The Life and Miracles of Thekla
Scott Fitzgerald Johnson
The Life and Miracles of Thekla offers a unique view on the reception of classical and early Christian literature in Late Antiquity. This study examines the Life and Miracles as an intricate example of Greek writing and attempts to situate the work amidst a wealth of similar literary forms from the classical world.
Paperback 2006
Actors in the Audience
Shadi Bartsch
This is a book about language, theatricality, and empire--about how the Roman emperor dramatized his rule and how his subordinates in turn staged their response. Informed by theories of dramaturgy, sociology, new historicism, and cultural criticism, this close reading of literary and historical texts gives us a new perspective on the politics of the Roman empire--and on the languages and representation of power.
Hardcover 1998
Aelian, I, On the Characteristics of Animals, I
Aelian
Translated by A. F. Scholfield
Aelian's Characteristics of Animals is an appealing collection of facts and fables about the animal kingdom that invites the reader to ponder contrasts between human and animal behavior.
Hardcover 1958
Aelian, II, On the Characteristics of Animals, II
Aelian
Translated by A. F. Scholfield
Hardcover
Aelian, III, On the Characteristics of Animals, III
Aelian
Translated by A. F. Scholfield
Hardcover
Aelian, IV, Historical Miscellany
Aelian
Translated by Nigel G. Wilson
Aelian's Historical Miscellany (Varia Historia) is a pleasurable example of light reading for Romans of the early third century. Offering engaging anecdotes about historical figures, retellings of legendary events, and enjoyable descriptive pieces, Aelian's collection of nuggets and narratives appealed to a wide reading public.
Hardcover 1997
Aeschylus, I, Persians. Seven against Thebes. Suppliants. Prometheus Bound
Aeschylus
Edited and translated by Alan H. Sommerstein
Aeschylus (ca. 525–456 BCE) is the dramatist who made Athenian tragedy one of the world’s great art forms. Seven of his eighty or so plays survive complete. The first volume of this new Loeb Classical Library edition offers fresh texts and translations by Alan H. Sommerstein of Persians, the only surviving Greek historical drama.
Hardcover 2009
Aeschylus, II, Oresteia: Agamemnon. Libation-Bearers. Eumenides
Aeschylus
Edited and translated by Alan H. Sommerstein
Aeschylus (ca. 525–456 BCE) is the dramatist who made Athenian tragedy one of the world’s great art forms. Seven of his eighty or so plays survive complete. The second volume contains the complete Oresteia trilogy.
Hardcover 2009
Aeschylus, III, Fragments
Aeschylus
Edited and translated by Alan H. Sommerstein
Aeschylus (ca. 525–456 BCE) is the dramatist who made Athenian tragedy one of the world’s great art forms. Seven of his eighty or so plays survive complete. The third volume of this edition collects all the major fragments of lost Aeschylean plays.
Hardcover 2008
Amphoteroglossia
Panagiotis Roilos
This work offers the first systematic and interdisciplinary study of the poetics of the twelfth-century medieval Greek novel. Rollos investigates the complex ways in which rhetorical theory and practice constructed the overarching cultural aesthetics that conditioned the production and reception of the genre of the novel in Byzantine society.
Paperback 2006
Apollonius of Tyana, I
Philostratus
Edited and translated by Christopher P. Jones
This biography of a first-century C.E. holy man has become one of the most widely discussed literary works of later antiquity. With an engaging style, Philostratus portrays a charismatic teacher and religious reformer from Tyana in Cappadocia (modern central Turkey) who travels across the known world, from the Atlantic to the Ganges. His miracles, which include extraordinary cures and mysterious disappearances, together with his apparent triumph over death, caused pagans to make Apollonius a rival to Jesus of Nazareth.
Hardcover 2005
Apollonius of Tyana, II
Philostratus
Edited and translated by Christopher P. Jones
This biography of a first-century C.E. holy man has become one of the most widely discussed literary works of later antiquity. With an engaging style, Philostratus portrays a charismatic teacher and religious reformer from Tyana in Cappadocia (modern central Turkey) who travels across the known world, from the Atlantic to the Ganges. His miracles, which include extraordinary cures and mysterious disappearances, together with his apparent triumph over death, caused pagans to make Apollonius a rival to Jesus of Nazareth.
Hardcover
Apollonius of Tyana, III
Philostratus
Edited and translated by Christopher P. Jones
Philostratus's colorful biography of Apollonius of Tyana provoked a long-lasting debate between pagans and Christians. This new translation of Apollonius's letters reveals his personality and his religious and philosophical ideas. The bishop Eusebius's reply to Hierocles' use of the biography in an anti-Christian polemic is an essential chapter in the history of Philostratus's masterpiece. New for this edition is a selection of ancient reports about Apollonius from authors such as St. Jerome and St. Augustine.
