Review of Imagining Community in Late Classical Athens and the Early Roman Empire, by D.S. Richter, Oxford, 2011. Classical Review 63.1 (2013): 90-92. (original) (raw)

Van Hoof L. (2014) ‘Lobbying through Literature: Libanius, For the Teachers (Oration 31)’. In L. Van Hoof and P. Van Nuffelen (eds.) Literature and Society in the Fourth Century A.D.: Performing Paideia, Constructing the Present, Presenting the Self. Leiden: Brill, 68-82.

Lieve Van Hoof

View PDFchevron_right

Van Hoof L. (2010) ‘Greek Rhetoric and the Later Roman Empire: The “Bubble” of the “Third Sophistic”’. L’antiquité tardive 18: 211-224.

Lieve Van Hoof

View PDFchevron_right

Van Hoof L. (2013) ‘Performing Paideia: Literature as an Instrument for Social Promotion in the Fourth Century A.D.’. Classical Quarterly 63: 387-406. [WOS:000318305300023]

Lieve Van Hoof

View PDFchevron_right

Greek rhetoric and the later Roman empire. The bubble of the ‘third sophistic’

Lieve Van Hoof

Antiquité Tardive, 2010

View PDFchevron_right

The Transforming Use of an Oratorical Corpus. The Case of Dinarchus, Annual Meeting for Postgraduates in Ancient Literature, University of Liverpool, 22nd-23rd June 2017 (Abstract & Handout)

Antonio Iacoviello

View PDFchevron_right

Papaioannou, Sophia, Andreas Serafim and Beatrice Da Vela (edd.). The theatre of justice: aspects of performance in Greco-Roman oratory and rhetoric. Mnemosyne supplements. Monographs on Greek and Latin language and literature, 403. Leiden; Boston: Brill, 2017. xi, 355 p. ISBN 9789004334649.

Guy Westwood, Sophia Papaioannou, Edward Harris, Andreas Serafim

"Papaioannou, Sophia, Andreas Serafim, and Beatrice da Vela (eds.). Theatre of Justice: Aspects of Performance in Greco-Roman Oratory and Rhetoric (Under Contract, Brill)

View PDFchevron_right

2014 L. Van Hoof and P. Van Nuffelen, eds., Literature and Society in the Fourth Century A.D.: Performing Paideia, Constructing the Present, Presenting the Self (Mnemosyne Supplements 373), Brill, Leiden, 2014.

Peter Van Nuffelen

View PDFchevron_right

Rhetoric, Poetry and the agelaioi sophistai: The innovative Isocrates, in: A. Markantonatos/E. Volonaki (eds.), Poet and Orator. A Symbiotic Relationship in Democratic Athens, Trends in Classics 74, Berlin/Boston 2019, 305-327

Evangelos Alexiou

View PDFchevron_right

Literary History in Imperial Greece. Dionysius’ On Ancient Orators, Plutarch’s On the Oracles of the Pythia, Philostratus’ Lives of the Sophists

Lawrence Kim

J. Grethlein and A. Rengakos, eds. Griechische Literaturgeschichtsschreibung. Traditionen, Probleme und Konzepte, 213-247. Berlin and Boston, 2017

View PDFchevron_right

Tradition and Innovation in Ancient Greek Oratory of the Roman Empire: History of the Problem

Светлана Межерицкая

Scrinium. Journal of Patrology and Critical Hagiography, 2022

View PDFchevron_right

Review of A. Markantonatos (ed.) Brill's Companion to Sophocles. Pp. xxii + 737, ills. Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2012. Cased, €180, US\$247. ISBN: 978-90-04-18492-3.

Marco Catrambone

2014

View PDFchevron_right

Lucian and Archilochus, or: How to Make Use of the Ancient Iambographers in the Context of the Second Sophistic, in: P. J. Finglass – C. Collard – N. J. Richardson (edd.), Hesperos. Studies in Ancient Greek Poetry Presented to M. L. West on his Seventieth Birthday, Oxford 2007, 132-142

Heinz-Günther Nesselrath

View PDFchevron_right

Review of Desmond 'Philosopher-Kings of Antiquity'

Sean McConnell

View PDFchevron_right

GREEK IMPERIAL RHETORS AND SOPHISTS. Review of JANISZEWSKI (P.), STEBNICKA (K.), SZABAT (E.), Prosopography of Greek Rhetors and Sophists of the Roman Empire. Classical Review FirstView January 2016; to be published in CR 66.1 (2016). Copyright The Classical Association 2016.

