Seán Easton is a professor of Greek, Latin and Classical Studies (GLCS). His research and teaching are focused on three main areas: Representations of Ancient Greece and Rome in visual media, especially movies and television; epic poetry and later writers who adapt it from it (especially Shakespeare); and environmental thought, peacemaking and the conflict emotions in ancient Greece and Rome. He teaches courses in the following interdisciplinary programs: Peace, Justice, and Conflict Studies (PJCS); Comparative Literature; Environmental Studies; Film Studies; and Sports Management. He has published articles and chapters on the Roman epic poet Lucan and the representations of Alexander the Great in Sohrab Modi’s film 'Sikandar' (India, 1941) and Oliver Stone’s 'Alexander' (USA, 2004), the Greco-Persian Wars in the '300' franchise films, Greek and Roman myth in John Frankenheimer’s classic 'Seconds' (1966), Terrence Malick’s epic 'New World' (2005), and George Nolfi’s adventure-romance 'The Adjustment Bureau' (2011).
CLA-203: Ancient Peace and War
CLA-206: Ancient Greek and Roman Ecology
CLA-213: Ancient Worlds on Screen
CLA-214: Ancient and Modern Identities
LAT-204: Myth, History and Nature: Roman Versions
LAT-304: Myth, History, and Nature
CLA-110: Ancient Greek and Roman Sport
CLA-205: The Trojan War
FTS-100: Greek Myth in 'Midsummer Night's Dream'
GRE-311: Life & Death in Homer
LAT-202: Women, Power and Persecution
LAT-302: Women, Power and Persecution
GRE-202: Real Greeks
GRE-302: Real Greeks
LAT-201: Laughing Matters
LAT-301: Laughing Matters
CLA-100: World of Wordcraft
GRE-211: Life & Death in Homer
PCS-203: Ancient Peace/Conflict
GRE-201: Intellectual Revolutions
GRE-301: Intellectual Revolutions
PhD University of California, Los Angeles; MA University of California, Los Angeles; BA Oberlin College