10.1 |
The Performance of Greek Poetry |
The Songs of the Deliades: Multilingualism in Ritual Contexts |
Annette Teffeteller |
146 |
10.2 |
The Performance of Greek Poetry |
Between Athens and Delphi: The Pragmatics of the Delphic Hymns |
Claas Lattmann |
146 |
10.3 |
The Performance of Greek Poetry |
On the “Scribe as Performer” and the Homeric Text |
Jonathan Ready |
146 |
10.4 |
The Performance of Greek Poetry |
Composing Archaic Greek Elegy in the Roman Empire: Theognidea 1-18 |
Lawrence Kowerski |
146 |
11.1 |
Representation of Time in the Hellenistic and Roman World |
The Greco-Roman Sundial as Virtuoso Greek Mathematics |
Alexander Jones |
146 |
11.2 |
Representation of Time in the Hellenistic and Roman World |
A Doctor on the Clock: The Roles of Clocks and Hours in Galen’s Medical Treatises |
Kassandra Jackson |
146 |
11.3 |
Representation of Time in the Hellenistic and Roman World |
Chronos as all-encompassing – Plato’s Unification of Time |
Barbara Sattler |
146 |
11.4 |
Representation of Time in the Hellenistic and Roman World |
The Unity of Time in Plautus’ Captivi |
Robert Germany |
146 |
12.1 |
Looking Both Ways: Dialogic Receptions in Practice |
From Botticelli to Ovid’s Flora |
John F. Miller |
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 |
12.3 |
Looking Both Ways: Dialogic Receptions in Practice |
Beasting It – Homeric Similes on the Bayou |
Corinne O. Pache |
146 |
12.4 |
Looking Both Ways: Dialogic Receptions in Practice |
Cinemetamorphosis: Toward a Cinematic Theory of Classical Narrative |
Martin Winkler |
146 |
13.2 |
The Impact of Moses Finley |
Finley in America |
Fred Naiden |
146 |
13.3 |
The Impact of Moses Finley |
Finley in Britain |
Dorothy Thompson |
146 |
14.1 |
Aristotle |
Self-Love and Self-Sufficiency in the Aristotelian Ethics |
Jerry Green |
146 |
14.2 |
Aristotle |
Virtue and External Goods in Aristotle |
Jay Elliott |
146 |
14.3 |
Aristotle |
Aristotle and the Physiology of Sense Organs |
John Thorp |
146 |
15.1 |
Medieval Latin Poetry |
Ipse senatorum meminit clarissimus ordo: Memory, Identity, and Spatial Polemic in Prudentius' Contra Symmachum |
Joshua J Hartman |
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 |
16.1 |
Breastfeeding and Wet-Nursing in Antiquity |
Clytemnestra’s Breast as a Receptacle of Memory in Aeschylus’ _Libation Bearers_ |
Catalina Popescu |
146 |
16.2 |
Breastfeeding and Wet-Nursing in Antiquity |
The Wet-Nurses of Ptolemaic and Roman Egypt |
Maryline Parca |
146 |
16.3 |
Breastfeeding and Wet-Nursing in Antiquity |
Adult Breastfeeding in Ancient Rome |
Tara Mulder |
146 |
16.4 |
Breastfeeding and Wet-Nursing in Antiquity |
Lactation Cessation and the Realities of Martyrdom in the Passion of Saint Perpetua |
Stamatia Dova |
146 |
17.1 |
The Matter of Thebes |
Eteocles and the Sound of Silence |
Patrick Lambdin |
146 |
17.2 |
The Matter of Thebes |
The Comic and the Tragic Birth of Heracles |
Dustin Dixon |
146 |
17.3 |
The Matter of Thebes |
A Theban Odyssey: Family, Identity, and Finitude in the Epic Cycle |
Ella Haselswerdt |
146 |
17.4 |
The Matter of Thebes |
