Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 99
Volume 99 of Harvard Studies in Classical Philology includes the following contributions: Nancy Felson, “Vicarious Transport: Fictive Deixis in Pindar’s Pythian Four”; Douglas E. Gerber, “Pindar, Nemean Six: A Commentary”; Jennifer Clarke Kosak, “Therapeutic Touch and Sophokles’ Philoktetes”; F. S. Naiden, “The Prospective Imperfect in Herodotus”; Thomas A. Schmitz, “‘I Hate All Common Things’: The Reader’s Role in Callimachus’ Aetia Prologue”; Dimitrios Yatromanolakis, “Alexandrian Sappho Revisited”; John T. Ramsey, “Mithridates, the Banner of Ch’ih-yu, and the Comet Coin”; Alexander Jones, “Geminus and the Isia”; Benjamin Victor, “Further Remarks on the Andria of Terence”; Peter E. Knox, “Lucretius on the Narrow Road”; Francis Cairns, “Virgil Eclogue 1.1–2: A Literary Programme?”; Michael Hendry, “Epidaurus, Epirus,…Epidamnus? Vergil Georgics 3.44”; Charles Segal, “Ovid’s Meleager and the Greeks: Trials of Gender and Genre”; John Hunt, “Readings in Apollonius of Tyre”; Bernard Frischer et al., “Word-Order Transference between Latin and Greek: The Relative Position of the Accusative Direct Object and the Governing Verb in Cassius Dio and Other Greek and Roman Prose Authors”; and Craig Kallendorf, “Historicizing the ‘Harvard School’: Pessimistic Readings of the Aeneid in Italian Renaissance Scholarship.”
1101975782
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 99
Volume 99 of Harvard Studies in Classical Philology includes the following contributions: Nancy Felson, “Vicarious Transport: Fictive Deixis in Pindar’s Pythian Four”; Douglas E. Gerber, “Pindar, Nemean Six: A Commentary”; Jennifer Clarke Kosak, “Therapeutic Touch and Sophokles’ Philoktetes”; F. S. Naiden, “The Prospective Imperfect in Herodotus”; Thomas A. Schmitz, “‘I Hate All Common Things’: The Reader’s Role in Callimachus’ Aetia Prologue”; Dimitrios Yatromanolakis, “Alexandrian Sappho Revisited”; John T. Ramsey, “Mithridates, the Banner of Ch’ih-yu, and the Comet Coin”; Alexander Jones, “Geminus and the Isia”; Benjamin Victor, “Further Remarks on the Andria of Terence”; Peter E. Knox, “Lucretius on the Narrow Road”; Francis Cairns, “Virgil Eclogue 1.1–2: A Literary Programme?”; Michael Hendry, “Epidaurus, Epirus,…Epidamnus? Vergil Georgics 3.44”; Charles Segal, “Ovid’s Meleager and the Greeks: Trials of Gender and Genre”; John Hunt, “Readings in Apollonius of Tyre”; Bernard Frischer et al., “Word-Order Transference between Latin and Greek: The Relative Position of the Accusative Direct Object and the Governing Verb in Cassius Dio and Other Greek and Roman Prose Authors”; and Craig Kallendorf, “Historicizing the ‘Harvard School’: Pessimistic Readings of the Aeneid in Italian Renaissance Scholarship.”
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Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 99

Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 99

Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 99

Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 99

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Overview

Volume 99 of Harvard Studies in Classical Philology includes the following contributions: Nancy Felson, “Vicarious Transport: Fictive Deixis in Pindar’s Pythian Four”; Douglas E. Gerber, “Pindar, Nemean Six: A Commentary”; Jennifer Clarke Kosak, “Therapeutic Touch and Sophokles’ Philoktetes”; F. S. Naiden, “The Prospective Imperfect in Herodotus”; Thomas A. Schmitz, “‘I Hate All Common Things’: The Reader’s Role in Callimachus’ Aetia Prologue”; Dimitrios Yatromanolakis, “Alexandrian Sappho Revisited”; John T. Ramsey, “Mithridates, the Banner of Ch’ih-yu, and the Comet Coin”; Alexander Jones, “Geminus and the Isia”; Benjamin Victor, “Further Remarks on the Andria of Terence”; Peter E. Knox, “Lucretius on the Narrow Road”; Francis Cairns, “Virgil Eclogue 1.1–2: A Literary Programme?”; Michael Hendry, “Epidaurus, Epirus,…Epidamnus? Vergil Georgics 3.44”; Charles Segal, “Ovid’s Meleager and the Greeks: Trials of Gender and Genre”; John Hunt, “Readings in Apollonius of Tyre”; Bernard Frischer et al., “Word-Order Transference between Latin and Greek: The Relative Position of the Accusative Direct Object and the Governing Verb in Cassius Dio and Other Greek and Roman Prose Authors”; and Craig Kallendorf, “Historicizing the ‘Harvard School’: Pessimistic Readings of the Aeneid in Italian Renaissance Scholarship.”

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674379473
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 02/15/2000
Series: Harvard Studies in Classical Philology , #99
Pages: 425
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.25(h) x 1.20(d)

About the Author

Charles Segal was Walter C. Klein Professor of the Classics at Harvard University.

Table of Contents

A Distant Anatolian Echo in Pindar: The Origin of the Aegis Again

CALVERT WATKINS


War Games: Odysseus at Troy

CORINNE ONDINE PACHE


Aithón, Aithon, and Odysseus

OLGA LEVANIOUK


Who is gathptatos in the Odyssey?

STAMATIA DOVA


The Parthenoi of Bacchylides 13

TIMOTHY POWER


The List of the War Dead in Aeschylus' Persians

MARY EBBOTT


"Dream of a Shade": Refractions of Epic Vision in
Pindar's Pythian 8 and Aeschylus' Seven against Thebes

GREGORY NAGY


The Ilioupersis in Athens

GLORIA FERRARI


The Oracles of Sophocles' Trachiniae: Convergence or Confusion?

CHARLES SEGAL


Drama and Droniena: Bloodshed, Violence, and Sacrificial Metaphor in Euripides

ALBERT HENRICHS


Democracy in Syracuse, 466-412 BC.

ERIC ROBINSON


Epos as Authoritative Speech in Herodotos' Histories

ALEXANDER HOLLMANN


Author and Audience in Thucydides' Archaeology. Some Reflections

NINO LURAGHI


Darius 3

E. BADIAN


Mused Hypophetores: Apollonius of Rhodes on Inspiration and Interpretation

JosE M. GONZÁLEZ


Plautus' Amphitruo: Three Problems

ZEPH STEWART


Politics and Religion in the Bacchanalian Affair of 186 B.C.E.

SAROLTA A. TAKÁCS


Tragic History and Barbarian Speech in Sallust's Jugurtha

CASEY DuÉ


Silenus and the linago Vocis in Eclogue 6

BRiAN W. BREED


The Poet's Fiction: Virgil's Praise of the Farmer, Philosopher, and Poet at the End ofGeorgics 2

LEAH J. KRONENIBERG


Well-Read Heroes: Quoting the Aetia in Aeneid 8

MICHAEL A. TUELLER


A Trope by Any Other Name: "Polysemy," Ambiguity, and Significatio in Virgil

RICHARD F. THOMAS


Hylas and Silva: Etymological Wordplay in Propertius 1.20

DAVID PETRAIN


Propertius 2.32.35-36

WENDELL CLAUSEN


The Soldier in the Garden and Other Intruders in Ovid's
Metamorphoses

R. J. TARRANT


The Writing in (and of) Ovid's Byblis Episode

THOMAS E. JENKINS


Nero Speaking

CHRISTOPHER JONES


On Statius' Thebaid

D. R. SHACKLETON BAILEY


Juvenal, the Niphates, and Trajan's Column (Satire 6.407-412)

PRUDENCE JONES


Missio at Halicarnassus

KATHLEEN COLEMAN


Observations on a Byzantine Manuscript in Harvard College Library

JOHN DUFFY AND DIMITER G. ANGELOV


Summaries of Dissertations for the Degree of Ph.D


Index for HSCP 68-100


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