@book {1398865, title = {Epistolary Poetry in Byzantium and Beyond. An Anthology with Critical Essays}, year = {2021}, publisher = {Routledge}, organization = {Routledge}, abstract = {Letters were an important medium of everyday communication in the ancient Mediterranean. Soon after its emergence, the epistolary form was adopted by educated elites and transformed into a literary genre, which developed distinctive markers and was used, for instance, to give political advice, to convey philosophical ideas, or to establish and foster ties with peers. A particular type of this genre is the letter cast in verse, or epistolary poem, which merges the form and function of the letter with stylistic elements of poetry. In Greek literature, epistolary poetry is first safely attested in the fourth century\ AD and would enjoy a lasting presence throughout the Byzantine and early modern periods.
The present volume introduces the reader to this hitherto unexplored chapter of post-classical Greek literature through an anthology of exemplary epistolary poems in the original Greek with facing English translation. This collection, which covers a broad chronological range from late antique epigrams of the\ Greek Anthology\ to the poetry of western humanists, is accompanied by exegetical commentaries on the anthologized texts and by critical essays discussing questions of genre, literary composition, and historical and social contexts of selected epistolary poems.}, url = {https://www.routledge.com/Epistolary-Poetry-in-Byzantium-and-Beyond-An-Anthology-with-Critical-Essays/Kubina-Riehle/p/book/9780367759971}, editor = {Alexander Riehle and Krystina Kubina} } @book {1372886, title = {A Companion to Byzantine Epistolography}, year = {2020}, publisher = {Brill}, organization = {Brill}, address = {Boston}, abstract = {A Companion to Byzantine Epistolography\ introduces and contextualizes the culture of Byzantine letter-writing from various socio-historical, material and literary angles. While this culture was long regarded as an ivory-tower pastime of intellectual elites, the eighteen essays in this volume, authored by leading experts in the field, show that epistolography had a vital presence in many areas of Byzantine society, literature and art. The chapters offer discussions of different types of letters and intersections with non-epistolary genres, their social functions as media of communication and performance, their representations in visual and narrative genres, and their uses in modern scholarship. The volume thus contributes to a more nuanced understanding of letter-writing in the Byzantine Empire and beyond.}, url = {https://brill-com.ezp-prod1.hul.harvard.edu/view/title/22982}, editor = {Alexander Riehle} } @book {1231300, title = {Genre in Archaic and Classical Greek Poetry: Theories and Models}, year = {2020}, publisher = {Brill}, organization = {Brill}, address = {Boston}, url = {https://brill.com/view/title/55930?format=HC\&offer=544829}, editor = {Naomi A. Weiss and Margaret Foster and Leslie Kurke} } @article {1231301, title = {The longs and shorts of an emergent nation: Nikolaos Loukanes{\textquoteright}s 1526 Iliad and the unprosodic New Trojans.}, journal = {Receptions of Hellenism in Early Modern Europe}, volume = {303}, year = {2019}, pages = {258-76}, url = {https://brill.com/view/book/edcoll/9789004402461/BP000026.xml?language=en}, author = {Calliope Dourou}, editor = {Natasha Constantinidou and Han Lamers} } @book {1230393, title = {Spear-Won Land: Sardis from the King{\textquoteright}s Peace to the Peace of Apamea}, year = {2019}, publisher = {University of Wisconsin Press}, organization = {University of Wisconsin Press}, address = {Madison}, url = {https://uwpress.wisc.edu/books/5697.htm}, editor = {Paul J. Kosmin and Andrea M. Berlin} } @book {1231542, title = {The Juggler of Notre Dame and the Medievalizing of Modernity. Volume 6: War and Peace, Sex and Violence }, year = {2018}, publisher = {Open Book Publisher}, organization = {Open Book Publisher}, address = {Cambridge, UK}, url = {https://www.openbookpublishers.com/product/822}, author = {Jan Ziolkowski} } @book {1231541, title = {The Juggler of Notre Dame and the Medievalizing of Modernity. Volume 5: Tumbling into the Twentieth Century }, year = {2018}, publisher = {Open Book Publisher}, organization = {Open Book Publisher}, address = {Cambridge, UK}, url = {https://www.openbookpublishers.com/product/821}, author = {Jan Ziolkowski} } @book {1231540, title = {The Juggler of Notre Dame and the Medievalizing of Modernity. Volume 4: Picture That: Making a Show of the Jongleur}, year = {2018}, publisher = {Open Book Publishers}, organization = {Open Book Publishers}, address = {Cambridge, UK}, url = {https://www.openbookpublishers.com/product/820}, author = {Jan Ziolkowski} } @book {1231539, title = {The Juggler of Notre Dame and the Medievalizing of Modernity. Volume 3: The American Middle Ages }, year = {2018}, publisher = {Open Book Publishers}, organization = {Open Book Publishers}, address = {Cambridge, UK}, url = {https://www.openbookpublishers.com/product/819}, author = {Jan Ziolkowski} } @book {1231537, title = {The Juggler of Notre Dame and the Medievalizing of Modernity. Volume 2: Medieval Meets Medievalism}, year = {2018}, publisher = {Open Book Publishers}, organization = {Open Book Publishers}, address = {Cambridge, UK}, url = {https://www.openbookpublishers.com/product/805}, author = {Jan Ziolkowski} } @book {1231534, title = {The Juggler of Notre Dame and the Medievalizing of Modernity. Volume 1: The Middle Ages}, year = {2018}, publisher = {Open Book Publishers }, organization = {Open Book Publishers }, address = {Cambridge, UK}, url = {https://www.openbookpublishers.com/product/697}, author = {Jan Ziolkowski} } @book {1231530, title = {Empire and Political Cultures in the Roman World}, year = {2018}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press }, organization = {Cambridge University Press }, address = {Cambridge}, url = {https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/empire-and-political-cultures-in-the-roman-world/70EFC6A43B1BBBE00C597BCFE37501D0}, author = {Emma Dench} } @book {1230403, title = {The Music of Tragedy: Performance and Imagination in Euripidean Theater}, year = {2018}, publisher = {University of California Press}, organization = {University of California Press}, address = {Oakland}, url = {https://www.ucpress.edu/book/9780520295902/the-music-of-tragedy}, author = {Naomi Weiss} } @book {1230368, title = {Time and Its Adversaries in the Seleucid Empire}, year = {2018}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, organization = {Harvard University Press}, address = {Cambridge, MA}, url = {https://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674976931}, author = {Paul J. Kosmin} } @book {1230409, title = {Why Bob Dylan Matters}, year = {2017}, publisher = {HarperCollins}, organization = {HarperCollins}, address = {New York }, url = {https://www.harpercollins.com/products/why-bob-dylan-matters-richard-f-thomas}, author = {Richard F. Thomas} } @article {1231531, title = {Carpento certe: Conveying Gender in Roman Transportation}, journal = {Classical Antiquity }, volume = {35}, year = {2016}, pages = {215-246}, url = {https://ca.ucpress.edu/content/35/2/215}, author = {Jared Hudson} } @presentation {698686, title = {Using Technology for Good in the Latin Classroom}, year = {2015}, url = {https://scholar.harvard.edu/livingston/presentations/using-technology-good-latin-classroom} } @presentation {649661, title = {Written in Stone: Teaching with Inscriptions}, year = {2015}, abstract = {

CANE Summer Institute Public Lecture.

}, url = {http://caneweb.org/new/?page_id=165}, author = {Kathleen M. Coleman} } @book {721726, title = {Ancient Bronzes through a Modern Lens: Introductory Essays on the Study of Ancient Mediterranean and Near Eastern Bronzes}, year = {2014}, publisher = {Harvard Art Museums}, organization = {Harvard Art Museums}, address = {Cambridge, MA}, abstract = {

With contributions by Lisa M. Anderson, Francesca G. Bewer, Ruth Bielfeldt, Susanne Ebbinghaus, Katherine Eremin, Se{\'a}n Hemingway, Henry Lie, Carol C. Mattusch, Josef Riederer, and Adrian St{\"a}hli.

