47.4 |
Reception |
Triumphant Orpheus: Orphic Platonism and Sir Orfeo |
Verity Walsh |
149 |
48.1 |
Bloody Excess: Roman Epic |
The Programmatic ‘Ordior’ of Silius Italicus |
Paul Hay |
149 |
48.2 |
Bloody Excess: Roman Epic |
Hannibal's Bloody Homecoming in Silius' Punica |
Andrew McClellan |
149 |
48.3 |
Bloody Excess: Roman Epic |
Lucan, Seneca and the plus quam Aesthetic |
Scott Weiss |
149 |
48.4 |
Bloody Excess: Roman Epic |
They Might be Romans: The Giants and Civil War in Augustan Poetry |
David Wright |
149 |
49.2 |
New Directions in the Late Republican Roman Empire |
Scaevola and Rutilius in Asia |
Kit Morrell |
149 |
49.3 |
New Directions in the Late Republican Roman Empire |
Modicum imperium: New Visions of Empire in the 70s BCE |
Josiah Osgood |
149 |
49.4 |
New Directions in the Late Republican Roman Empire |
Rome’s Late Republican Empire: The View from the Danube |
T. Corey Brennan |
149 |
49.5 |
New Directions in the Late Republican Roman Empire |
Provincial Commanders in the Sphere of Antonius the Triumvir: the Negotiation of Relationships |
Hannah Mitchell |
149 |
49.6 |
New Directions in the Late Republican Roman Empire |
'What Was He Thinking?': Marcus Antonius, Parthia and 'Caesarian Imperialism' |
Kathryn Welch |
149 |
50.2 |
Philology's Shadow II |
Ad fontes: source and original in the shadow of theology |
Irene Peirano |
149 |
50.3 |
Philology's Shadow II |
Philology’s Roommate: Hermeneutics, Rhetoric, and the Seminar |
Constanze Güthenke |
149 |
50.4 |
Philology's Shadow II |
Praeparatio Rabbinica: Zacharias Frankel (1801–1875), the Wissenschaft des Judentums, and the Septuagint |
Theodor Dunkelgrün |
149 |
50.5 |
Philology's Shadow II |
Philological Apologetics: Hellenization and Festugière |
Renaud Gagné |
149 |
51.2 |
Dido in and after Vergil |
“Deianeirian Dido" |
Robin N. Mitchell-Boyask |
149 |
51.3 |
Dido in and after Vergil |
"Dido in the light of Livy" |
Elena Giusti |
149 |
51.4 |
Dido in and after Vergil |
“Dido Docta: A Scholarly Revision of Aeneid 4 in the Historia Apollonii Regis Tyri” |
Jacqueline Arthur-Montagne |
149 |
51.5 |
Dido in and after Vergil |
"The Lamentations of Dido: Genre, Gender, and Character in Two Medieval Poems" |
Christopher Nappa |
149 |
51.6 |
Dido in and after Vergil |
"From Epic to Opera to Dance and Back: Mark Morris Dances Dido" |
Barbara Leigh Clayton |
149 |
51.7 |
Dido in and after Vergil |
"Heavy Metal Dido: Heimdall’s 'Ballad of the Queen'" |
Lissa Crofton-Sleigh |
149 |
52.2 |
Techne and Training: New Perspectives on Ancient Scientific and Technical Education |
Teaching Trees – Tree Teaching: The Ancient Art of Grafting |
Laurence Totelin |
149 |
52.3 |
Techne and Training: New Perspectives on Ancient Scientific and Technical Education |
Teaching Clinical Judgment: Methodist and Galenic Approaches |
Katherine D. van Schaik |
149 |
52.4 |
Techne and Training: New Perspectives on Ancient Scientific and Technical Education |
Jack of All Trades? Medical Practitioners and the Design, Manufacture, and Use of Instruments, Apparatuses, and Machines |
Jane Draycott |
149 |
52.5 |
Techne and Training: New Perspectives on Ancient Scientific and Technical Education |
Smelling and Smelting: Learning with the Senses in Theory and Practice |
