4.1 |
Intrageneric Dialogues in Hellenistic and Imperial Epic |
Argeia and Thersander in Antimachos’ Thebaid? |
Michael Haslam |
146 |
4.5 |
Intrageneric Dialogues in Hellenistic and Imperial Epic |
The Aesthetics of Slaughter in Quintus Smyrnaeus’ Posthomerica |
Nicholas Kauffman |
146 |
4.3 |
Intrageneric Dialogues in Hellenistic and Imperial Epic |
Nomen Echionium: Theban narratives in Virgil's Aeneid |
Stefano Rebeggiani |
146 |
79.3 |
Language and Linguistics: Lexical, Syntactical, and Philosophical Aspects |
All in a δή’s work: Discourse-cohesive δή in Herodotus’ Thermopylae narrative |
Coulter George |
146 |
79.5 |
Language and Linguistics: Lexical, Syntactical, and Philosophical Aspects |
Dialectic and Proof in Topics 1.2 |
Charles George |
146 |
79.4 |
Language and Linguistics: Lexical, Syntactical, and Philosophical Aspects |
Listening to the logos: harmonia and syntax in Heraclitus |
Luke Parker |
146 |
79.1 |
Language and Linguistics: Lexical, Syntactical, and Philosophical Aspects |
Not-so-impersonal passives in Plautus |
Hans Bork |
146 |
79.2 |
Language and Linguistics: Lexical, Syntactical, and Philosophical Aspects |
The Semantic Evolution of Δίγλωσσος |
Robert Groves |
146 |
3.3 |
Law and Empire in the Roman World |
The lex Rupilia and the role of provincial administration in Roman legal history |
Charles Bartlett |
146 |
3.5 |
Law and Empire in the Roman World |
Ulpian and the Criminalization of Divination |
David M. Ratzan |
146 |
3.2 |
Law and Empire in the Roman World |
Lex or Leges?: Augustus' Judiciary Reforms |
Emily Master |
146 |
3.1 |
Law and Empire in the Roman World |
The Right to a Leisurely Trial? Strategy, Signaling, and Speed in P. Oxy. XLII 3017 |
Martin Reznick |
146 |
3.4 |
Law and Empire in the Roman World |
Empire and Agency: Women and the Law in the Eastern Roman Provinces |
Mary Deminion |
146 |
43.2 |
Libros Me Futurum: New Directions in Apuleian Scholarship |
Apuleius and the ‘Impossible Tasks’: Linking together the Heavens and the Earth |
Elsa Giovanna Simonetti |
146 |
43.3 |
Libros Me Futurum: New Directions in Apuleian Scholarship |
Apuleius’ Use and Abuse of Platonic Myth in the Metamorphoses |
Jeffrey Ulrich |
146 |
43.4 |
Libros Me Futurum: New Directions in Apuleian Scholarship |
The Mantle of Humanity: Met. 11.24 and Apuleian Ethics |
Sasha-Mae Eccleston |
146 |
43.1 |
Libros Me Futurum: New Directions in Apuleian Scholarship |
Apuleius’ Book of Trans* Formations: A Transgender Studies Reappraisal of Met. 8.24-30 and 11.17-30 |
H. Christian Blood |
146 |
12.3 |
Looking Both Ways: Dialogic Receptions in Practice |
Beasting It – Homeric Similes on the Bayou |
Corinne O. Pache |
146 |
12.2 |
Looking Both Ways: Dialogic Receptions in Practice |
Appropriation and Reflection: The Augustan Age in the Light of Italian Fascism |
Genevieve Gessert |
146 |
12.4 |
Looking Both Ways: Dialogic Receptions in Practice |
Cinemetamorphosis: Toward a Cinematic Theory of Classical Narrative |
Martin Winkler |
146 |
12.1 |
Looking Both Ways: Dialogic Receptions in Practice |
From Botticelli to Ovid’s Flora |
John F. Miller |
146 |
62.5 |
Making Meaning from Data |
Enhancing and Extending the Digital Study of Intertextuality |
Joseph P. Dexter, Matteo Romanello, Pramit Chaudhuri, Tathagata Dasgupta, and Nilesh Tripuraneni |
146 |
62.3 |
Making Meaning from Data |
Trees into Nets: Network-based Approaches to Ancient Greek Treebanks |
Francesco Mambrini and Marco Passarotti |
146 |
62.1 |
Making Meaning from Data |
What Do You Do with a Million Links? |
Elton Barker, Pau de Soto, Leif Isaksen, and Rainer Simon |
146 |
62.2 |
Making Meaning from Data (Joint SCS/AIA Panel) |
Beyond Rhetoric: the Correlation of Data, Syntax, and Sense in Literary Analysis |