This publication brings together prominent art historians, conservators, and scientists to discuss fresh approaches to the study of ancient Mediterranean and Near Eastern works of bronze. Featuring significant bronzes from the Harvard Art Museums{\textquoteright} holdings as well as other museum collections, the volume{\textquoteright}s eight essays present technical and formal analyses in a format that will be useful for both general readers and students of ancient art. The text provides an overview of ancient manufacturing processes as well as modern methods of scientific examination, and it focuses on objects as diverse as large-scale statuary and more utilitarian armor, vessels, and lamps. Filling a current gap in the art historical literature, this book offers a much-needed, accessible introduction to ancient bronzes.

}, url = {http://yalepress.yale.edu/book.asp?isbn=9780300207798}, editor = {S. Ebbinghaus} } @book {721736, title = {Verso una poetica rituale}, year = {2014}, publisher = {Argo}, organization = {Argo}, address = {Lecce, Italia}, abstract = {

Il modello teorico di una\ poetica rituale\ proposta da D. Yatromanolakis e O. Roilos fonda una nuova problematica che si basa sulla inscrizione di forme rituali in pi{\`u} vasti sistemi d{\textquoteright}espressione culturali e sociopolitici all{\textquoteright}interno di varie tradizioni del mondo greco.
Il "caso greco", col suo materiale sterminato, contrassegnato da svariate continuit{\`a} e discontinuit{\`a}, spesso pieno di rimaneggiamenti ideologicamente ispirati nell{\textquoteright}arco di tre millenni, offre un terreno certamente impegnativo ma fecondo per indagini comparative.
L{\textquoteright}ipotesi {\`e} verificata in tre precisi ambiti di ricerca: Saffo e la lirica greca arcaica, il romanzo bizantino del XII secolo e l{\textquoteright}opera poetica di Odysseas Elytis.

}, author = {D. Yatromanolakis and P. Roilos} } @book {681886, title = {The Virgil Encyclopedia}, year = {2014}, pages = {1600}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, organization = {Wiley-Blackwell}, address = {Chichester}, abstract = {

The Virgil Encyclopedia\ is the first comprehensive reference volume to be published in English on Publius Vergilius Maro, the classical Roman poet whose works and thoughts have been at the center of Western literary, cultural, artistic, and pedagogical traditions for more than two millennia. Through more than 2,200 carefully researched entries, scholars and students alike are provided with an in-depth treatment of all aspects of Virgil{\textquoteright}s poetry and his immeasurable influence that continues to the present day.

}, url = {http://www.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-1405154985.html}, editor = {Richard F. Thomas and Jan M. Ziolkowski} } @book {681471, title = {Le jardin dans l{\textquoteright}Antiquit{\'e}}, year = {2014}, publisher = {Fondation Hardt}, organization = {Fondation Hardt}, address = {Vandoeuvres}, abstract = {

Contents:

P. DUCREY, "Pr{\'e}face"
K. COLEMAN, "Melior{\textquoteright}s plane tree: an introduction to the ancient garden"
C. E. LOEBEN, "Der Garten im und am Grab - G{\"o}tter in G{\"a}rten und G{\"a}rten f{\"u}r G{\"o}tter: reale und dargestellte G{\"a}rten im Alten {\"A}gypten"
S. DALLEY, "From Mesopotamian temples as sacred groves to the date-palm motif in Greek art and architecture"
E. PRIOUX, "Parler de jardin pour parler de cr{\'e}ations litt{\'e}raires"
R. TAYLOR, "Movement, vision, and quotation in the gardens of Herod the Great"
A. MARZANO, "Roman gardens, military conquests, and elite self-representation"
B. BERGMANN, "The concept of boundary in the Roman garden"
G. CANEVA, "Il giardino come espressione del divino nelle rappresentazioni dell{\textquoteright}antica Roma"
R. L. FOX, "Early Christians and the gardens: image and reality"

}, url = {https://www.droz.org/product/9782600007603}, editor = {Kathleen Coleman} } @article {680876, title = {The Antiphonal Ending of Euripides{\textquoteright} Iphigenia in Aulis (1475{\textendash}1532)}, journal = {Classical Philology}, volume = {109}, year = {2014}, pages = {119{\textendash}129}, author = {Naomi A. Weiss} } @presentation {680661, title = {Empire Builders, Image Builders: Legacies of the Roman Military}, year = {2014}, author = {Ivy J. Livingston} } @inbook {680831, title = {Galen and the tripartite soul}, booktitle = {Plato and the Divided Self}, year = {2014}, pages = {331{\textendash}349}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, organization = {Cambridge University Press}, address = {Cambridge}, author = {Mark Schiefsky}, editor = {Rachel Barney and Tad Brennan and Charles Brittain} } @inbook {680811, title = {The History of the Indo-European Primary Comparative}, booktitle = {Das Nomen im Indogermanischen Morphologie, Substantiv versus Adjektiv, Kollektivum.}, year = {2014}, publisher = {Reichert Verlag}, organization = {Reichert Verlag}, address = {Wiesbaden}, author = {Jeremy Rau and N. Oettinger} } @inbook {680821, title = {Phantasia and the Ethics of Fictionality in Byzantium: A Cognitive Anthropological Perspective}, booktitle = {Medieval Greek Storytelling: Fictionality and Narrative in Byzantium}, year = {2014}, pages = {9{\textendash}30}, publisher = {Harrassowitz Verlag}, organization = {Harrassowitz Verlag}, address = {Wiesbaden}, author = {Panagiotis Roilos}, editor = {P. Roilos} } @presentation {680651, title = {Pro Cicerone: In Defense of Cicero in the Latin Classroom}, year = {2014}, abstract = {

This session presents a unit of study centered on the life and writings of Cicero, a pivotal figure in Roman history and one of the best-documented. Cicero{\textquoteright}s life, intersecting with many of Rome{\textquoteright}s best-known figures, provides a perfect point of access to many cultural themes, while engaging students with primary texts of undisputed virtuosity.

}, author = {Ivy J. Livingston} } @inbook {680816, title = {Unshapely Bodies and Beautifying Embellishments: The Ancient Epics in Byzantium, Allegorical Hermeneutics, and the Case of Ioannes Diakonos Galenos}, booktitle = {Jahrbuch der {\"O}sterreichischen Byzantinistik}, volume = {64}, year = {2014}, pages = { 231{\textendash}246}, publisher = {Verlag der {\"O}sterreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften}, organization = {Verlag der {\"O}sterreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften}, address = {Wien}, author = {Panagiotis Roilos}, editor = {Kislinger Ewald} } @inbook {678931, title = {Melior{\textquoteright}s plane tree: an introduction to the ancient garden}, booktitle = {Le jardin dans l{\textquoteright}Antiquit{\'e}}, year = {2014}, pages = {1{\textendash}26}, publisher = {Fondation Hardt}, organization = {Fondation Hardt}, address = {Vandoeuvres}, author = {Kathleen Coleman}, editor = {Kathleen Coleman} } @book {661356, title = {Medieval Greek Storytelling: Fictionality and Narrative in Byzantium}, year = {2014}, publisher = {Harrassowitz Verlag}, organization = {Harrassowitz Verlag}, address = {Wiesbaden}, abstract = {

Written by eminent scholars in the field of Byzantine studies, the majority of the chapters included in\ Medieval Greek Storytelling: Fictionality and Narrative in Byzantium\ are revised versions of the papers that were presented at an international conference that Panagiotis Roilos organized at Harvard University in December 2009. The topics explored in the book cover an extensive chronological range of postclassical Greek culture(s) and literature, from early Christianity to early modern Greek literature, with a pronounced focus on the Byzantine period, as well as a variety of genres: hagiography, historiography, chronicles, {\textquotedblleft}patriographic literature,{\textquotedblright} the novel, the epic, and philological commentary. One of the main aims of the book is to shift the focus of current scholarship on fictionality from those genres that are traditionally identified as {\textquotedblleft}fictional,{\textquotedblright} such as the novel and the epic, to other literary discourses that lay claim to historical objectivity and veracity. By doing so, this volume as a whole sheds new light on the interpenetration of different, often apparently antithetical discursive categories and strategies and on the ensuing problematization of established demarcations between {\textquotedblleft}historicity{\textquotedblright} and fictionality, as well as {\textquotedblleft}objectivity{\textquotedblright} and imaginary arbitrariness, in diverse Byzantine literary and broader cultural contexts.

