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Katherine
King
Professor
king@humnet.ucla.edu
(310) 825-5071
Humanities 354
Professor King received her Ph.D. in
Comparative Literature from Princeton University in 1978.
She holds a joint appointment in the Departments of
Comparative Literature and Classics. King teaches seminars
on Greek tragedy and the Classical tradition for which she
utilizes feminist theory and cultural criticism. Her main
interest is in why and how a writer manipulates myth and
important cultural texts for ideological purposes. In 1987
King published Achilles: Paradigms of the War Hero from
Homer to the Middle Ages. She edited Homer (1994), a
collection of essays on the influence of Homer from the
Middle Ages to the 1990's. Professor King has also published
essays on the classical tradition that focus on such diverse
twentieth-century authors as Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Leslie
Marmon Silko, and Marguerite Yourcenar. King is currently
working on "Imaginary Women," a cross-cultural analysis of
some archetypal women in classical Greek (e.g., Helen, Medea,
and Penthesilea), and modern American cultures. She serves
on the editorial board of Viator, a journal of Medieval and
Renaissance literature. She has also been a member of the
Committee on the Status of Women and Minorities in the
American Philological Association. Professor King received
the Distinguished Teaching Award in 1993.
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