In 2005, she was appointed lecturer in Greek history and literature at the University of Roehampton.[6] She was promoted to senior lecturer in 2007 and to principal lecturer in 2011.[7] She held the Käthe-Leichter visiting professorship for gender studies at the University of Vienna in 2010/11, where she gave the Käthe-Leichter Lecture on 'A traitor to her sex? Athena the trickster'.[8] She became a National Teaching Fellow of the Higher Education Academy in 2015.[2] She was promoted to Professor of Classics in January 2018.[1]
She is a team member on the 'Our Mythical Childhood' project,[9] which is based in Warsaw and funded by the European Research Council; it examines classical reception in children's and young adults' culture.[10] In relation to this she also researches the autistic connection and reception of myth.[11]