}, url = {http://www.harrassowitz-verlag.de/title_168.ahtml}, editor = {Panagiotis Roilos} } @book {660896, title = {The Land of the Elephant Kings: Space, Territory, and Ideology in the Seleucid Empire}, year = {2014}, pages = {448}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, organization = {Harvard University Press}, address = {Cambridge, MA}, abstract = {

The Seleucid Empire (311{\textendash}64 BCE) was unlike anything the ancient Mediterranean and Near Eastern worlds had seen. Stretching from present-day Bulgaria to Tajikistan{\textemdash}the bulk of Alexander the Great{\textquoteright}s Asian conquests{\textemdash}the kingdom encompassed a territory of remarkable ethnic, religious, and linguistic diversity; yet it did not include Macedonia, the ancestral homeland of the dynasty.\ The Land of the Elephant Kings\ investigates how the Seleucid kings, ruling over lands to which they had no historic claim, attempted to transform this territory into a coherent and meaningful space.

Based on recent archaeological evidence and ancient primary sources,\ Paul J. Kosmin{\textquoteright}s multidisciplinary approach treats the Seleucid Empire not as a mosaic of regions but as a land unified in imperial ideology and articulated by spatial practices. Kosmin uncovers how Seleucid geographers and ethnographers worked to naturalize the kingdom{\textquoteright}s borders with India and Central Asia in ways that shaped Roman and later medieval understandings of {\textquotedblleft}the East.{\textquotedblright} In the West, Seleucid rulers turned their backs on Macedonia, shifting their sense of homeland to Syria. By mapping the Seleucid kings{\textquoteright} travels and studying the cities they founded{\textemdash}an ambitious colonial policy that has influenced the Near East to this day{\textemdash}Kosmin shows how the empire{\textquoteright}s territorial identity was constructed on the ground. In the empire{\textquoteright}s final century, with enemies pressing harder and central power disintegrating, we see that the very modes by which Seleucid territory had been formed determined the way in which it fell apart.

}, url = {http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674728820}, author = {Kosmin, Paul J.} } @inbook {680581, title = {Alexander the Great and the Seleucids in Iran}, booktitle = {The Oxford Handbook of Ancient Iran}, year = {2013}, pages = {671{\textendash}689}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, organization = {Oxford University Press}, address = {Oxford}, author = {Kosmin, Paul J.}, editor = {Daniel Potts} } @inbook {680586, title = {Apologetic Ethnography: Megasthenes{\textquoteright} Indica and the Seleucid Elephant}, booktitle = {Ancient Ethnography: New Approaches}, year = {2013}, pages = {97{\textendash}115}, publisher = {Bloomsbury Academic}, organization = {Bloomsbury Academic}, address = {New York}, author = {Kosmin, Paul J.}, editor = {Eran Almagor and Joseph Skinner} } @presentation {680671, title = {Classical to the Core: Latin as the Lynchpin to the Goals of the Standards}, year = {2013}, abstract = {

This session will illustrate project-based activities in which students become the makers of objects and texts that are shared not only among each other, but with their schools and communities. The projects and their Roman models (monuments, coins) will provide a lens through which students will engage with {\textquotedblleft}big{\textquotedblright} issues of civic identity and image.

}, author = {Ivy J. Livingston} } @inbook {680696, title = {The Delian Maidens and their relevance to choral mimesis in classical drama}, booktitle = {Choral Mediations in Greek Tragedy}, year = {2013}, pages = {227{\textendash}256}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, organization = {Cambridge University Press}, address = {Cambridge}, author = {Gregory Nagy}, editor = {Renaud Gagn{\'e} and Marianne Hopman} } @article {680556, title = {In Memoriam John Miles Foley (1947{\textendash}2012)}, journal = {Folklore}, volume = {124}, year = {2013}, pages = {104{\textendash}106}, author = {David F. Elmer} } @article {680561, title = {The Milman Parry Collection of Oral Literature}, journal = {Oral Tradition [Internet]}, volume = {28}, year = {2013}, pages = {341{\textendash}354}, url = {https://journal.oraltradition.org/wp-content/uploads/files/articles/28ii/20_28.2.pdf}, author = {David F. Elmer} } @article {680576, title = {Poetry{\textquoteright}s Politics in Archaic Greek Epic and Lyric}, journal = {Oral Tradition [Internet]}, volume = {28}, year = {2013}, pages = {143{\textendash}166}, url = {https://journal.oraltradition.org/wp-content/uploads/files/articles/28i/08_28.1.pdf}, author = {David F. Elmer} } @inbook {680591, title = {Seleucid Ethnography and Indigenous Kingship: The Babylonian Education of Antiochus I}, booktitle = {The World of Berossos}, year = {2013}, pages = {193{\textendash}206}, publisher = {Harrassowitz}, organization = {Harrassowitz}, address = {Wiesbaden}, author = {Kosmin, Paul J.}, editor = {Johannes Haubold and Giovanni Lanfranchi and Robert Rollinger and John Steele} } @inbook {680706, title = {Virgil{\textquoteright}s verse invitus, regina {\textellipsis} and its poetic antecedents}, booktitle = {More modoque: Die Wurzeln der europ{\"a}ischen Kultur und deren Rezeption im Orient und Okzident}, year = {2013}, pages = {155{\textendash}165}, publisher = {Forschungszentrum f{\"u}r Humanwissenschaften der Ungarischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. Festschrift f{\"u}r Mikl{\'o}s Mar{\'o}th zum siebzigsten Geburtstag}, organization = {Forschungszentrum f{\"u}r Humanwissenschaften der Ungarischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. Festschrift f{\"u}r Mikl{\'o}s Mar{\'o}th zum siebzigsten Geburtstag}, address = {Budapest}, author = {Gregory Nagy}, editor = {P. Fodor and Mayer, G. and M. Monostori and K. Szov{\'a}k and L. Tak{\'a}cs} } @article {680881, title = {The Visual Language of Nero{\textquoteright}s Harbor Sestertii}, journal = {Memoirs of the American Academy at Rome}, volume = {58}, year = {2013}, pages = {65{\textendash}81}, author = {Naomi A. Weiss} } @inbook {678956, title = {The graffiti}, booktitle = {Excavations at Zeugma Conducted by Oxford Archaeology}, volume = {1}, year = {2013}, pages = {178{\textendash}191}, publisher = {Packard Humanities Institute}, organization = {Packard Humanities Institute}, address = {Los Altos, CA}, author = {Kathleen Coleman and Rebecca Benefiel}, editor = {William Aylward} } @book {664521, title = {The Ancient Greek Hero in 24 Hours}, year = {2013}, publisher = {The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press}, organization = {The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press}, address = {Cambridge, MA; London}, abstract = {

The ancient Greeks{\textquoteright} concept of {\textquotedblleft}the hero{\textquotedblright} was very different from what we understand by the term today,\ Gregory Nagy\ argues{\textemdash}and it is only through analyzing their historical contexts that we can truly understand Achilles, Odysseus, Oedipus, and Herakles.

