Francis Stephen Halliwell, FBA, FRSE (born 1953), known as Stephen Halliwell, is a British classicist and academic. From 1995 he was Professor of Greek at the University of St Andrews and Wardlaw Professor of Classics from 2014; having retired in October 2020, he is now emeritus professor.[1] He has been elected President of the Classical Association for 2024-25.[2]
Although his publications cover many topics in ancient Greek literature and philosophy, from Homer to Neoplatonism, Halliwell has worked most extensively on Ancient Greek comedy, especially Aristophanes, and on Greek philosophical poetics and aesthetics, especially in the writings of Plato and Aristotle. Halliwell's characteristic style of tackling large issues of cultural significance through the fine-grained interpretation of texts led David Konstan, in reviewing Between Ecstasy and Truth, to call him ‘the ideal close reader’, whose arguments are ‘detailed, learned, and nuanced’.[10]
Two of his books have won international prizes: The Aesthetics of Mimesis, described in The Times Literary Supplement as 'formidable' and 'an outstanding example of taking ideas seriously',[11] won the Premio Europeo di Estetica 2008;[12] and Greek Laughter, which one reviewer called 'monumental' and 'an extraordinary resource',[13] won the Criticos Prize (since renamed the London Hellenic Prize) 2008.[14]
Halliwell has given two hundred invited research papers in eighteen countries.[15] He has also made a number of appearances in broadcast media, including the BBC radio programme In Our Time.[16] His work has been translated into nine languages.[17]
Scholarship and Controversy: Centenary Essays on the Life and Work of Sir Kenneth Dover, London, 2023. Edited by Stephen Halliwell and Christopher Stray. ISBN978-1350333451
Aristophanes: Wasps and Other Plays, Oxford World's Classics, Oxford, 2024. ISBN978-0198900221