Anna Lamari is an Associate Professor of Ancient Greek Literature at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki. Her research focuses on ancient Greek drama, narratology, and intertextuality, with particular emphasis on tragic and comic fragments, reperformances of Greek tragedy, and the reception of classical texts in antiquity. She is the author of Fragmenta Comica: Nausicrates, Nicostratus (2023), Reperforming Greek Tragedy: Theater, Politics, and Cultural Mobility in the Fifth and Fourth Centuries BC (2017), and Narrative, Intertext, and Space in Euripides’ Phoenissae (2010). In addition to these monographs, she has co-edited several volumes, including Departing the Polis: Perceptions of Travel in Greek Drama (2025), Fragmentation in Ancient Greek Drama (2020), and Reperformances of Drama in the Fifth and Fourth Centuries BC (2015). Dr. Lamari has been the recipient of several prestigious fellowships. She was a Fellow at the Center for Hellenic Studies at Harvard University (2014) and has served as an Associate in Hellenic Studies at the same institution (2020–2023). Her research has been supported by the Hellenic Foundation for Research and Innovation (HFRI), where she is currently the Principal Investigator of the project The Heirs of Aristophanes: Middle Comedy Poets Nausicrates and Nicostratus (2022–2025). She has previously received fellowships from the Foundation for Education and European Culture, the National Scholarship Foundation, and the Research Committee of Aristotle University, where she was twice awarded a Prize of Excellence. Dr. Lamari has presented her research at international conferences and has been an invited speaker at institutions across Europe and the United States.