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Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 112 includes Olga Levaniouk, ¿The Dreams of Bar¿in and Penelope¿; Paul K. Hosle, ¿Bacchylides¿ Theseus and Vergil¿s Aristaeus¿; Vayos Liapis, ¿Arion and the Dolphin: Apollo Delphinios and Maritime Networks in Herodotus¿; and other new essays on Greek and Roman Classics.
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 110 includes 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"; and other essays.
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 109 includes Jose Marcos Macedo's "Zeus as (Rider of) Thunderbolt"; Henry Spelman's "Borrowing Sappho's Napkins"; Florence Klein's "Vergil's 'Posidippeanism'?"; Benjamin Victor's "Four Passages in Propertius' Last Book of Elegies"; and other essays.
This volume of nineteen articles offers: Marianne Palmer Bonz, "The Jewish Donor Inscriptions from Aphrodisias: Are They Both Third-Century, and Who Are the Theosebeis?"; Timothy W. Boyd, "Where Ion Stood, What Ion Sang"; and C. O. Brink, "Can Tacitus' Dialogus Be Dated? Evidence and Historical Conclusions."
The twenty articles in Volume 103 include: Renaud Gagne, "Winds and Ancestors: The Physika of Orpheus"; Jonas Grethlein, "The Poetics of the Bath in the Iliad"; Daniel Turkeltaub, "Perceiving Iliadic Gods"; Ruth Scodel, "The Gods' Visit to the Ethiopians in Iliad 1"; and Alberto Bernabe, "The Derveni Theogony: Many Questions and Some Answers."
The twenty articles in Volume 102 include: Mika Kajava, "Hestia: Hearth, Goddess, and Cult"; Jonathan Burgess, "Untrustworthy Apollo and the Destiny of Achilles: Iliad 24.55-63"; Anna Bonifazi, "Relative Pronouns and Memory: Pindar beyond Syntax"; and William Race, "Pindar's Olympian 11 Re-Visited Post-Bundy."
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 108 includes Christopher P. Jones, "The Greek Letters Ascribed to Brutus"; Benjamin Garstad, "Rome in the Alexander Romance"; James N. Adams, "The Latin of the Magerius (Smirat) Mosaic"; Lucia Floridi, "The Construction of a Homoerotic Discourse in the Epigrams of Ausonius"; and other essays.
This volume includes: Lucia Athanassaki, "Transformations of Colonial Disruption into Narrative Continuity in Pindar's Epinician Odes"; Christina Clark, "Minos' Touch and Theseus' Glare: Gestures in Bakkhylides 17"; James J. Clauss, "Once upon a Time on Cos: A Banquet with Pan on the Side in Theocritus Idyll 7"; and many others.
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 107 includes "Alcman's Nightscapes (Frs. 89 and 90 PMGF)" by Felix Budelmann; "Epicharmus, Tisias, and the Early History of Rhetoric" by Wilfred Major; "The Literary and Stylistic Qualities of a Plinian Letter" by Thomas Keeline; and other essays.
This volume on classical philology includes, among others, the following contributions: Francis Cairns, "Virgil Eclogue 1.1-2: A literary Program?"; John Hunt, "Readings in Apollonius of Tyre"; Alexander Jones, "Geminus and the Isia"; and Peter Knox "Lucretius on the Narrow Road".
This volume of 16 essays includes, among others, "Sequence and Simultaneity in Iliad N, , and O," by Cedric H. Whitman and Ruth Scodel; "Two Inscriptions from Aphrodisias," by Christopher Jones; and "The Authenticity of the Letter of Sappho to Phaon (Heroides XV)," by R. J. Tarrant.
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