5.5 |
Writing Imperial Politics in Greek |
Christians, Money, and the Politics of Intellectual Life under the Severans |
Jared Secord |
145 |
5.4 |
Writing Imperial Politics in Greek |
Pausanias Politicus: Reflections on Theseus, Themistocles, and Athenian Democracy in Book 1 of the Periegesis |
Patrick Paul Hogan |
145 |
5.3 |
Writing Imperial Politics in Greek |
The Political Geography of Dionysius’ Periegesis and Arrian’s Periplus Ponti Euxini |
Janet Downie |
145 |
5.2 |
Writing Imperial Politics in Greek |
The Glory Without the Glamour: Shared Political Rhetoric in Plutarch and Tacitus |
Adam Kemezis |
145 |
5.1 |
Writing Imperial Politics in Greek |
The Face of the Emperor in Philo's Embassy to Gaius |
Daniel W. Leon |
145 |
4.4 |
Written Ritual: Greek Sacrifice in Text and Context |
Sacrificing “In the Greek Fashion” |
F. S. Naiden |
145 |
4.3 |
Written Ritual: Greek Sacrifice in Text and Context |
Sacrifice as Literary Construct? The Gap Between God and Sacrifice, Poetry and Cult |
Sarah Hitch |
145 |
4.2 |
Written Ritual: Greek Sacrifice in Text and Context |
Anger and Honorary Shares: The Promethean Division Revisited |
Charles Stocking |
145 |
4.1 |
Written Ritual: Greek Sacrifice in Text and Context |
Sacrificing and Purifying in Greek Poleis. Reassessments and Perspectives |
Stella Georgoudi |
145 |
3.6 |
Authors Meet Critics: Gender and Race in Antiquity and its Reception |
Author Response on Race: Antiquity and its Legacy |
Denise McCoskey |
145 |
3.5 |
Authors Meet Critics: Gender and Race in Antiquity and its Reception |
Response #2 to Race: Antiquity and its Legacy |
Constanze Guthenke |
145 |
3.4 |
Authors Meet Critics: Gender and Race in Antiquity and its Reception |
Response #1 to Race: Antiquity and its Legacy |
Joseph Skinner |
145 |
3.3 |
Authors Meet Critics: Gender and Race in Antiquity and its Reception |
Author Response on Gender: Antiquity and its Legacy |
Brooke Holmes |
145 |
3.2 |
Authors Meet Critics: Gender and Race in Antiquity and its Reception |
Response #2 to Gender: Antiquity and its Legacy |
Craig Williams |
145 |
3.1 |
Authors Meet Critics: Gender and Race in Antiquity and its Reception |
Response #1 to Gender: Antiquity and its Legacy |
Victoria Wohl |
145 |
2.5 |
Epicurean Philosophy in Roman Poetry |
The Epicurean Calculus of Pleasure and Pain in Horace Satires 2.6 |
Benjamin Vines Hicks |
145 |
2.4 |
Epicurean Philosophy in Roman Poetry |
Ridentem dicere verum: Philodemean Ethics in Horace's Sermones 1.1 |
Sergio Yona |
145 |
2.3 |
Epicurean Philosophy in Roman Poetry |
Reconciling Epicurean Friendship and Roman amicitia in the Works of Philodemus |
Sonya Wurster |
145 |
2.2 |
Epicurean Philosophy in Roman Poetry |
Lucretius on the Origin of the World: The Argumentative Structure of De Rerum Natura 5.91-508 |
Abigail Buglass |
145 |
2.1 |
Epicurean Philosophy in Roman Poetry |
Anima Animae: Lucretius and the Life of the Body-Mind |
Alex Dressler |
145 |
1.5 |
Greek Language and Linguistics |
Hybrid Meter in an Orphic Hymn to Zeus |
Jacobo Myerston |
145 |
1.4 |
Greek Language and Linguistics |
Expressing Degrees of Probability in Greek |
Helma Dik |
145 |
1.3 |
Greek Language and Linguistics |
Women’s Playthings: Contextualizing the Meaning of “Douleuma” |
Roger S. Fisher |
145 |
1.2 |
Greek Language and Linguistics |
μασχαλισμός |
Francis Dunn |
145 |
1.1 |
Greek Language and Linguistics |
Evidence for an Innovative Aspect of ‘Aeolic’ Inflection in Thessalian Greek |
Toru Minamimoto |
145 |