Pseudo-intellectualism and melancholy: The poetics of black bile in Lucian’s Lexiphanes (original ) (raw )Of Pleasure and Sorrow: Two Modern Greek Epicurean Poems
Yannis Stamos
Diogenes, 2014
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The Philosopher’s Tongue: Synaxaria between History and Literature. With an Excursus on the Recension M of the Synaxarion of Constantinople and an Edition of BHG 2371n
Stratis Papaioannou
L'histoire comme elle se présentait dans l'hagiographie byzantine et médiévale, 2022
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“Anger, Bile, and the Poet’s Body in the Archilochean Tradition,” in Greek Iambos and Elegy: New Approaches, C. Carey and L. Swift, eds. Oxford University Press (2015) 310-339.
Julia Nelson Hawkins
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A Few Thoughts on the Influence of Classical and Byzantine Poetry on the Profane Poems of Ioannes Mauropous
Claudio De Stefani
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The Peasant's Banquet: Gluttony on the Move in the Greek Poetic Consciousness
Evan I Levine
Eisodos, 2015
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“Wait a Moment, Phantasia”: Ekphrastic Interference in Seneca and Epictetus
Shadi Bartsch
Classical Philology, 2007
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Ate in the Homeric Poems
Douglas Cairns
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Drunk with Wisdom: Metaphors of Ecstasy in Plato’s Symposium and Lucian of Samosata
Eva Anagnostou-Laoutides
Religions
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Verbal Performances in Lucian’s Symposium
Athanassios Vergados
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Lysias Or. 1: Two Critical Notes
Kirk Sanders
Philologus, 2008
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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
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“A Proto-Epyllion? The Pseudo-Hesiodic Shield and The Poetics of Deferral”, in M. Baumbach and S. Bär edd., Brill’s Companion to Greek and Latin Epyllion and Its Reception (Leiden 2012) 177-97
Peter Bing
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Eumolpus' Poetics (Petr. Sat. 118): Problems of Interpretation and Train of Thought
Denis Keier
Philologia classica, 2021
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Poetic Language and Euripides' Medea
Patrick James
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Atalante philandros: teasing out satyric innuendo (Sophocles, Fr. 1111 Radt = Hermogenes, On Ideas 2.5)
Rebecca Laemmle (Lämmle)
The Classical Quarterly , 2019
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Thoughts Shot Forth in Vain (Eur. Hecuba 599-602)
Tatiana Kostyleva
Philologia classica, 2019
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‘What Harbour Will There Not Be for Your Cries?’ (420) and Other Textual Problems in Sophocles’ Oedipvs Tyrannvs
David Kovacs
The Classical Quarterly
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Bodily Rhetoric in Sophocles’ Trachiniae
Melissa Mueller
Tragic Rhetoric: The Rhetorical Dimensions of Greek Tragedy, edited by M.Carmen Encinas Reguero and M.Quijada Sagredo, 2021
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Review of Ahrensdorf, P., Pangle, T. trans. Sophocles. The Theban Plays: Oedipus the Tyrant, Oedipus at Colonus, Antigone
Sarah Nooter
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An epic party? Sober thoughts on νηφέμεν (Archil. fr. 4 W.)
Alexander Nikolaev
Philologus 58 (2014) 10–25
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A Rhetorical Declamation of Sophonias the Monk and Paraphrast
Denis M Searby
Byzantinische Zeitschrift, 2011
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Amnestia for Eurydamas of Phthiotic Thebes? A New Interpretation of SEG 53, 565, ZEITSCHRIFT FÜR PAPYROLOGIE UND EPIGRAPHIK 172 (2010) 87–92
Jacek Rzepka
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On Sophocles, Oedipus Rex 258–264
mauro agosto
ATHENS JOURNAL OF PHILOLOGY
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Shame, Pleasure, and Honor in Phaedra's Great Speech (Euripides, Hippolytus 375-87)
David Kovacs
The American Journal of Philology, 1980
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Oedipus' Lament: Waking and Refashioning the Traumatic Past in Sophocles' Oedipus at Colonus
Laurialan Reitzammer
In Emotional Trauma in Greece and Rome: Representations and Reactions, A. Karanika and L. Panoussi, eds.,, 2020
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‘Two Puzzling Phrases at Soph. Ichn. 179 & 182 (P.Oxy. IX 1174, Col. VII 15 and 18)’, ZPE 191 (2014), 36-38
Andreas P . Antonopoulos
2014
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‘On This Earth That is Purgatory’: The Language of Purgatory in “Eumaeus”
Thomas M Newman
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A fragment of a Greek novel?: P3. Med. 36 revisited
María Paz López Martínez
M. Capasso-P. Davoli-N. Pellé (eds.), Proceedings of the 29th International Congress of Papyrology, Lecce 28 July-3 August 2019, I-II, Lecce 2022, pp. 648-660. En colaboración con C. Ruíz Montero., 2022
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Old Tunes, New Tones: (Re-)Defining the “Phanariot Verses” of the Greek Enlightenment
Julia Chatzipanagioti-Sangmeister
Historical Review, 2013
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Review of B. Martin, Harmful Interaction Between the Living and the Dead in Greek Tragedy (Liverpool, 2020), Journal of Hellenic Studies Vol. 142 (2022): 356-358
Rosa Andújar
Journal of Hellenic Studies, 2022
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The wise Homer and his erudite commentator: Eustathios’ imagery in the proem of the Parekbolai on the Iliad. In: BMGS 41.1 (2017), pp. 30-44.
Baukje van den Berg
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VERSES ATTRIBUTED TO THE TELEGONY (The Classical Quarterly)
Christos Tsagalis
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All of a Sudden: The Role of Ἐξαίφνης in Plato's Dialogues
Joseph Cimakasky
2014
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'The Lysis In Theodectes' Lynceus: Remarks on Arist. Poet. 11, 1452a 27-29 and 18, 1455b 29-32', QUCC 87.3 (2007) 119-25
Ioanna Karamanou
Quaderni urbinati di cultura classica, 2007
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Review of Nancy Worman, Abusive Mouths in Classical Athens (Mnemosyne 64 [2011] 314-17)
Stephen Halliwell
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