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Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 90
R. J. Tarrant
Harvard University Press
This volume of sixteen articles includes: T. D. Barnes, “The Significance of Tacitus’ Dialogus de oratoribus”; Wendell Clausen, “Cicero and the New Poetry”; Gregory Crane, “Three Notes on Herodas 8”; Thomas K. Hubbard, “Pegasus’ Bridle and the Poetics of Pindar’s Thirteenth Olympian”; C. P. Jones, “Suetonius in the Probus of Giorgio Valla”; Peter E. Knox, “Ovid’s Medea and the Authenticity of Heroides 12”; Norbert F. Lain, “Catullus 68.145”; Jeffrey S. Rusten, “Structure, Style, and Sense in Interpreting Thucydides: The Soldier’s Choice (Thuc. 2.42.4)”; Richard Seaford, “Immortality, Salvation, and the Elements”; D. R. Shackleton Bailey, “Tu Marcellus eris”; Friedrich Solmsen, “Aeneas Founded Rome with Odysseus”; Joseph B. Solodow, “Raucae, tua cura, palumbes: Study of a Poetic Word Order”; Richard F. Thomas, “Unwanted Mice (Arat. Phaen. 1140–1141)” and “Virgil’s Georgics and the Art of Reference”; Brent Vine, “An Umbrian-Latin Correspondence”; and Robert Wallace, “The Date of Isokrates’ Areopagitikos.”
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Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 91
R. J. Tarrant
Harvard University Press
This volume of twenty articles includes: T. Corey Brennan, “An Ethnic Joke in Homer?”; Gregory Crane, “The Laughter of Aphrodite in Theocritus, Idyll 1”; Andrew R. Dyck, “The Glossographoi”; R. L. Fowler, “The Rhetoric of Desperation”; Douglas E. Gerber, “Short-Vowel Subjunctives in Pindar”; Eric Hostetter, “A Weary Herakles at Harvard”; J. M. Hunt, “Apollonius Citharoedus”; Jefferds Huyck, “Vergil’s Phaethontiades”; Leo Mildenberg, “Numismatic Evidence”; Stephen Mitchell, “Imperial Building in the Eastern Roman Provinces”; Charles E. Murgia, “The Servian Commentary on Aeneid 3 Revisited”; Hayden Pelliccia, “Pindarus Homericus: Pythian 3.1–80”; GailAnn Rickert, “Akrasia and Euripides’ Medea”; Ruth Scodel, “Horace, Lucilius, and Callimachean Polemic”; D. R. Shackleton Bailey, “The Silvae of Statius”; Susan C. Shelmerdine, “Pindaric Praise and the Third Olympian”; Ronald Syme, “M. Bibulus and Four Sons”; Richard F. Thomas, “Prose into Poetry: Tradition and Meaning in Virgil’s Georgics”; W. S. Watt, “Notes on the Anthologia Latina”; and Clifford Weber, “Metrical Imitatio in the Proem to the Aeneid.”
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Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 92
R. J. Tarrant
Harvard University Press
This volume of twenty-two articles includes: Charles F. Ahern, Jr., “Daedalus and Icarus in the Ars Amatoria”; T. D. Barnes, “Structure and Chronology in Ammianus, Book 14”; Daniel R. Blickman, “Lucretius, Epicurus, and Prehistory”; John Bodel, “Missing Links: Thymatulum or Tomaculum?”; Alan Cameron, “Biondo’s Ammianus: Constantius and Hormisdas at Rome”; James J. Clauss, “The Episode of the Lycian Farmers in Ovid’s Metamorphoses”; Gregory Crane, “Creon and the “Ode to Man” in Sophocles’ Antigone”; Thomas N. Habinek, “Science and Tradition in Aeneid 6”; Edward M. Harris, “Demosthenes’ Speech against Meidias”; J. M. Hunt, “Apolloniana”; Peter E. Knox, “Pyramus and Thisbe in Cyprus”; Christina S. Kraus, “Liviana Minima”; Robert Mondi, “Χαοσ and the Hesiodic Cosmogony”; Charles E. Murgia, “Propertius 4.1.87–88 and the Division of 4.1”; Hayden Pelliccia, “Pindar, Nemean 7.31–36 and the Syntax of Aetiology”; William H. Race, “Climactic Elements in Pindar’s Verse”; Eckart Schütrumpf, “Traditional Elements in the Concept of Hamartia in Aristotle’s Poetics”; Charles Segal, “Poetic Immortality and the Fear of Death: The Second Proem of the De Rerum Natura”; D. R. Shackleton Bailey, “Albanius or Albinius? A Palinode Resung” and “More on Quintilian’s (?) Shorter Declamations”; W. S. Watt, “Notes on Seneca, Tragedies”; and Clifford Weber, “Egeria’s Norman Homeland.”
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Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 96
R. J. Tarrant
Harvard University Press
This volume of nineteen articles offers: Marianne Palmer Bonz, “The Jewish Donor Inscriptions from Aphrodisias: Are They Both Third-Century, and Who Are the Theosebeis?”; Timothy W. Boyd, “Where Ion Stood, What Ion Sang”; C. O. Brink, “Can Tacitus’ Dialogus Be Dated? Evidence and Historical Conclusions”; Robert D. Brown, “The Bed-Wetters in Lucretius 4.1026”; Joseph W. Day, “Interactive Offerings: Early Greek Dedicatory Epigrams and Ritual”; Marian Demos, “Callicles’ Quotation of Pindar in the Gorgias”; Margalit Finkelberg, “The Dialect Continuum of Ancient Greek”; Andrew Garrett and Leslie Kurke, “Pudenda Asiae Minoris”; Stephen Harrison, “Yew and Bow: Vergil Georgics 2.448”; C. P. Jones, “A Geographical Setting for the Baucis and Philemon Legend (Ovid Metamorphoses 8.611–724)”; Alan Kershaw, “En in the Senecan Dramatic Corpus”; Paul T. Keyser, “Later Authors in Nonius Marcellus and His Date”; William T. Loomis, “Entella Tablets VI (254–241 B.C.) and VII (20th cent. A.D.?)”; Alan Nussbaum, “Five Latin Verbs from Root *leik-”; Michael Peachin, “The Case of the Heiress Camilia Pia”; Alexander Sens, “A Beggarly Boxer: Theocritus Idyll 22.134”; D. R. Shackleton Bailey, “Comm. Pet. 10”; W. S. Watt, “Notes on Seneca De Beneficiis, De Clementia, and Dialogi”; and Shirley Werner, “On the History of the Commenta Bernensia and the Adnotationes super Lucanum.”
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