PEGASUS
Receptions of Greek & Roman Antiquity in Children's & YA Literature
  • Home
  • About
  • Security & Privacy
  • Some Other Resources

Midas, Mixed Messages, and the “Museum” of Dugald Steer’s Mythology

Posted on December 31, 2019January 5, 2023 by Rebecca Resinski

In 2018 Krishni Burns organized a panel on Classics & children’s media for the meeting of the Classical Association of the Midwest and South. I presented “Midas, Mixed Messages, and the ‘Museum’ of Dugald Steer’s Mythology.”  (Click on the paper title for a PDF of the talk.)

Post navigation

When Beauty and the Beast Read Latin and Greek →
← Uses of Classics in J. K. Rowling’s Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone

Recent Posts

  • Integrating Children’s Literature into an Undergraduate Classics Curriculum
  • Classics, True Lovers, and Texts in Nancy Garden’s Annie on My Mind
  • Classics in Rainbow Rowell’s Simon Snow Trilogy
  • Persephone and the Phoenix in Ami Polonsky’s Gracefully Grayson
  • Myth and David Almond’s My Name is Mina
  • Rescuing or Punishing Procne and Philomela
  • Articulating the Identity of Wonder Woman through Myth
  • Collage, Hybridity, and Sara Fanelli’s Mythological Monsters of Ancient Greece
  • “Atalanta” by Betty Miles and Moving Past Patriarchy
  • The Judgment of Paris and Please Share, Aphrodite!
Theme by Out the Box