In Greek tradition, a hero was a human, male or female, of the remote past, who was endowed with superhuman abilities by virtue of being descended from an immortal god. Despite their mortality, heroes, like the gods, were objects of cult worship. Nagy examines this distinctively religious notion of the hero in its many dimensions, in texts spanning the eighth to fourth centuries BCE: the Homeric\ Iliad\ and\ Odyssey;\ tragedies of Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides; songs of Sappho and Pindar; and dialogues of Plato. All works are presented in English translation, with attention to the subtleties of the original Greek, and are often further illuminated by illustrations taken from Athenian vase paintings.

The fifth-century BCE historian Herodotus said that to read Homer is to be a civilized person. In twenty-four installments, based on the Harvard University\ course\ Nagy has taught and refined since the late 1970s,\ The Ancient Greek Hero in 24 Hours\ offers an exploration of civilization{\textquoteright}s roots in the Homeric epics and other Classical literature, a lineage that continues to challenge and inspire us today.

}, url = {http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674073401}, author = {Gregory Nagy} } @book {661206, title = {The Poetics of Consent: Collective Decision Making and the Iliad}, year = {2013}, publisher = {John Hopkins University Press}, organization = {John Hopkins University Press}, address = {Baltimore, MD}, abstract = {

The Poetics of Consent breaks new ground in Homeric studies by interpreting the Iliad{\textquoteright}s depictions of political action in terms of the poetic forces that shaped the Iliad itself. Arguing that consensus is a central theme of the epic, David Elmer analyzes in detail scenes in which the poem{\textquoteright}s three political communities{\textemdash}Achaeans, Trojans, and Olympian gods{\textemdash}engage in the process of collective decision making.

These scenes reflect an awareness of the negotiation involved in reconciling rival versions of the Iliad over centuries. They also point beyond the Iliad{\textquoteright}s world of gods and heroes to the here-and-now of the poem{\textquoteright}s performance and reception, in which the consensus over the shape and meaning of the Iliadic tradition is continuously evolving.

Elmer synthesizes ideas and methods from literary and political theory, classical philology, anthropology, and folklore studies to construct an alternative to conventional understandings of the Iliad{\textquoteright}s politics. The Poetics of Consent reveals the ways in which consensus and collective decision making determined the authoritative account of the Trojan War that we know as the Iliad.

}, url = {https://jhupbooks.press.jhu.edu/content/poetics-consent}, author = {David F. Elmer} } @book {721721, title = {Grammaticus multi nominis. Festschrift for Alan J. Nussbaum.}, year = {2012}, publisher = {Beech Stave Press}, organization = {Beech Stave Press}, address = {Ann Arbor}, url = {http://www.beechstave.com/nux.html}, editor = {J. Rau and A. Cooper and B. W. Fortson and M. Weiss} } @book {681466, title = {L{\textquoteright}Organisation des spectacles dans le monde romain}, year = {2012}, publisher = {Fondation Hardt}, organization = {Fondation Hardt}, address = {Vandoeuvres}, abstract = {

Contents:

Preface by P. DUCREY; Introduction by K. COLEMAN and J. NELIS-CLEMENT;J. NOLLE "Stadtpr{\"a}gungen des Ostens und die {\textquoteright}explosion agonistique{\textquoteright}: {\"U}berlegungen zu Umfang, Aussagen und Hintergr{\"u}nden der Propagierung von Agonen auf den Pr{\"a}gungen der St{\"a}dte des griechischen Ostens"; O. M. VAN NIJF "Political games"; C. KOKKINIA "Games vs. buildings as euergetic choices"; M. L. CALDELLI "Associazioni di artisti a Roma: una messa a punto"; J-P. THUILLIER "L{\textquoteright}organisation des ludi circenses: les quatre factions (R{\'e}publique, Haut-Empire)"; R. WEBB "The nature and representation of competition in pantomime and mime"; G. CHAMBERLAND "La m{\'e}moire des spectacles: l{\textquoteright}autorepr{\'e}sentation des donateurs"; C. JONES "The organization of spectacle in Late Antiquity".

}, url = {https://www.droz.org/product/9782600007580}, editor = {Kathleen Coleman and Jocelyne Nelis-Cl{\'e}ment} } @inbook {680806, title = {Notes on Stative Verbal Roots, the Caland System, and Primary Verbal Morphology in Indo-Iranian and Indo-European}, booktitle = {Multi nominis grammaticus. Festchrift for Alan J. Nussbaum}, year = {2012}, pages = {255{\textendash}273}, publisher = {Beech Stave Press}, organization = {Beech Stave Press}, address = {Ann Arbor}, author = {Jeremy Rau}, editor = {A. Cooper and J. Rau and M. Weiss} } @inbook {680886, title = {Recognition and Identity in Euripides{\textquoteright} Ion }, booktitle = {Recognition and Modes of Knowledge: Anagnorisis from Antiquity to Contemporary Theory}, year = {2012}, pages = {33{\textendash}50}, publisher = {University of Alberta Press}, organization = {University of Alberta Press}, address = {Edmonton}, author = {Naomi A. Weiss}, editor = {T. Russo} } @inbook {680691, title = {Signs of Hero Cult in Homeric Poetry}, booktitle = {Homeric Contexts}, year = {2012}, pages = {17{\textendash}61}, publisher = {De Gruyter}, organization = {De Gruyter}, address = {Berlin}, author = {Gregory Nagy}, editor = {Franco Montanari and Antonios Rengakos and Christos Tsagalis} } @inbook {680866, title = {The Streets of Rome: The Classical Dylan}, booktitle = {Reception and the Classics: An Interdisciplinary Approach to the Classical Tradition}, year = {2012}, pages = {134{\textendash}159}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, organization = {Cambridge University Press}, address = {Cambridge; New York}, author = {Richard F. Thomas}, editor = {William Brockliss and Pramit Chaudhuri and Ayelet Haimson Lushkov and Katherine Wasdin} } @inbook {680861, title = {Thoughts on the Virgilian hexameter}, booktitle = {Multi nominis grammaticus. Festchrift for Alan J. Nussbaum}, year = {2012}, pages = {306{\textendash}314}, publisher = {Beech Stave Press}, organization = {Beech Stave Press}, address = {Ann Arbor}, author = {Richard F. Thomas}, editor = {Adam I. Cooper and Jeremy Rau and Michael Weiss} } @inbook {680896, title = {Walter of Aquitaine in Spanish Ballad Tradition}, booktitle = {Child{\textquoteright}s Children: Ballad Study and its Legacies}, year = {2012}, pages = {171{\textendash}185}, publisher = {Wissenschaftlicher Verlag Trier}, organization = {Wissenschaftlicher Verlag Trier}, address = {Trier}, author = {Jan M. Ziolkowski}, editor = {Joseph Harris and Barbara Hillers} } @article {678871, title = {Bureaucratic language in the correspondence between Pliny and Trajan}, journal = {Transactions of the American Philological Association}, volume = {142}, year = {2012}, pages = {189{\textendash}238}, abstract = {

\ This article identifies and analyzes bureaucratic features in the language employed by Pliny and Trajan in Epistles 10 as an example of communication between two officials of senior but unequal status who were engaged in managing provincial affairs in the Roman empire.\ 

}, author = {Kathleen Coleman} } @book {661371, title = {Virgil: Aeneid Book XII}, year = {2012}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, organization = {Cambridge University Press}, address = {Cambridge}, abstract = {

Book XII brings Virgil{\textquoteright}s Aeneid to a close, as the long-delayed single combat between Aeneas and Turnus ends with Turnus{\textquoteright} death {\textendash} a finale that many readers find more unsettling than triumphant. In this, the first detailed single-volume commentary on the book in any language, Professor Tarrant explores Virgil{\textquoteright}s complex portrayal of the opposing champions, his use and transformation of earlier poetry (Homer{\textquoteright}s in particular) and his shaping of the narrative in its final phases. In addition to the linguistic and thematic commentary, the volume contains a substantial introduction that discusses the larger literary and historical issues raised by the poem{\textquoteright}s conclusion; other sections include accounts of Virgil{\textquoteright}s metre, later treatments of the book{\textquoteright}s events in art and music, and the transmission of the text. The edition is designed for upper-level undergraduates and graduate students and will also be of interest to scholars of Latin literature.