Marie-Claire Beaulieu, J. Matthew Harrington, and Bridget Almas |
146 |
62.4 |
Making Meaning from Data (Joint SCS/AIA Panel) |
Inside-out and Outside-In: Improving and Extending Digital Models for Archaeological Interpretation |
Rachel Opitz, James Newhard, Marcello Mogetta, Tyler Johnson, Samantha Lash, and Matt Naglak |
146 |
15.3 |
Medieval Latin Poetry |
Navigating the Gaze in the Paderborn Epic |
Eb Joseph Daniels |
146 |
15.4 |
Medieval Latin Poetry |
Literary Criticism in the Vulgate Commentary on Ovid’s Metamorphoses |
Frank Coulson |
146 |
15.1 |
Medieval Latin Poetry |
Ipse senatorum meminit clarissimus ordo: Memory, Identity, and Spatial Polemic in Prudentius' Contra Symmachum |
Joshua J Hartman |
146 |
53.1 |
Neo-Latin Texts in the Americas and Europe |
Out of the Pietist Labyrinth: Susanna Sprögel’s Latin Verses |
Owen Ewald |
146 |
53.4 |
Neo-Latin Texts in the Americas and Europe |
Love's Imperium in Garcilaso's Third Latin Ode |
Joseph D. Reed |
146 |
53.3 |
Neo-Latin Texts in the Americas and Europe |
… quae mihi satis liberalis et humana visa |
K. T. S. Klos |
146 |
53.5 |
Neo-Latin Texts in the Americas and Europe |
Myths of Poetry and Praise: Orpheus in Poliziano's and Statius' Silvae |
Marco Romani Mistretta |
146 |
53.6 |
Neo-Latin Texts in the Americas and Europe |
José Manuel Peramás’ De Invento Novo Orbe Inductoque Illuc Christi Sacrificio (1777): [world]views of America in a little-known Neo-Latin epic on Columbus’ voyages to the "New World" |
Maya Feile Tomes |
146 |
53.2 |
Neo-Latin Texts in the Americas and Europe |
Greek and Roman Sources in Niels Hemmingsen’s De lege naturae apodictica methodus |
Eric Hutchinson |
146 |
5.4 |
New Fragments of Sappho |
The Reception of the New Sappho in Latin Literature |
Llewelyn Morgan |
146 |
5.5 |
New Fragments of Sappho |
Reimagining the Fragments of Sappho |
Diane Rayor |
146 |
5.1 |
New Fragments of Sappho |
Provenance, authenticity, and the text of the New Sappho papyri |
Dirk Obbink |
146 |
5.2 |
New Fragments of Sappho |
"(S)he do the polis in different voices" |
Joel Lidov |
146 |
5.3 |
New Fragments of Sappho |
Sappho and her Brothers |
Eva Stehle |
146 |
33.4 |
New Frontiers in the Study of Roman Epicureanism |
Tibullus On Property Management |
Benjamin Vines Hicks |
146 |
33.1 |
New Frontiers in the Study of Roman Epicureanism |
Gastronomy and Slavery under Caesar: the Politics of an Epicurean Cliché (Ad Fam. 15.18) |
Nathan Gilbert |
146 |
33.2 |
New Frontiers in the Study of Roman Epicureanism |
Code-switching for Epicurus in the Late Republic |
Pamela Gordon |
146 |
33.3 |
New Frontiers in the Study of Roman Epicureanism |
Horace’s Philosophical Upbringing in Satires 1.4 |
Sergio Yona |
146 |
33.5 |
New Frontiers in the Study of Roman Epicureanism |
Virgilian Enargeia: Hellenistic Epistemology and Rhetoric in Aeneas’ Gaze |
Robert Hedrick |
146 |
9.1 |
Organized by the American Society of Greek and Latin Epigraphy |
Herodotus 1.64.3 and Alkmeonides' Dedications IG I^3 597 and 1469: A Case for Alkmaionid Exile |
Cameron Pearson |
146 |
44.2 |
ORGANS: Form, Function and Bodily Systems in Greco-Roman Medicine |
Organs Personified: Their Form and Function in the Empathetic Medical System of Aretaeus of Cappadocia |
Amber Porter |
146 |
44.1 |
ORGANS: Form, Function and Bodily Systems in Greco-Roman Medicine |
Birth and the Many-Legged Womb |
Anna Bonnell-Freidin |
146 |
44.3 |
ORGANS: Form, Function and Bodily Systems in Greco-Roman Medicine |
Vivisection and Revelation: Some Narratives from Latin Literature |
Michael Goyette |
146 |
44.4 |
ORGANS: Form, Function and Bodily Systems in Greco-Roman Medicine |
Fighting with the Heart of a Beast: Galen's Use of Exotic Animal Anatomy against Cardiocentrists |
Luis Alejandro Salas |
146 |