Biography: Miriam Robbins Dexter, Ph.D.
Miriam Robbins Dexter holds a B.A. in Classics and a Ph.D. in Indo-European Studies (comparative linguistics, ancient Indo-European languages, archaeology, and comparative mythology), both from
UCLA. Her doctoral dissertation, Indo-European Female Figures, along with courses she has taught (and is still teaching) at UCLA, in ancient goddesses and heroines, evolved into her book, Whence
the Goddesses: A Source Book. She is the author of twenty scholarly articles and nine encyclopedia articles on ancient female figures. She co-edited an anthology of articles in honor of the
archaeologist Marija Gimbutas, Varia on the Indo-European Past: Papers in Memory of Marija Gimbutas (1997), as well as a monograph of Dr. Gimbutas' own collected articles, The Kurgan Culture
and the Indo-Europeanization of Europe: Selected articles from 1952 to 1993 (1997). She has also co-edited several volumes of the Proceedings of the UCLA Indo-European conference. She edited and
supplemented the book which Professor Gimbutas was writing at the time of her death, The Living Goddesses (University of California Press, Winter, 1999. Paperback version 2001) She is also
co-editing conference proceedings for the Institute of Archaeomythology. For thirteen years, she taught courses in Latin, Greek, and Sanskrit language and literature in the department of Classics at the
University of Southern California. She is presently teaching in the Women's Studies and Honors Programs at UCLA.