}, url = {http://www.cambridge.org/us/academic/subjects/classical-studies/classical-literature/virgil-aeneid-book-xii}, editor = {Richard Tarrant} } @inbook {680871, title = {Epigram and Propertian Elegy{\textquoteright}s Epigram Riffs: Radical Poet/Radical Critics}, booktitle = {Latin Elegy and Hellenistic Epigram: A Tale of Two Genres at Rome}, year = {2011}, pages = {67{\textendash}85}, publisher = {Cambridge Scholars Publishing}, organization = {Cambridge Scholars Publishing}, address = {Newcastle upon Tyne}, author = {Richard F. Thomas}, editor = {Alison Keith} } @article {680801, title = {Indo-European Kinship Terminology: *ph$_{2}$tr-ou̯-/ph$_{2}$tr̥-u̯- and its Derivatives}, journal = {Historische Sprachforschung}, volume = {124}, year = {2011}, pages = {1{\textendash}25}, author = {Jeremy Rau} } @inbook {680826, title = {Orality, Ritual, and the Dialectics of Performance}, booktitle = {Medieval Oral Literature}, year = {2011}, pages = {225{\textendash}249}, publisher = {De Gruyter}, organization = {De Gruyter}, address = {Berlin}, author = {Panagiotis Roilos}, editor = {K. Reichl} } @book {661451, title = {Horace: Odes I V and Carmen Saeculare}, year = {2011}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, organization = {Cambridge University Press}, address = {Cambridge}, abstract = {

The Carmen Saeculare was composed and published in 17 BCE as Horace was returning to the genre of lyric which he had abandoned six years earlier; the fourth book of Odes is in part a response to this poem, the only commissioned poem we know from the period. The hardening of the political situation, with the Republic a thing of the past and the Augustan succession in the air, threw the problematic issue of praise into fresh relief, and at the same time provided an impulse towards the nostalgia represented by the poet{\textquoteright}s private world. Professor Thomas provides an introduction and commentary (the first full commentary in English since the nineteenth century) to each of the poems, exploring their status as separate lyric artefacts and their place in the larger web of the book. The edition is intended primarily for upper-level undergraduates and graduate students, but is also important for scholars.

}, url = {http://www.cambridge.org/us/academic/subjects/classical-studies/classical-literature/horace-odes-iv-and-carmen-saeculare}, editor = {Richard F. Thomas} } @inbook {680901, title = {Do Actions Speak Louder Than Words? The Scope and Role of Pronuntiatio in the Latin Rhetorical Tradition, With Special Reference to the Cistercians}, booktitle = {Rhetoric beyond Words: Delight and Persuasion in the Arts of the Middle Ages}, year = {2010}, pages = {124{\textendash}150}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, organization = {Cambridge University Press}, address = {Cambridge}, author = {Jan M. Ziolkowski}, editor = {Mary Carruthers} } @inbook {680906, title = {Laments for Lost Children: Latin Traditions}, booktitle = {Laments for the Lost in Medieval Literature }, year = {2010}, pages = {81{\textendash}107}, publisher = {Brepols}, organization = {Brepols}, address = {Turnhout}, author = {Jan M. Ziolkowski}, editor = {Jane Tolmie and M.J. Toswell} } @book {660886, title = {Imagination and Logos: Essays on C. P. Cavafy}, year = {2010}, month = {2010}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, organization = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA}, abstract = {

This book explores diverse but complementary cross-disciplinary approaches to the poetics, intertexts, and impact of the work of C. P. Cavafy (Konstantinos Petrou Kavafis), one of the most influential twentieth-century European poets. Written by leading international scholars from a number of disciplines (critical theory, gender studies, comparative literature, English studies, Greek studies, anthropology, classics), the essays of this volume situate Cavafy{\textquoteright}s poetry within the broader contexts of modernism and aestheticism, and investigate its complex and innovative responses to European literary traditions (from Greek antiquity to modernity) as well as the multifaceted impact of Cavafy and his writings on other major figures of world literature.\ 

Contributors: Eve Sedgwick, Helen Vendler, Dimitrios Yatromanolakis, Albert Henrichs, Richard Dellamora, Kathleen Coleman, Mark Doty, James Faubion, Diana Haas.\ 

Jacket image: The Smoker by Ioannis Roilos, reproduced by permission of the painter.

}, url = {http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674053397}, editor = {Panagiotis Roilos} } @article {680836, title = {Euclid and beyond : towards a long-term history of deductivity}, journal = {K{\"u}nstliche Intelligenz}, volume = {4}, year = {2009}, pages = {25{\textendash}29}, author = {Mark Schiefsky and Malcolm D. Hyman} } @article {680841, title = {Structures of argument and concepts of force in the Aristotelian Mechanical Problems}, journal = {Early Science and Medicine }, volume = {14}, year = {2009}, pages = {43{\textendash}67}, author = {Mark Schiefsky} } @book {664526, title = {Indo-European Nominal Morphology:The Decads and the Caland System}, year = {2009}, publisher = {Innsbrucker Beitr. zur Sprachwiss}, organization = {Innsbrucker Beitr. zur Sprachwiss}, address = {Innsbruck}, abstract = {

The following book presents two self-standing studies on IE nominal morphology that seek to expand the results of what we have learned in the last forty years and to map out new directions for future research. The first study tackles a long-standing crux in the system of the IE numerals, the original inflection behavior and derivational interrelations of the IE decad formulations. The second study focuses on a broader question in IE nominal morphology and investigates a phenomenon that has taxed the imagination of scholars for more than a century, the Caland system.

}, url = {http://sprawi.at/content/indo-european-nominal-morphology-decads-and-caland-system}, author = {Jeremy Rau} } @book {661341, title = {C. P. Cavafy: The Economics of Metonymy}, year = {2009}, publisher = {University of Illinois Press}, organization = {University of Illinois Press}, address = {Urbana, IL}, abstract = {

Konstantinos P. Kavafis--known to the English-reading world as C. P. Cavafy--has been internationally recognized as an important poet and attracted the admiration of eminent literary figures such as E. M. Forster, F. T. Marinetti, W. H. Auden, George Seferis, and James Merrill. Cavafy{\textquoteright}s idiosyncratic poetry remains one of the most influential and perplexing voices of European modernism.

Focusing on Cavafy{\textquoteright}s intriguing work, this book navigates new territories in critical theory and offers an interdisciplinary study of the construction of (homo)erotic desire in poetry in terms of metonymic discourse and anti-economic libidinal modalities. Panagiotis Roilos shows that problematizations of art production, market economy, and trafficability of er{\^o}s in diverse late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century European sociocultural and political contexts were re-articulated in Cavafy{\textquoteright}s poetry in new subversive ways that promoted an "unorthodox" discursive and libidinal anti-economy of jouissance.

}, url = {https://www.press.uillinois.edu/books/?id=c034817}, author = {Panagiotis Roilos} } @article {681451, title = {A Psychoanalytical Reading of Euripides{\textquoteright} Ion: Repetition, Development and Identity}, journal = {Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies}, volume = {51}, year = {2008}, pages = {39{\textendash}50}, url = {http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.2041-5370.2008.tb00274.x/abstract}, author = {Naomi A. Weiss} } @book {660861, title = {Solomon and Marcolf}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, pages = {470}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, organization = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA}, abstract = {

Solomon and Marcolf\ enjoyed an extraordinary heyday in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Its first half constitutes a dialogue, mostly of one-liners, between King Solomon and a wily, earthy, and irreverent rustic named Marcolf, while its second recounts tricks that the peasant plays upon the ruler. Although less known than\ Till Eulenspiegel,\ Solomon and Marcolf\ was printed not only in Latin but also in German, English, Italian, and other European languages. Marcolf was associated closely with Aesop as well as with practical jokers and clowns in vogue in early modern literature. Today\ Solomon and Marcolf\ has notoriety from its mention in\ Gargantua\ and its analysis by Mikhail Bakhtin in\ Rabelais and His World.

