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Luke Madson

Visiting Assistant Professor in Greek and Roman Studies Hofstra University

  • Hempstead NY

Luke Madson explores the politics, culture and literature of ancient Greece and Rome.

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Spotlight

2 min

Christopher Nolan’s The Odyssey is bringing one of the world’s oldest and most influential stories back to the big screen. Beyond the monsters, battles and epic-scale adventure, Homer’s story asks questions that still feel immediate. What happens after a long war? What makes a leader legitimate? How do displaced people find their way home? Can violence ever truly restore order? Luke Madson, visiting assistant professor in Greek and Roman Studies at Hofstra University, can help audiences look beyond the spectacle. Madson teaches Greek and Roman epic, mythology, tragedy, comedy and the literature and culture of the ancient world. His research into ancient Greek politics, political identity and historical storytelling also provides insight into the power struggles, competing loyalties and contested ideas of leadership found throughout the epic. An Epic Shaped by War The Odyssey is a story about what comes after war. Odysseus survives Troy, but his journey home reveals the toll of conflict on soldiers, families and societies. In Ithaca, his absence creates a power struggle as the suitors compete to replace him. Drawing on his expertise in ancient Greek politics, Luke Madson can explain how early audiences understood this crisis and why it resonates amid displacement, political instability and contested leadership. Strangers, Stories and Power The epic repeatedly asks how societies treat outsiders. Through the Greek tradition of xenia, Odysseus encounters communities where strangers are welcomed, exploited or attacked, connecting the story to modern debates about migration, refugees and borders. Odysseus also changes identities and carefully shapes his story for different audiences. Madson can explore how persuasion and reputation shaped authority in the ancient world, and how these themes relate to propaganda and misinformation today. A Source for Stories Beyond the Screen Journalists covering Christopher Nolan’s The Odyssey, Greek mythology or the modern relevance of ancient stories can connect with Luke Madson for expert commentary and interview support. He can provide historical, political and cultural context on topics such as: The lasting appeal of Odysseus and the hero’s journey War, displacement and the challenges of returning home Leadership, legitimacy and political instability Hospitality, migration and the treatment of outsiders Storytelling, propaganda and political identity Revenge, justice and cycles of violence How modern adaptations keep Greek mythology relevant The political and cultural world behind Homer’s epic As Nolan brings The Odyssey to a new generation, Madson can help audiences understand the ancient ideas and conflicts behind the spectacle, and why they continue to resonate today.

Luke Madson

Biography

Luke Madson is a visiting assistant professor in Greek and Roman Studies at Hofstra University and a historian of the politics, culture and literature of the ancient Mediterranean world. His research focuses particularly on ancient Greece, including the relationship between Athens and Sparta, political identity, democracy, diplomacy, regional rivalries and the ways historical narratives influence public memory. He examines how ancient writers presented political conflict, cultural difference and competing ideas about leadership, citizenship and society.

Madson also teaches across a broad range of classical subjects, including Greek and Roman epic, tragedy, comedy, mythology, the ancient novel, Latin and the literature and culture of the Roman world. His expertise allows him to provide historical context on ancient democracy, political polarization, propaganda, mythology and the continuing influence of Greek and Roman ideas on modern politics, literature and popular culture.

Areas of Expertise

Ancient Greece
Ancient Rome
Greek Mythology
Ancient Democracy
Political Polarization
Spartan History
Athens and Sparta
Greek Historical Writing
Ancient Cultures
Ancient Literature
Greek Tragedy, Comedy and Epic

Education

Rutgers University and Eberhard Karls University of Tübingen

Joint PhD

Classics and Ancient History

In Progress - Doctoral research examining Laconism and anti-democratic political culture in Classical Athens.

Villanova University

MA

Classics

2018

Graduate study in classical languages, literature and ancient history.

Knox College

BA

Classics and History

2014

Undergraduate studies combining classical civilization, ancient history and historical research. His senior project examined hoplite ideology, education and social structure.