Harvard Studies in Classical Philology

Citation:

Thomas, Richard F., ed. “Harvard Studies in Classical Philology,” 2020, 110.

Abstract:

Contents

Rachel Zelnick-Abramovitz "Half-Slave, Half-Free: Partial Manumission in the Ancient Near East and Beyond"
Chris Eckerman "I Weave a Variegated Headband: Metaphors for Song and Communication in Pindar’s Odes"
Alexander Nikolaev

"Through the Thicket: The Text of Pindar Olympian 6.54 (βατιᾶι τ’ ἐν ἀπειράτωι)"

Tobias Joho "Alcibiadean Mysteries and Longing for 'Absent' and Iinvisible Things' in Thucydides’ Account of the Sicilian Expedition"
Peter Barrios Lech "Menander and Catullus 8—Revisited: Menander Misoumenos and Catullus Carmen 8"
Katharina Volk "Varro and the Disorder of Things"
John T. Ramsey "The Date of the Consular Elections in 63 and the Inception of Catiline’s Conspiracy"
Brian D. McPhee "Erulus and the Moliones: An Iliadic Intertext in Aeneid 8.560–567"
Julia Scarborough "Eridanus in Elysium: The Underground Poetics of Virgil’s Violent River"
Geert Roskam "Providential Gods and Social Justice: An Ancient Controversy on Theonomous Ethics"
Rafael J. Gallé Cejudo "Progymnasmatic Alteration in the Love Letters of Philostratus"
Moysés Marcos "Callidior ceteris persecutor: The Emperor Julian and his Place in Christian Historiography"
Valéry Berlincourt "Dea Roma and Mars: Intertext and Structure in Claudian’s Panegyric for the Consuls Olybrius and Probinus"
Fabio Stok "What is the Spangenberg Fragment?"
George M. Hollenback "Do Not Steal Seed: An Overlooked Double Entendre in Oracula Sibyllina 2.71"
Paolo Pellegrini "R. A. B. Mynors and Harvard: An Unpublished Letter to E. K. Rand (10.10.1944)"

Publisher's Version

Last updated on 02/07/2022