69.4 |
Language and Meter |
What Can Computers Do for Philology? A Case Study in Pseudo-Seneca |
Pramit Chaudhuri and Joseph P. Dexter |
147 |
69.3 |
Language and Meter |
Unmetrical Mamurra: The Impure Iambs of Catullus c. 29 |
Michael Wheeler |
147 |
69.2 |
Language and Meter |
The Poetics of Syntax: Pindar and the Vedic Rishis |
Annette Teffeteller |
147 |
69.1 |
Language and Meter |
Rethinking Dactylo-Epitrite in Euripides' Medea |
Doug Fraleigh |
147 |
61.6 |
Running Down Rome: Lyric, Iambic, and Satire |
Talking Donkeys: A Seriocomic Interpretation of Apuleius, Metamorphoses 11.2 |
Geoffrey Benson |
147 |
61.5 |
Running Down Rome: Lyric, Iambic, and Satire |
There and Back Again: Inverting the Virgilian Career in Juvenal's Third Satire |
James Taylor |
147 |
61.4 |
Running Down Rome: Lyric, Iambic, and Satire |
Horace's Unified, Epicurean Persona in the "Diatribe Satires" (1.1-3) |
Sergio Yona |
147 |
61.3 |
Running Down Rome: Lyric, Iambic, and Satire |
Inachia, Horace, and Neoteric Poetry |
James Townshend |
147 |
61.2 |
Running Down Rome: Lyric, Iambic, and Satire |
Where is 'Here'? Analogies of Physical and Literary Space in Catullus 42 and 55 |
Jessica Seidman |
147 |
61.1 |
Running Down Rome: Lyric, Iambic, and Satire |
Catullus the Mathematician |
Mary Jaeger |
147 |
23.5 |
Emperors, Aristocrats, and Bishops in Late Antiquity |
Narrative Time and the Letters of Sidonius Apollinaris. |
Michael Hanaghan |
147 |
23.4 |
Emperors, Aristocrats, and Bishops in Late Antiquity |
Politics, the Brain, and Public Health in Late Antiquity |
Jessica Wright |
147 |
23.3 |
Emperors, Aristocrats, and Bishops in Late Antiquity |
Callidior ceteris persecutor: The Emperor Julian and his Place in Christian Historiography |
Moysés Marcos |
147 |
23.2 |
Emperors, Aristocrats, and Bishops in Late Antiquity |
Public and private in fourth-century paganism: Firmicus Maternus' aristocratic Roman audience |
Mattias Gassman |
147 |
23.1 |
Emperors, Aristocrats, and Bishops in Late Antiquity |
Imperial Authority and Saeculum Rhetoric from Augustus to Constantine |
Susan Dunning |
147 |
15.4 |
German and Austrian Refugee Classicists: New Testimonies, New Perspectives |
Ernst Badian on Fritz Schachermeyr's Interpretation of Alexander the Great |
T. Corey Brennan |
147 |
15.3 |
German and Austrian Refugee Classicists: New Testimonies, New Perspectives |
Gendering the Study of Germanophone Refugee Classicists |
Judith P. Hallett |
147 |
15.2 |
German and Austrian Refugee Classicists: New Testimonies, New Perspectives |
Between three worlds: the Odyssey of a Protestant German-Jewish Classicist: Friedrich W. Lenz |
Hans-Peter Obermayer |
147 |
15.1 |
German and Austrian Refugee Classicists: New Testimonies, New Perspectives |
Werner Jaeger: The Chicago Years |
Stanley Burstein |
147 |
57.1 |
Beyond the Case Study: Theorizing Classical Reception |
Reception and Staying in the Field of Play |
Simon Goldhill |
147 |
57.2 |
Beyond the Case Study: Theorizing Classical Reception |
Affective Interests: Ancient Tragedy, Shakespeare and the Concept of Character |
Vanda Zajko |
147 |
57.3 |
Beyond the Case Study: Theorizing Classical Reception |
Borges’ Classical Receptions in Theory |
Laura Jansen |
147 |
57.4 |
Beyond the Case Study: Theorizing Classical Reception |
Theorizing Closeness in Classical Reception Studies: Renaissance Supplements and Continuations |
Leah Whittington |
147 |
28.1 |
Classical and Early Modern Tragedy: Comparative Approaches and New Perspectives |
Tragic Phaidra: A Diachronic Case Study between Antiquity and Early Modern Age |