William Guast

View PDFchevron_right

Contemplating Athens -- The Allure of Empire, Eros, and Socratic Philosophy in Plato and Xenophon (Review Article)

Dustin Gish

Polis: The Journal for Greek Political Thought, Vol. 28/1 (2008)

View PDFchevron_right

J. Billings, The Philosophical Stage. Drama and Dialectic in Classical Athens. Princeton University Press, 2021. In: Classical World 115/1, 2021, 93-94

Anna Novokhatko

Classical World, 2021

View PDFchevron_right

Richard L. Hunter, Casper C. de Jonge (ed.), Dionysius of Halicarnassus and Augustan Rome: Rhetoric, Criticism and Historiography. Greek culture in the Roman world. Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press, 2019.

Beatrice Poletti

Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2019.12.14, 2019

View PDFchevron_right

Verbal Performances in Lucian’s Symposium

Athanassios Vergados

View PDFchevron_right

Review of Sophocles and the Greek Tragic Tradition, Simon Goldhill and Edith Hall (eds.), Cambridge University Press, 2009

Eric Dugdale

View PDFchevron_right

A. CARUSO, ‘Lecturing in Athens. Investigation on the ‘Topography’ of the Second Sophistic: Αn Overview’.

Ada Caruso

Proceedings of the International Conference: What’s new in Roman Greece (Athens, National Hellenic Research Foundation, 8th-10th October 2015), Series Meletemata 80, Athens 2018: 303-315, 2018

View PDFchevron_right

An Imperial Anti-sublime: Aristides' Roman Oration

Susan Jarratt

View PDFchevron_right

William J. Dominik, ‘Performance Politics and Language in Imperial Literature’, review of S. Bartsch, Actors in the Audience: Theatricality and Doublespeak from Nero to Hadrian (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press 1994), Scholia 5 (1996) 131–135.

William J Dominik

View PDFchevron_right

Book Review di R. Lauriola, Kyriakos N. Demetriou (edd.), Brill's Companion to the Reception of Sophocles, Leiden - Boston 2017, «Eisodos» 2018.2, 56-62.

Sonia Francisetti Brolin

View PDFchevron_right

Inscribing Orpheus: Ovid and the Invention of a Greco-Roman Corpus

Elizabeth Young

View PDFchevron_right

The Roman World of Cicero's De Oratore (review)

Alison Keith

Classical World, 2006

View PDFchevron_right

Review of A. F. Basson and W. J. Dominik (edd.), Literature, Art, History: Studies on Classical Antiquity and Tradition in Honour of W. J. Henderson. Peter Lang: Frankfurt am Main, 2003 in Scholia ns 14 (2005), 14

Alex Nice

Scholia, 2005

View PDFchevron_right

Review of West, M.L., Hellenica. Selected Papers on Greek Literature and Thought. Volume II: Lyric and Drama. Oxford.

Thomas Coward

Classical Review 64.2

View PDFchevron_right

Pindarum quisquis studet aemulari: Greek and Roman civic performance contexts (Pindar’s Fourth and Fifth Pythians and Horace’s Odes 4.2)

Lucia Athanassaki

View PDFchevron_right

Richard Hunter and Casper C. de Jonge, eds., Dionysius of Halicarnassus and Augustan Rome: Rhetoric, Criticism, and Historiography. Greek Culture in the Roman World. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2019. Pp. ix+300.

Beatrice Poletti

History of Humanities 6.2, 684-686, 2021

View PDFchevron_right

Classical Review 2010 REVIEW of: GOLDHILL, S. (ed.) The End of Dialogue in Antiquity (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008)

Elton Barker

View PDFchevron_right

“From Ponêros to Pharmakos: Theater, Social Drama and Revolution at Athens, 428-404 BCE.” ClasAnt 21.2 (2002): 283-346.

David Rosenbloom

View PDFchevron_right

Elodie Paillard, Sophocles and his audience: 'Classical heroes' for the élite?, Classicum 45.1, 2019

Elodie Paillard

Classicum, 2019

View PDFchevron_right

‘Philippus in acie tutior quam in theatro fuit…’ (Curtius 9.6.25). The Macedonian Kings and Greek Theatre

Eoghan Moloney

E. Csapo, H.R. Goette, J.R. Green, & P.J. Wilson (eds.), Greek Theatre in the Fourth Century BC., 2014

View PDFchevron_right

Papaioannou, Sophia, Andreas Serafim and Beatrice da Vela. “Introduction”, in Sophia Papaioannou, Andreas Serafim, and Beatrice da Vela (eds.). Theatre of Justice: Aspects of Performance in Greco-Roman Oratory and Rhetoric (Brill 2017) 1-9

Andreas Serafim

View PDFchevron_right

Harvey Yunis ed. Written Texts and the Rise of Literate Culture in Ancient Greece (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003). CR 55.1 (2005) 308-11.

David Rosenbloom

View PDFchevron_right