A Look at Thebes's Place in American Fiction (1962-2010) |
Michele Valerie Ronnick |
146 |
18.1 |
Hellenistic and Neoteric Intertexts |
Hipponax’ Poetic Initiation and Herodas’ ‘Dream’ |
Vanessa Cazzato |
146 |
18.2 |
Hellenistic and Neoteric Intertexts |
Prenatal Power in Callimachus’ Hymn to Delos and the Mendes Stela |
Leanna Boychenko |
146 |
18.3 |
Hellenistic and Neoteric Intertexts |
The Goatherd and the Winnowing-shovel: Interpretation and Signification in Theocritus' Seventh Idyll |
Matthew Chaldekas |
146 |
18.4 |
Hellenistic and Neoteric Intertexts |
Theocritus and Fan Fiction: Idylls 8 and 9 |
Nita Krevans |
146 |
18.5 |
Hellenistic and Neoteric Intertexts |
Salty Sequences in Catullus and Meleager |
Charles Campbell |
146 |
18.6 |
Hellenistic and Neoteric Intertexts |
Virgil’s Nomina Flexa: Tityrus, Amaryllis, Meliboeus |
Aaron Kachuck |
146 |
19.1 |
Philosophical Poetics |
Philosophy as a Reinterpretation of Poetry in Plato’s Republic |
Samuel Flores |
146 |
19.2 |
Philosophical Poetics |
Between Hesiod and the Sophists: Prodicus’ Heracles at the Crossroads |
Katherine Lu Hsu |
146 |
19.3 |
Philosophical Poetics |
Plato's Protagoras as a Comedy of Pleasure |
James Andrews |
146 |
19.4 |
Philosophical Poetics |
“Since we are two alone:” Profaning the Patrios Nomos in Plato's Menexenus |
Clifford Robinson |
146 |
19.5 |
Philosophical Poetics |
Where is the Good? The Place of Agathon in the Symposium |
Phillip Horky |
146 |
19.6 |
Philosophical Poetics |
Persius 4 & 5: Pedagogy and the failure of philosophy |
Kate Meng Brassel |
146 |
20.1 |
Religion, Ritual, and Identity |
The Heloreia Festival at Halaisa Archonideia, Tauromenion, and Syracuse |
Paul Iversen |
146 |
20.2 |
Religion, Ritual, and Identity |
Curses, Class, and Gender: Psychological and Demographic Aspects of Roman “Magic” |
Andreas Bendlin |
146 |
20.3 |
Religion, Ritual, and Identity |
A new paradigm for Roman imperial priesthoods? Reconsidering the religious elements in associative life in early imperial Italy |
Zsuzsanna Varhelyi |
146 |
20.4 |
Religion, Ritual, and Identity |
A New Latin Inscription from Cetamura del Chianti: Private Ritual at a Sacred Well |
Lora Holland |
146 |
20.5 |
Religion, Ritual, and Identity |
Philostratus, prognōsis, and the alternatives to divination |
Roshan Abraham |
146 |
21.1 |
Empire and Ideology in the Roman World |
Roman Senatorial Reactions to the Extortion and Abuse of Provincials and Foreigners before 149 B.C.E. |
Lekha Shupeck |
146 |
21.2 |
Empire and Ideology in the Roman World |
Rome and the “Immortal Gods”: an Ideology for Empire |
Larisa Masri |
146 |
21.3 |
Empire and Ideology in the Roman World |
Pax, the Senate, and Augustus in 13 BCE: a new look at the Ara Pacis Augustae |
Amy Russell |
146 |
21.4 |
Empire and Ideology in the Roman World |
Crinagoras of Mytilene and the Construction of Empire in Greek Epigrams of the Augustan Period |
Thomas Keith |
146 |
21.5 |
Empire and Ideology in the Roman World |
Who Controls the Imperial Mint at Rome? An Epigraphic Perspective on Bureaucrats |
David Schwei |
146 |