Lothar Willms |
147 |
28.2 |
Classical and Early Modern Tragedy: Comparative Approaches and New Perspectives |
Hanc fabulam nescio an tragoediam vocare debeam: Florent Chrestien, Isaac Casaubon, tragedy and Euripides' Cyclops |
Malika Bastin-Hammou |
147 |
28.3 |
Classical and Early Modern Tragedy: Comparative Approaches and New Perspectives |
Totus Ulixes: Versions of Ulysses in the neo-Latin Ulysses Redux |
Emma Buckley |
147 |
28.4 |
Classical and Early Modern Tragedy: Comparative Approaches and New Perspectives |
Merope's Legacy on the Italian Stage |
Tatiana Korneeva |
147 |
16.1 |
New Approaches to Fragments and Fragmentary Survival |
When is a Fragment not a Fragment? The Problem of Fragmentary Roman Oratory |
Catherine Steel |
147 |
16.2 |
New Approaches to Fragments and Fragmentary Survival |
Fragmentary Furii and Latin Historical Epic |
Jessica H. Clark |
147 |
16.3 |
New Approaches to Fragments and Fragmentary Survival |
Fragmentary Texts, Contradictory Narrative, and the Roman Historical Tradition |
Christopher Simon |
147 |
16.4 |
New Approaches to Fragments and Fragmentary Survival |
The Philology of Fragments |
Sander Goldberg |
147 |
47.1 |
The Emperor Julian |
The making of the emperor: Julian and the succession of 361 |
Kevin Feeney |
147 |
47.2 |
The Emperor Julian |
Julian and Basil of Caesarea on Impostor Philosophers |
Stefan Hodges-Kluck |
147 |
47.3 |
The Emperor Julian |
Julian as Citizen: Attic Oratory and the Misopogon |
Joshua J. Hartman |
147 |
47.4 |
The Emperor Julian |
In Search of a Western Julian: Ammianus and the Latin Tradition |
Alan Ross |
147 |
41.1 |
Marx and Antiquity |
Ode on a Grecian Printing-Press: Marx and the possibility of antiquity |
Adam Edward Lecznar |
147 |
41.2 |
Marx and Antiquity |
Marxing out on Fundus: Salvaging the Slave from Virgil’s Farm |
Tom Geue |
147 |
41.3 |
Marx and Antiquity |
The Hell of the Populace: Marx, Epicurus, and the Limits of Enlightenment |
Martin Devecka |
147 |
40.1 |
The Future of Classical Education: A Dialogue |
Classical Education in the UK: Boom or Bust? |
Arlene Holmes-Henderson |
147 |
40.2 |
The Future of Classical Education: A Dialogue |
Trends in Teachings the Classics to Undergraduates |
Mary Pendergraft |
147 |
40.3 |
The Future of Classical Education: A Dialogue |
Nondum Arabes Seresque rogant: Classics Looks East |
Kathleen Coleman |
147 |
40.4 |
The Future of Classical Education: A Dialogue |
A Liberal Art for the Future |
Nigel Nicholson |
147 |
27.1 |
Objects and Affect: The Materialities of Greek Drama |
Stone into Smoke: Mortality and Materiality in Euripides' Troades |
Victoria Wohl |
147 |
27.3 |
Objects and Affect: The Materialities of Greek Drama |
Objects, Emotions, Words: Orestes and the Empty Urn |
Joshua Billings |
147 |
27.2 |
Objects and Affect: The Materialities of Greek Drama |
Electra, Orestes, and the Sibling Hand |
Nancy Worman |
147 |
27.4 |
Objects and Affect: The Materialities of Greek Drama |
Noses in the Orchestra: Sense and Substance in Athenian Satyr Drama |
Anna Uhlig |
147 |
27.5 |
Objects and Affect: The Materialities of Greek Drama |
Material Ghosts: Recycled Theatrical Equipment in Fifth-Century Athens |
Al Duncan |
147 |
70.3 |
Latin Hexameter Poetry |
Lucan's Hesiod: Erictho as Typhon in Bellum Civile 6.685-94 |
Stephen Sansom |
147 |
70.1 |
Latin Hexameter Poetry |
Vergil's Third Eclogue at the Dawn of Roman Literature |
John Oksanish |
147 |
70.2 |
Latin Hexameter Poetry |
The Aristaeus Epyllion in Georgics 4 and the Instability of Didactic Knowledge |
Patrick Glauthier |
147 |