Academic Books:
2021 with Hunter H. Gardner, Ancient Epic in Film and Television, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
Novels:
Nausikaa's Odyssey, available via Kindle Direct, with all proceeds donated to Clock Tower Sanctuary, supporting young homeless people in Brighton
Nausikaa's Odyssey eBook : Potter, Amanda: Amazon.co.uk: Kindle Store
Academic Articles:
2020 'Bringing Classical Monsters to Life on BBC Children’s Television: Gorgons, Minotaurs and Sirens in Doctor Who, The Sarah Jane Adventures, and Atlantis' in Chasing Mythical Beasts: The Reception of Ancient Monsters in Children's and Young Adult's Culture edited by Katarzyna Marciniak, Heidelberg: Winter Heidelberg, pp. 521-538.
2020 with Fiona Hobden. 'Redirecting the gaze: The Woman and the Gladiator on Television in the Twenty-First Century' , New Voices in Classical Reception Studies, Conference Proceedings volume 2
2018 ‘Feminist heroines for our times: Screening the Amazon Warrior in Wonder Woman (1975-1979), Xena: Warrior Princess (1996-2001) and Wonder Woman (2017), Thersites, 7.
Thersites 7/2018
2018 ‘Sons of Anarchy’ in Television Finales from Howdy Doody to Girls edited by Douglas Howard and David Bianculli, New York: Syracuse University Press, pp. 345-351.
2018 ‘Xena: Warrior Princess’ in Television Finales from Howdy Doody to Girls edited by Douglas Howard and David Bianculli, New York: Syracuse University Press, pp. 454-459.
2018, with Tania Evans, ‘Sacrificial Shadows: Tragic Greek Heroines Reinvented for Television in Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Game of Thrones’ in Locating Classical Receptions on Screen: Masks, Echoes, Shadows edited by Ricardo Apostol and Anastasia Bakogianni, New York: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 43-65.
2018 ‘Greek Myth in the Whoniverse’ in Ancient Greece on British Television edited by Fiona Hobden and Amanda Wrigley, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, pp. 168-186.
2018 ‘The Changing Faces of Heroism in Atlantis (2013-15)’ in Epic Heroes on Screen edited by Antony Augoustakis and Stacie Raucci, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, pp. 125-140.
2017 ‘ “Atalanta Just Married”: A Case Study on Greek Mythology-Based Fan Fiction’ in Rewriting the Ancient World: Greeks, Romans and Christians in Modern Popular Fiction edited by Lisa Maurice, Leiden: Brill, pp. 131-149.
2016 ‘Fan reactions to Nagron as One True Pairing’ in Starz Spartacus: Reimagining an Icon on Screen edited by Antony Augoustakis and Monica S. Cyrino, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, pp. 161-172.
2016, with Hunter H. Gardner, ‘Violence and Voyeurism in the Arena’ in Starz Spartacus: Reimagining an Icon on Screen edited by Antony Augoustakis and Monica S. Cyrino, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, pp. 211-228.
2016 ‘Classical monsters in new Doctor Who fan fiction’, Transformative Works and Cultures, 21.
Classical monsters in new Doctor Who fan fiction
2015 ‘Slashing Rome: Season Two Rewritten in Online Fan Fiction’ in Rome Season Two: Trial and Triumph edited by Monica S. Cyrino, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, pp. 219-230.
2010 ‘Beware of Geeks Appropriating Greeks: Viewer Reception of the Myth of Philoctetes in Torchwood’ in Impossible Worlds, Impossible Things: Cultural Perspectives on Doctor Who, Torchwood, and The Sarah Jane Adventures, edited by Ross P. Garner, Melissa Beattie and Una McCormack, Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars, pp. 79-93.
2010 ‘Unpacking Pandora’s Box: The redemption of an ancient anti-heroine for a twenty-first century audience in US TV Series Xena: Warrior Princess and Charmed’ in Classical and Contemporary Mythic Identities: Construction of the Literary Imagination, edited by Aminal Ayal and Paul Hardwick, Lampeter: Edwin Mellen, pp. 97–122.
2010 ‘Who needs a Homeric hero when we’ve got Xena?: The confusion of gendered roles in Xena: Warrior Princess episodes “Beware Greeks Bearing Gifts” and “Ulysses”’, Rosetta 8.5, 96-126.
Who needs a Homeric hero when we’ve got Xena?
2009 ‘Hell Hath No Fury Like a Dissatisfied Viewer: Audience Responses to the Presentation of the Furies in Xena: Warrior Princess and Charmed’ in Classics for All: Reworking Antiquity in Mass Culture, edited by Dunstan Lowe and Kim Shahabudin, Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars, pp. 217-236.
Book Reviews:
2021 'Virginia Woolf's Greek Tragedy by Nancy Worman', Classical Journal Online
2021 'Ovid and Cinema' review of M. M. Winkler's Ovid on Screen: A Montage of Attractions (2020) The Classical Review.
2020 'Review of Meredith E. Safran (ed.): Screening the Golden Ages of the Classical Tradition (2019) Thersites, 12.
2018 ‘Ben Hur: Lew Wallace’s Novel and its Extensive Afterlife’ review of Jon Solomon’s Ben-Hur: The Original Blockbuster (2014) The Classical Review, 68.1, pp. 283-285.