Call for Applications: American School of Classical Studies at Athens Summer Session Travel-Study Programs, Due 6 January 2025

Call for Applications

American School of Classical Studies at Athens

Summer Session Travel-Study Programs

Due 6 January 2025


Six-Week Summer Session, June 16 to July 30, 2025

The Summer Session program of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens is a six-week session designed for those who wish to become acquainted with Greece and its major monuments, and to improve their understanding of the country’s landscape, history, material culture, and literature from antiquity to the present. Led by exceptional scholars of Classics and related fields, participants visit many of the major archaeological sites, monuments, and museums throughout Greece. The program has a strong academic component and participants are expected to research and then present topics on-site. Since 1925, the Summer Session has offered participants the unique opportunity to learn from eminent archaeologists and art historians on-site.

The ASCSA Summer Session offers an unparalleled opportunity to experience the ancient sites, monuments, and culture of Greece first-hand, under the guidance of expert professors deeply familiar with the country and up-to-date with the latest research.

For the summer of 2024, the ASCSA presents an intensive Summer Session that lasts six weeks and is limited to twenty participants.  The Summer Session is based at the ASCSA campus in central Athens.  From there the group travels throughout Greece, from the Peloponnesus in the south to Thessaloniki in the north, and even the island of Crete. The itinerary includes not only well-known archaeological sites and museums but also amazing places off the beaten track.

Summer Session participants receive exclusive access to archaeological sites and storerooms inaccessible to others and enjoy presentations on ongoing excavations by preeminent scholars. Presentations and tours by the world's leading specialists offer Summer Session participants insightful, comprehensive overviews of Greek art and archaeology, and illuminate the full range of Greece's rich history– from the Bronze Age to the Classical Greek and Roman eras, through the Byzantine period, and into the twenty-first century.

Participants work together in cooperative learning projects, sharing their knowledge in on-site oral presentations and seminar-style discussions.  Summer Session participants also deepen their understanding of contemporary Greece as they travel through it, converse with its inhabitants, and reflect on the relationship of past and present in this fascinating country.

Graduate students and faculty in Classics or Ancient History whose main focus is not archaeology will find the Summer Session provides them invaluable new perspectives on ancient Greece that they can incorporate in their teaching and research. For graduate students focusing on Greek archaeology, the Summer Session offers an intensive introduction to the major issues and sources of the field. Advanced undergraduates who are considering graduate training in classical studies will find the Summer Session superb preparation for the rigors of graduate school. Teachers will discover new stories and engaging new material to share with their students back home.

For information, visit here.


Summer Seminars

The Summer Seminars of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens are 18-day programs that focus on specific cultural themes, historical periods, or geographical regions. The Seminars are led by exceptional scholars of Classics and related fields. Under their direction, participants study texts, visit archaeological sites and museums, and engage with expert guest speakers in order to deepen their understanding of Greece’s landscape, history, literature, and material culture.

Seminar I: People and Places of Ancient Philosophy (June 9 to June 27, 2025)

The origins and development of ancient philosophy are intertwined with the history, topography, and material culture of democratic Athens in the classical and Hellenistic periods. This seminar will resituate the “ancient philosophers” and their intellectual traditions in the physical world from which they hail: democratic Athens of the classical and Hellenistic periods. Socrates and Plato, Aristotle and Theophrastus, Epicurus and Zeno, Antisthenes and Diogenes (among others) are best considered on site and in context. This seminar will explore these philosophers and their legacy in light of the various settings which shaped their thinking and appear in their works. 

The program will spend approximately half the seminar in Athens. While in Athens, many of its canonical sites will be visited, including the Acropolis and Agora, the Theater of Dionyos and the Kerameikos Cemetery, and the port of Piraeus. Participants will also explore its world-famous archaeological collections, including those of the Acropolis and Agora, the National Archaeological Museum and the Epigraphical Museum. The other half of the time, participants will (like good philosophers!) be in motion, traveling in a counterclockwise circle around the Corinthian Gulf and Peloponnese before ending up back in Athens and the School. Highlights of the road trip include: Elefsina; the Thebes Museum; Delphi (site and museum); ancient Olympia (site and museum); Palace of Nestor; Mystra and Sparti/Sparta; Mycenae; Nafplio; ancient Corinth (site and museum). In time-honored American School tradition, the journey will be punctuated with the occasional swim stop. This course will be taught by Professor Geoff Bakewell (Rhodes College).

Seminar II: Settlers and Traders: Corinth and Its Apoikiai in W. Greece and  S. Albania (July 3 to July 21, 2025)

This 2025 ASCSA Summer Seminar will explore and interrogate the history and topography of the city of Corinth and its “colonies” (apoikiai) in western Greece, including the islands of Leucas and Corcyra, and Apollonia and Epidamnus in Albania. Activities will encourage participants to develop skills of observation and analysis, of both the landscape and our sources. Each participant will present an oral site report on a topic related to the seminar after consultation with the leaders. Participants will be encouraged to investigate and question the traditional narrative of ancient Greek expansion in the Archaic period by considering its presence in the landscape. 

The program will spend part of the initial time in Athens introducing the topic of Greek “colonization,” its historiography, and debate over use of the term. During the seminar, there will be opportunities on site and at museums to discuss these topics as they connect with the specific sites of the day. The seminar is organized in two phases. The first part of the seminar exposes participants to the site and extensive history of Corinth and the Corinthia, with particular focus on the archaeologically recovered remains and material culture. The second and longer phase of the seminar will be an exploration of the accessible Corinthian colonies on the Greek mainland (e.g., Alyzia, Sollion, Anactorion, Actium, Nicopolis, and the islands of Leucas and Corcyra) before the group crosses the border to Albania to visit Apollonia and Epidamnus, among others, in order not just to connect these sites but to also consider why these settlement sites were chosen and their association with their founding city. The program will return to Greece to visit other colonies and important adjacent regional sites including Dodona, Ambracia, Amphilochia, and Delphi before concluding in Athens. The seminar will draw upon a wide array of guest speakers to ensure participants are exposed not only to the sites but to the many people who excavate and study them. It will be taught by Professors Georgia Tsouvala (Illinois State University) and Lee L. Brice (Illinois Wesleyan University).

For more information on both summer programs, visit here.