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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."
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.
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.
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.
Among other articles, This volume includes Iliad 4.384 Tude, Iliad 15.339 Mekiste, and Odyssey 19.136 Odyse by Jeremy Rau; "Craft Similes and the Construction of Heroes in the Iliad" by Naomi Rood.
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 106 includes Natasha Bershadsky, "A Picnic, a Tomb, and a Crow: Hesiod's Cult in the Works and Days"; Alexander Dale, "Sapphica"; Guillermo Galan Vioque, "A New Manuscript of Classical Authors in Spain"; Jarrett T. Welsh, "The Dates of the Dramatists of the Fabula Togata"; and other essays.
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."
This volume celebrates 100 years of Harvard Studies in Classical Philology. It contains essays by Harvard faculty, emeriti, currently enrolled graduate students, and most recent Ph.D.s. It displays the range and diversity of the study of the Classics at Harvard at the beginning of the twenty-first century.
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 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."
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.
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