Valeria V. Sergueenkova |
149 |
53.1 |
The World of Neo-Latin: Current Research |
Catullus Transformed: Antiquity Resurrected for Reformation in Theodore Beza’s 1579 Psalmorum Davidis et Aliorum Prophetarum Libri Quinque |
Michael Spangler |
149 |
53.2 |
The World of Neo-Latin: Current Research |
Translating Confucius: Intorcetta’s First Attempts |
Rodney John Lokaj and Alessandro Tosco |
149 |
53.3 |
The World of Neo-Latin: Current Research |
A Neo-Latin Theological Bestiary of the Seventeenth Century |
Carl Springer |
149 |
53.4 |
The World of Neo-Latin: Current Research |
Michael Serveto vs. John Calvin: a Deadly Conflict |
Albert Baca |
149 |
53.5 |
The World of Neo-Latin: Current Research |
Virbius in Pascoli's Laureolus |
Anne Mahoney |
149 |
54.1 |
Ritual and Religious Belief |
In God’s Army? Socialhistorical Aspects of Early Egyptian Monasticism |
Christian Barthel |
149 |
54.2 |
Ritual and Religious Belief |
Debating Paganism in a Christian Empire |
Mattias Gassman |
149 |
54.3 |
Ritual and Religious Belief |
The cult of the Erinyes in the Derveni Papyrus |
Richard Janko |
149 |
54.4 |
Ritual and Religious Belief |
Semeta lygra: Reading hieroglyphics with Archaic Greeks |
Christopher Stedman Parmenter |
149 |
54.5 |
Ritual and Religious Belief |
For the wheel’s still in spin: the evolution of the Skira festival in Classical Athens |
Adam Rappold |
149 |
54.6 |
Ritual and Religious Belief |
Mare pacavi a praedonibus: Divus Augustus and the Pacification of the Sea |
Katheryn Whitcomb |
149 |
55.1 |
Rhythm and Style |
Meter and Voice in Sophocles' Oedipus at Colonus |
Abigail Akavia |
149 |
55.2 |
Rhythm and Style |
Dinner Bells and War Drums: Dactylic Hexameter in Old Comedy |
Amelia Margaret Bensch-Schaus |
149 |
55.3 |
Rhythm and Style |
The Uniqueness of Homer, Reconsidered |
James H. Dee |
149 |
55.4 |
Rhythm and Style |
Evidence from Aristophanes for the Language and Style of Euripides |
Almut Fries |
149 |
55.5 |
Rhythm and Style |
‘Asianist’ Prose Rhythm from the Hellenistic Era to the ‘Second Sophistic’ |
Lawrence Kim |
149 |
56.1 |
Lyric from Greece to Rome |
The Snake-Throttler in Saffron Clothes. Baby Herakles in the Hippodrome (Pindar, Nemean 1) |
Claas Lattmann |
149 |
56.2 |
Lyric from Greece to Rome |
Explaining Archilochus in antiquity: the indirect tradition |
Enrico Emanuele Prodi |
149 |
56.3 |
Lyric from Greece to Rome |
Integrating Sappho and Alcaeus in Horace Odes 1.22 |
Justin Hudak |
149 |
56.4 |
Lyric from Greece to Rome |
Horace on the Hymnic Genre |
Brittney Szempruch |
149 |
56.5 |
Lyric from Greece to Rome |
The Pleasures of Lyric in Plutarch's Hierarchy of Taste |
David F. Driscoll |
149 |
56.6 |
Lyric from Greece to Rome |
A Defense of Horace, Ars Poetica 172 |
Courtney Evans |
149 |
57.2 |
Carthage and the Mediterranean |
Ground Truths: Reconsidering Carthaginian Domination |
Peter Van Dommelen |
149 |
57.3 |
Carthage and the Mediterranean |
Origin and development of Punic settlements in Sardinia until the age of Romanization |
Chiara Biasetti Fantauzzi |
149 |
57.4 |
Carthage and the Mediterranean |
Punic Sicily Until the Roman Conquest |
Salvatore De Vincenzo |
149 |
57.5 |
Carthage and the Mediterranean |
The Sufetes of North Africa: Comparative Contexts |
Nathan Pilkington |
149 |