Traditions about Solomon and Marcolf became widespread at the very latest by 1000, but perhaps centuries earlier. The Latin prose as it has been preserved is likely to have taken shape around 1200, but the earliest extant manuscript dates from 1410. Tantalizing bits of evidence point to connections between Marcolf and the Near East. Thus the contest with Marcolf was related to riddle competitions between King Solomon on the one hand and King Hiram of Tyre or the Queen of Sheba on the other.

Solomon and Marcolf, not put into English since 1492, is here presented with the Latin and a facing translation. In addition to a substantial introduction, the text comes with a detailed commentary that clarifies difficulties in language and identifies proverbial material and narrative motifs. The commentary is illustrated with reproductions of the woodcut illustrations from the 1514 printing of the Latin. The volume contains appendices with supplementary materials, especially sources, analogues, and testimonia; a bibliography; and indices.

Jan M. Ziolkowski\ is Director of\ Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection\ in Washington and Arthur Kingsley Porter Professor of Medieval Latin at Harvard University.

Jacket illustration: Frontispiece of\ Collationes quas dicuntur fecisse mutuo rex Salomon sapientissimus et Marcolphus {\textellipsis}, printed by Johann Weissenburger in Landshut, Germany, on May 14, 1514 (Munich, Staatsbibliothek, L.eleg.m.250, 9)

}, url = {http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674028418}, author = {Jan M. Ziolkowski} } @book {661521, title = {Fairy Tales From Before Fairy Tales: The Medieval Past of Wonderful Lies}, year = {2007}, publisher = {University of Michigan Press}, organization = {University of Michigan Press}, address = {Ann Arbor, MI}, abstract = {

When did fairy tales begin? What qualifies as a fairy tale? Is a true fairy tale oral or literary? Or is a fairy tale determined not by style but by content? To answer these and other questions, Jan M. Ziolkowski not only provides a comprehensive overview of the theoretical debates about fairy tale origins but includes an extensive discussion of the relationship of the fairy tale to both the written and oral sources. Ziolkowski offers interpretations of a sampling of the tales in order to sketch the complex connections that existed in the Middle Ages between oral folktales and their written equivalents, the variety of uses to which the writers applied the stories, and the diverse relationships between the medieval texts and the expressions of the same tales in the "classic" fairy tale collections of the nineteenth century. In so doing, Ziolkowski explores stories that survive in both versions associated with, on the one hand, such standards of the nineteenth-century fairy tale as the Brothers Grimm, Hans Christian Andersen, and Carlo Collodi and, on the other, medieval Latin, demonstrating that the literary fairy tale owes a great debt to the Latin literature of the medieval period.

}, url = {https://www.press.umich.edu/2688346/fairy_tales_from_before_fairy_tales}, author = {Jan M. Ziolkowski} } @book {661511, title = {Nota Bene: Reading Classics and Writing Melodies in the Early Middle Ages}, year = {2007}, publisher = {Brepols}, organization = {Brepols}, address = {Turnhout}, abstract = {

Nota Bene explores a little-known juxtaposition of verbal text and musical notation in the Middle Ages. This particular intersection deserves attention from those interested in music, the reception of classical Latin literature, the history of education, and the development of punctuation.

Between the late tenth century and the late twelfth century, the musical notation known as neumes was provided in dozens of manuscripts for, among other texts, a number of Horace{\textquoteright}s Odes as well as for sections of epics by Lucan, Statius, and Vergil. These materials constitute a paradoxical corpus of "classical poems in plainchant" that complicates our views of both how students learned Latin and what was being sung in an era most often associated with Gregorian chant. The book wrestles first with the literary-historical puzzle of why certain passages and not others were "neumed" and later with the ethnomusicological riddles of how, where, when, and by whom the passages were sung.

}, url = {http://www.brepols.net/Pages/ShowProduct.aspx?prod_id=IS-9782503525341-1}, author = {Jan M. Ziolkowski} } @inbook {680846, title = {Seeing Seneca Whole?}, booktitle = {Seeing Seneca Whole: Perspectives on Philosophy, Poetry and Politics}, year = {2006}, pages = {1{\textendash}17}, publisher = {Brill}, organization = {Brill}, address = {Leiden}, author = {Richard J. Tarrant}, editor = {Katharina Volk and Gareth D. Williams} } @book {661346, title = {Amphoteroglossia: A Poetics of the Twelfth-Century Medieval Greek Novel}, year = {2006}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, organization = {Harvard University Press}, address = {Washington, DC and Cambridge, MA}, abstract = {

This work offers the first systematic and interdisciplinary study of the poetics of the twelfth-century medieval Greek novel. This book investigates the complex ways in which rhetorical theory and practice constructed the overarching cultural aesthetics that conditioned the production and reception of the genre of the novel in twelfth-century Byzantine society. By examining the indigenous rhetorical concept of amphoteroglossia, this book probes unexplored aspects of the re-inscription of inherited allegorical, comic, and rhetorical modes in the Komnenian novels, and offers new methodological directions for the study of Byzantine secular literature in its cultural complexities. The creative re-appropriation of the established generic conventions of the ancient Greek novel by the medieval Greek novelists, it is argued in this wide-ranging study, has invested these works with a dynamic dialogism. In this book,\ Roilos\ shows that this interdiscursivity functions on two pivotal axes: on the paradigmatic axis of previously sanctioned ancient Greek and--less evidently but equally significantly--Christian literature, and on the syntagmatic axis of allusions to the broader twelfth-century Byzantine cultural context.

}, url = {http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674017917}, author = {Panagiotis Roilos} } @book {661186, title = {Martial: Liber Spectaculorum}, year = {2006}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, organization = {Oxford University Press}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {

This book is the first full-scale edition of the so-called Liber spectaculorum by Martial. A comprehensive introduction addresses the role of epigram in commemorating monuments and occasions, the connection between spectacle and imperial panegyric in Martial{\textquoteright}s oeuvre, characteristics of the collection, possible circumstances of composition and {\textquoteright}publication{\textquoteright}, transmission of the text, and related issues. Each epigram is followed by an apparatus criticus, an English translation, and a detailed commentary on linguistic, literary, and historical matters, adducing extensive evidence from epigraphy and art as well as literary sources. The book is accompanied by four concordances, five tables, two maps, 30 plates, and an appendix.

}, url = {http://ukcatalogue.oup.com/product/9780198144816.do}, author = {Kathleen M. Coleman} } @book {721731, title = {Greek Ritual Poetics}, year = {2005}, publisher = {Center for Hellenic Studies, Trustees for Harvard University}, organization = {Center for Hellenic Studies, Trustees for Harvard University}, address = {Washington, DC}, abstract = {

Investigating ritual in Greece from cross-disciplinary and transhistorical perspectives,\ Greek Ritual Poetics\ offers novel readings of the pivotal role of ritual in Greek traditions by exploring a broad spectrum of texts, art, and social practices. This collection of essays written by an international group of leading scholars in a number of disciplines presents a variety of methodological approaches to secular and religious rituals, and to the narrative and conceptual strategies of their reenactment and manipulation in literary, pictorial, and social discourses. Addressing understudied aspects of Greek ritual and societies, this book will prove significant for classicists, anthropologists, Byzantinists, art historians, neohellenists, and comparatists interested in the interaction between ritual, aesthetics, and cultural communicative systems.

