As we purge the mailbox:
Day: March 11, 2013
Freebies from Classical Review
Ten of the “most popular reviews from the last five issues” available for free until the end of the month … check them out here: Classical Review
Freebies From the Latest ABSA
The latest Annual of the British School at Athens features three articles that are free until the end of April:
- Aitia, astronomy and the timing of the Arrhēphoria
Efrosyni Boutsikas and Robert Hannah
- The rediscovery of Greek Rosso Antico Marble and its use in Britain in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries
Peter Warren
- Mycenae revisited Part 4: Assessing the new data
O.T.P.K. Dickinson, Lena Papazoglou-Manioudaki, Argyro Nafplioti and A.J.N.W. Prag
… access them here: Annual of the British School at Athens
Nestor 40.2 Available
The Aegean bibliography:
TOC: Illinois Classical Studies 37 (2012)
[I've been thinking of regularly posting TOCs when they show up in my mailbox … not sure if it's necessary]
In the latest ICS:
Volume 37 (2012)
Aphrodite against Athena, Artemis, and Hestia: A Contest of erga
Polyxeni Strolonga, Franklin and Marshall College
Anthemus and Hippias: The Policy of Amyntas I
I. K. Xydopoulos, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
Cockfighting and the Iconography of Panathenaic Amphorae
Christopher Eckerman, University of Oregon
Plutarch on the Statesman: Stability, Change, and Regret
Laurel Fulkerson, Florida State University
Agesilaus and the Case of the Lame Dancer
David Sansone, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Performing the Patron-Client Relationship: Dramaturgical Cues in Horace’s Sermones 2.5
V. Sophie Klein, Boston University
Anchises Censorius: Vergil, Augustus, and the Census of 28 B.C.E.
Eric Kondratieff, Western Kentucky University
Why is Jason Climbing the Dragon? A Hidden Catasterism in Valerius Flaccus’ Argonautica 8
Cristiano Castelletti, Fribourg University
The Manipulation of Juno’s μῆνιϛ:A Note on Lucan’s BC 9.505 and Silius Italicus’ Pun. 12.284
Christopher Trinacty, Oberlin College
Imperial and Rhetorical Hunting in Pliny’s Panegyricus
Eleni Manolaraki, University of South Florida
"The Old Vines Are Buried Deep": Classical Motifs in John Frankenheimer’s Seconds
Sean Easton, Gustavus Adolphus College