Galinsky published widely on Roman literature, social and cultural history, art, and religion and was a noted expert on
Augustan Rome and the role of memory in Rome. Other interests included the reception of classical themes and heroes (especially
Herakles) and the influence of Rome on
American popular culture. Galinsky received many awards for both his teaching and scholarship, including NEH,
Alexander von Humboldt, and
Guggenheim Fellowships. He was awarded an International Research Prize from the
Max Planck Society for 750,000 euros and directed the project
Memoria Romana. Galinsky held visiting appointments in the U.S., Europe, Argentina, and New Zealand and received numerous grants from the
National Endowment for the Humanities, including three summer seminars for college and university faculty at the
American Academy in Rome, where he was also a Resident in 1973. He was a consultant on academic programs to many institutions, including the South African Ministry of Research after the end of the
Apartheid regime. Galinsky regularly taught large introductory courses on
Ancient Greece and Rome and on Greece and Rome in Film. ==Death==