}, url = {http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674017924}, editor = {Dimitrios Yatromanolakis and Panagiotis Roilos} } @book {721741, title = {Προς μία τελετουργική ποιητική}, year = {2005}, publisher = {Ekdoseis Alexandreia}, organization = {Ekdoseis Alexandreia}, address = {Athens}, abstract = {

Greek edition of Towards a Ritual Poetics, translated by Emmanuel Skouras, and\ including a Preface by Marcel Detienne.

}, url = {http://alexandria-publ.gr/shop/towards-a-ritual-poetics/}, author = {Panagiotis Roilos and Dimitrios Yatromanolakis} } @article {680856, title = {Roads Not Taken: Untold Stories in Ovid{\textquoteright}s Metamorphoses}, journal = {Materiali e discussioni per l{\textquoteright}analisi dei testi classici}, volume = {54}, year = {2005}, pages = {65{\textendash}89}, author = {Richard J. Tarrant} } @book {661366, title = {Hippocrates On Ancient Medicine: Translated with Introduction and Commentary}, year = {2005}, publisher = {Brill}, organization = {Brill}, address = {Leiden}, abstract = {

The Hippocratic treatise\ On Ancient Medicine, a key text in the history of early Greek thought, mounts a highly coherent attack on the attempt to base medical practice on principles drawn from natural philosophy. This volume presents an up-to-date Greek text of\ On Ancient Medicine, a new English translation, and a detailed commentary that focuses on questions of medical and scientific method; the introduction sets out a new approach to the problem of the work{\textquoteright}s relationship to its intellectual context and addresses the contentious issues of its date, authorship, and reception. The book will be of interest to scholars of ancient medicine and ancient philosophy, as well as anyone concerned with the history of science and scientific method in antiquity.

}, url = {https://brill.com/view/title/11064}, author = {Mark J. Schiefsky} } @book {661201, title = {Romulus{\textquoteright} Asylum: Roman Identities from the Age of Alexander to the Age of Hadrian}, year = {2005}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, organization = {Oxford University Press}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {

Modern treatments of Rome have projected in highly emotive terms the perceived problems, or the aspirations, of the present: {\textquoteright}race-mixture{\textquoteright} has been blamed for the collapse of the Roman empire; more recently, Rome and Roman society have been depicted as {\textquoteright}multicultural{\textquoteright}. Moving beyond these and beyond more traditional, juridical approaches to Roman identity, Emma Dench focuses on ancient modes of thinking about selves and relationships with other peoples, including descent-myths, history, and ethnographies. She explores the relative importance of sometimes closely interconnected categories of blood descent, language, culture and clothes, and territoriality. Rome{\textquoteright}s creation of a distinctive imperial shape is understood in the context of the broader ancient Mediterranean world within which the Romans self-consciously situated themselves, and whose modes of thought they appropriated and transformed.

}, url = {http://ukcatalogue.oup.com/product/9780198150510.do}, author = {Emma Dench} } @article {680851, title = {The Last Book of the Aeneid}, journal = {Syllecta Classica}, volume = {15}, year = {2004}, pages = {103{\textendash}129}, author = {Richard J. Tarrant} } @book {680646, title = {A Linguistic Commentary on Livius Andronicus}, year = {2004}, publisher = {Routledge}, organization = {Routledge}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

As the oldest literary Latin preserved in any quantity, the language of Livius shows many features of linguistic interest and raises intriguing questions of phonolgy, morphology and syntax.

}, url = {https://www.routledge.com/products/9780415861434}, author = {Ivy J. Livingston} } @inbook {680526, title = {Samnites in English: the legacy of E. Togo Salmon in the English speaking world}, booktitle = {Samnium. Settlement and cultural change. The proceedings of the third E. Togo Salmon conference on Roman studies}, year = {2004}, pages = {7-22}, publisher = {Center for Old World Archaeology and Art }, organization = {Center for Old World Archaeology and Art }, address = {Providence, RI}, author = {Emma Dench}, editor = {H. Jones} } @book {661416, title = {P. Ovidi Nasonis Metamorphoses (Oxford Classical Texts)}, year = {2004}, publisher = {Clarendon Press}, organization = {Clarendon Press}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {

For this edition of the\ Metamorphoses\ R. J. Tarrant has freshly collated the oldest fragments and manuscripts and has drawn more fully than previous editors on the twelfth-century manuscripts, the earliest extant witnesses to many potentially original readings. He has also given more scope to conjecture than other recent editors, and has been readier than his predecessors to identify certain verses as interpolated. This edition will be indispensable for future study of Ovid{\textquoteright}s greatest work.

}, url = {https://global.oup.com/academic/product/metamorphoses-9780198146667?prevSortField=1\&facet_narrowbyprice_facet=50to100\&facet_narrowbybinding_facet=Hardcover\&facet_narrowbytype_facet=Books\%20for\%20Courses\&type=listing\&lang=en\&cc=us\&prevNumResPerPage=20}, editor = {Richard Tarrant} } @book {661221, title = {Homer{\textquoteright}s Text and Language}, year = {2004}, publisher = {University of Illinois Press}, organization = {University of Illinois Press}, address = {Chicago, IL}, abstract = {

As Homer remains an indispensable figure in the canons of world literature, interpreting the Homeric text is a challenging and high stakes enterprise. There are untold numbers of variations, imitations, alternate translations, and adaptations of the Iliad and Odyssey, making it difficult to establish what, exactly, the epics were. Gregory Nagy{\textquoteright}s essays have one central aim: to show how the text and language of Homer derive from an oral poetic system.

In Homeric studies, there has been an ongoing debate centering on different ways to establish the text of Homer and the different ways to appreciate the poetry created in the language of Homer. Gregory Nagy, a lifelong Homer scholar, takes a stand in the midst of this debate. He presents an overview of millennia of scholarly engagement with Homer{\textquoteright}s poetry, shows the different editorial principles that have been applied to the texts, and evaluates their impact.

}, url = {https://www.press.uillinois.edu/books/?id=c029837}, author = {Gregory Nagy} } @book {721746, title = {Towards a Ritual Poetics}, year = {2003}, publisher = {Foundation of the Hellenic World}, organization = {Foundation of the Hellenic World}, address = {Athens}, abstract = {

The book Towards a Ritual Poetics by Dimitrios Yatromanolakis, Assistant Professor of Classical Studies at John Hopkins University, and Panagiotis Roilos, Assistant Professor of Modern Greek Studies at Harvard University, is an interdisciplinary study regarding the incorporation of the rituals in cultural expression at different moments of Hellenic history. Three representative and slightly researched cases are examined, in a wide time framework, through which a methodological model is proposed, the notion of ritual poetics, aiming at comparing different aspects between rituals and socio-political expression.

}, url = {http://www.fhw.gr/publications/index.php?lang=2\&view=prod\&ekd_id=30}, author = {Dimitrios Yatromanolakis and Panagiotis Roilos} } @inbook {680551, title = {Beyond Greeks and Barbarians: Italy and Sicily in the Hellenistic Age}, booktitle = {Companion to the Hellenistic World}, year = {2003}, pages = {294-310}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishing}, organization = {Blackwell Publishing}, address = {Oxford}, author = {Emma Dench}, editor = {A. Erskine} } @inbook {680541, title = {Domination}, booktitle = {Cambridge Illustrated History of the Roman World}, year = {2003}, pages = {108-137}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, organization = {Cambridge University Press}, address = {Cambridge}, author = {Emma Dench}, editor = {G. Woolf} } @book {661231, title = {Homeric Responses}, year = {2003}, publisher = {University of Texas Press}, organization = {University of Texas Press}, address = {Austin, TX}, abstract = {

The Homeric Iliad and Odyssey are among the world{\textquoteright}s foremost epics. Yet, millennia after their composition, basic questions remain about them. Who was Homer{\textemdash}a real or an ideal poet? When were the poems composed{\textemdash}at a single point in time, or over centuries of composition and performance? And how were the poems committed to writing? These uncertainties have been known as The Homeric Question, and many scholars, including Gregory Nagy, have sought to solve it.

