapter entitled “Spawned from the Nile: Egyptian Monsters in Graeco-Roman Culture” for The Oxford Handbook of Monsters in Classical Myth.

Ancient Sea Monsters

Today’s guests are Camilla Asplund Ingemark and Dominic Ingemark, co-authors of several works about why ancient societies told stories about monsters. Their book Representations of Fear: Verbalising Emotion in Ancient Roman Folk Narrative (2020) explains how the act of narrating stories about monsters and other threats helps us to make sense of our lives and process our emotions: such stories can have a therapeutic power, providing a space for us to reflect on the difficulties and anxieties in our lives.

Ancient Myth in Modern Pop Culture

“I always think of the Sphinx as the monster who’s come up with the perfect response to mansplaining—when men won’t listen to her riddle properly and try and explain what they think she’s said, she just eats them! Oedipus defeats her by actually listening to her properly, which is a salutary reminder of how rare that quality is in the heroes of Greek myth.”

My Favorite Monsters

Today’s guest is Dr. Will Brockliss, Associate Professor of Classics at the University of Wisconsin Madison. Among his many works, Dr. Brockliss has written Homeric Imagery and the Natural Environment (2019) and several articles on Typhoeus, though, surprisingly, this is not his favorite monster!

Werewolves

Today’s guest is John Kachuba, award-winning author and creative writing instructor at Ohio University. His non-fiction book Shapeshifters: A History, was a 2020 Finalist for the Horror Writers Association’s Bram Stoker Award.