Milena Minkova | University of Kentucky College of Arts & Sciences (original) (raw)

Professor of Classics

Acting Director of Graduate Studies, Modern and Classical Languages, Literatures and Cultures

Contact Information

mmink2@uky.edu

1037 Patterson Office Tower

859-257-5710

Research Interests

Affiliations

Research

Minkova has been a Kazarow scholar at the University of Geneva (1990-1991) and a DAAD scholar at the University of Heidelberg (1995-1996). She has authored three book monographs: The Personal Names of the Latin Inscriptions from Bulgaria (Peter Lang, 2000); The Protean Ratio (Peter Lang, 2001); Introduction to Latin Prose Composition (Bolchazy-Carducci, 2007), as well as published a translation of John Scotus Eriugena’s De divisione naturae (Sofia 1994). Minkova has also published numerous articles on Latin medieval philosophy (recently on the 12th century cosmologists Bernardus Silvestris, Alan of Lille, and Johannes de Hauvilla), Latin literature, Neo-Latib, Latin composition, and Latin pedagogy. With her colleague T. Tunberg, Minkova has co-authored four books: Readings and Exercises in Latin Prose Composition (Focus, 2004); Reading Livy’s Rome. Selections from Livy, Books I-VI (Bolchazy-Carducci, 2005); Mater Anserina. Poems in Latin for Children (Focus, 2006); Latin for the New Millenium, an introductory Latin textbook (Bolchazy-Carducci, two volumes, 2008-2009). Minkova has also prepared a College Exercise Book based on Latin for the New Millennium (Bolchazy-Carducci, 2012). In 2018, Minkova published with Leuven University Press Florilegium recentioris Latinitatis, a critical anthology of Neo-Latin texts. Minkova is an associate director of the Institute for Latin Studies at the University of Kentucky, in which students study the entire history of Latin from ancient to modern times and where classes are conducted in Latin. Together with T. Tunberg, Minkova conducts various seminars and workshops in active Latin throughout the United States, as well as abroad. Minkova is an elected fellow of Rome based Academia Latinitati Fovendae, the primary learned society devoted to the preservation and promotion of the use of Latin.

Special Fields

12th Century Renaissance, Neo-Latin, Latin Composition, Latin Pedagogy and Active Latin

Education

Previous Positions