In Homeric Responses, Nagy presents a series of essays that further elaborate his theories regarding the oral composition and evolution of the Homeric epics. Building on his previous work in Homeric Questions and Poetry as Performance: Homer and Beyond and responding to some of his critics, he examines such issues as the importance of performance and the interaction between audience and poet in shaping the poetry; the role of the rhapsode (the performer of the poems) in the composition and transmission of the poetry; the "irreversible mistakes" and cross-references in the Iliad and Odyssey as evidences of artistic creativity; and the Iliadic description of the shield of Achilles as a pointer to the world outside the poem, the polis of the audience.

}, url = {https://utpress.utexas.edu/9780292705548/homeric-responses/}, author = {Gregory Nagy} } @book {661256, title = {Plato{\textquoteright}s Rhapsody and Homer{\textquoteright}s Music: The Poetics of the Panathenaic Festival in Classical Athens}, year = {2002}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, organization = {Harvard University Press}, address = {Washington, DC and Cambridge, MA}, abstract = {

The festival of the Panathenaia, held in Athens every summer to celebrate the birthday of the city{\textquoteright}s goddess, Athena, was the setting for performances of the Homeric Iliad and Odyssey by professional reciters or {\textquotedblleft}rhapsodes.{\textquotedblright} The works of Plato are our main surviving source of information about these performances. Through his references, a crucial phase in the history of the Homeric tradition can be reconstructed. Through Plato{\textquoteright}s eyes, the {\textquotedblleft}staging{\textquotedblright} of Homer in classical Athens can once again become a virtual reality.

This book examines the overall testimony of Plato as an expert about the cultural legacy of these Homeric performances. Plato{\textquoteright}s fine ear for language{\textemdash}in this case the technical language of high-class artisans like rhapsodes{\textemdash}picks up on a variety of authentic expressions that echo the talk of rhapsodes as they once practiced their art.

Highlighted among the works of Plato are the Ion, the Timaeus, and the Critias. Some experts who study the Timaeus have suggested that Plato must have intended this masterpiece, described by his characters as a humnos, to be a tribute to Athena. The metaphor of weaving, implicit in humnos and explicit in the peplos or robe that was offered to the goddess at the Panathenaia, applies also to Homeric poetry: it too was pictured as a humnos, destined for eternal re-weaving on the festive occasion of Athena{\textquoteright}s eternally self-renewing birthday.

}, url = {http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674009639}, author = {Gregory Nagy} } @book {661471, title = {Virgil and the Augustan Reception}, year = {2001}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, organization = {Cambridge University Press}, address = {Cambridge}, abstract = {

This book examines the ideological reception of Virgil at specific moments in the past two millennia. It focuses on the emperor Augustus in the poetry of Virgil, detects in the poets and grammarians of antiquity pro- and anti-Augustan readings, studies Dryden{\textquoteright}s 1697 Royalist translation, and also naive American translation. It scrutinizes nineteenth-century philology{\textquoteright}s rewriting or excision of troubling readings, and covers readings by both supporters and opponents of fascism and National Socialism. Finally it examines how successive ages have made the Aeneid conform to their upbeat expectations of this poet.

}, url = {http://www.cambridge.org/us/academic/subjects/classical-studies/classical-literature/virgil-and-augustan-reception}, author = {Richard F. Thomas} } @audiovisual {681201, title = {Homer, Iliad 1.15 (synezesis), read in Greek by Gregory Nagy}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {681341, title = {Homer, Iliad 18.478{\textendash}519, read in Greek by Gregory Nagy}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {681181, title = {Homer, Iliad 1.9 (optional caesura), read in Greek by Gregory Nagy}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {681371, title = {Homer, Iliad 24.468{\textendash}516, read in Greek by Gregory Nagy}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {681461, title = {Homer, Iliad 18.481 and 18.505 (two-syllable words with no stress), read in Greek by Gregory Nagy}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {680596, title = {Homer, Iliad 1 (variant opening) , read in Greek by Gregory Nagy}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {680531, title = {Homer, Iliad 1.1 (variant), read in Greek by Gregory Nagy}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {680516, title = {Homer, Iliad 1.1{\textendash}16 , read in Greek by Gregory Nagy}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {680741, title = {Homer, Iliad 9.307{\textendash}429, read in Greek by Gregory Nagy}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {665371, title = {Virgil, Aeneid 1.195{\textendash}207 (Dryden{\textquoteright}s translation) read by Kathleen M. Coleman}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {665411, title = {Virgil, Aeneid 1.586{\textendash}610 (Dryden{\textquoteright}s translation), read by Kathleen M. Coleman}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {665476, title = {Virgil, Aeneid 4.331{\textendash}361 (Dryden{\textquoteright}s translation) read by Kathleen M. Coleman}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {665481, title = {Virgil, Aeneid 6.124{\textendash}141 (Dryden{\textquoteright}s translation), read by Kathleen M. Coleman}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {665486, title = {Virgil, Aeneid 6.450{\textendash}474 (Dryden{\textquoteright}s translation), read by Kathleen M. Coleman}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {665141, title = {Statius 5.4 "To Sleep": An English Rendition, by Kathleen M. Coleman}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {665156, title = {Virgil, Aeneid 1.1{\textendash}11 (Dryden{\textquoteright}s translation), read by Kathleen M. Coleman}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {661636, title = {Virgil, Aeneid 4.331{\textendash}361, read in Latin by Wendell Clausen}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {661656, title = {Virgil, Aeneid 6.124{\textendash}141, read in Latin by Wendell Clausen}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {661771, title = {Virgil, Aeneid 6.185{\textendash}204, read in Latin by Wendell Clausen}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {661831, title = {Virgil, Aeneid 6.450{\textendash}474, read in Latin by Wendell Clausen}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {660901, title = {Homer, Iliad 6.466{\textendash}475, read in Greek by Carolyn Higbie}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {660941, title = {Statius, Silvae 5.4 ("Ode to Sleep"), read in Latin by Kathleen M. Coleman}, year = {1997}, note = {}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA}, abstract = {} } @audiovisual {661126, title = {Virgil, Aeneid 1.195{\textendash}207, read in Latin by Wendell Clausen}, year = {1997} } @audiovisual {661171, title = {Virgil, Aeneid 1.588{\textendash}610, read in Latin by Wendell Clausen}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {656246, title = {Propertius 1.21, read in Latin by Kathleen M. Coleman}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {656271, title = {Propertius 1.22, read in Latin by Kathleen M. Coleman}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {649086, title = {Homer, Iliad 1.457{\textendash}463, read in Greek by Carolyn Higbie}, year = {1997} } @audiovisual {636251, title = {Cicero, In Catilinam I (introduction), read in Latin by Richard J. Tarrant}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {636261, title = {Virgil, Aeneid 1.1{\textendash}11, read in Latin by Wendell Clausen}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {635466, title = {Catullus 5, read in English by Richard J. Tarrant}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {631516, title = {Catullus 5, read in Latin by Richard J. Tarrant}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {631536, title = {Catullus 5, read in Latin by Wendell Clausen}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {635566, title = {John Donne{\textquoteright}s "The Sun Rising" (adapted from Ovid Amores 1.13), read by Kathleen M. Coleman}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {631386, title = {Ovid, Amores 1.13, read in Latin by Kathleen M. Coleman}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Department of the Classics, Harvard University}, address = {Cambridge, MA} } @audiovisual {661016, title = {Virgil, Aeneid 12.926{\textendash}952, read in Latin by Richard F. Thomas}, year = {1995} }