Hardcover 2006
The Apostolic Fathers, I, I Clement. II Clement. Ignatius. Polycarp. Didache
Edited and translated by Bart D. Ehrman
The writings of the Apostolic Fathers give a rich and diverse picture of Christian life and thought in the period immediately after New Testament times. Some of them were accorded almost Scriptural authority in the early Church. This new Loeb edition reflects the latest scholarship.
Hardcover 2003
The Apostolic Fathers, II, Epistle of Barnabas. Papias and Quadratus. Epistle to Diognetus. The Shepherd of Hermas
Edited and translated by Bart D. Ehrman
The writings of the Apostolic Fathers give a rich and diverse picture of Christian life and thought in the period immediately after New Testament times. Some of them were accorded almost Scriptural authority in the early Church. This new Loeb edition of these essential texts reflects current idiom and the latest scholarship.
Hardcover 2003
Archilochos Heros
Diskin Clay
The discovery of the Mnesiepes inscription on Paros revealed the third century B.C. belief that the young Archilochos was transformed into a poet by an encounter with the Muses. It also revealed that the poet had become the object of a cult by his fellow islanders as he was transformed in death to a local hero. This is the first attempt to trace the history of this cult and addresses for the first time the larger phenomenon of the cult of poets in the Greek states.
Paperback 2005
Argonautica
Apollonius Rhodius
Edited and translated by William H. Race
Argonautica, composed in the 3rd century BCE, is the epic retelling of Jason’s quest for the golden fleece. It greatly influenced Roman authors such as Catullus, Virgil, and Ovid, and was imitated by Valerius Flaccus. This new edition of the first volume in the Loeb Classical Library offers a fresh translation and improved text.
Hardcover 2009
Aristophanes, III, Birds. Lysistrata. Women at the Thesmophoria
Aristophanes
Edited and translated by Jeffrey Henderson
In Birds Aristophanes turns from the pointed political satire characteristic of earlier plays to a fantasy that soars literally into the air and creates a utopian counter-Athens, called Cloudcuckooland, ruled by birds. Lysistrata blends rambunctious comedy and an earnest call for peace. Lysistrata, our first comic heroine, organizes a panhellenic conjugal strike of young wives until their husbands end the war between Athens and Sparta. Athenian women again take center stage in Women at the Thesmophoria, this time to punish Euripides for portraying them as wicked. Parody of Euripides' plots enlivens this witty confrontation of the sexes.
Hardcover 2000
Aristophanes, IV, Frogs. Assemblywomen. Wealth
Aristophanes
Edited and translated by Jeffrey Henderson
Frogswas produced in 405 BCE, shortly after the deaths of Sophocles and Euripides. Dionysus, on a journey to the underworld to retrieve Euripides, is recruited to judge a contest between the traditional Aeschylus and the modern Euripides, a contest that yields both comedy and insight on ancient literary taste. In Assemblywomen Athenian women plot to save Athens from male misgovernance. They institute a new social order in which all inequalities based on wealth, age, and beauty are eliminated--with raucously comical results. The gentle humor and straightforward morality of Wealth made it the most popular of Aristophanes' plays from classical times to the Renaissance. Here the god Wealth, cured of his blindness, is newly able to distinguish good people from bad.
Hardcover 2002
Aristophanes, V, Fragments
Aristophanes
Edited and translated by Jeffrey Henderson
Over forty plays by Aristophanes were read in antiquity, of which nearly a thousand fragments survive. These provide a fuller picture of the poet's ever astonishing comic vitality and a wealth of information and insights about his world. Henderson's latest volume contains what survives from, and about, his lost plays. Each fragmentary play is prefaced by a summary. Also included in this edition are ancient reports about Aristophanes' life, works, and influence on the later comic tradition.
Hardcover 2008
The Art of Bacchylides
Anne Pippin Burnett
Burnett shows us the art of Bacchylides in the context of Greek lyric traditions. She discusses the beginnings of choral poetry and the functions of the choral myth; she describes the purposes of the victory song in particular and the practices of Bacchylides and Pindar as they fulfilled their victory commissions. In analyzing individual poems Burnett's approach is two-fold, for each ode is seen as a choral performance reflecting archaic cult practice, while it is also studied as the expression of a particular poetic vision and sensibility.
Hardcover 1985
The Art of Plato
R. B. Rutherford
This book is not a study of Plato's philosophy, but a contribution to the literary interpretation of the dialogues, through analysis of their formal structure, characterization, language, and imagery. Among the dialogues considered in these interrelated essays are some of Plato's most admired and influential works, including Gorgias, the Symposium, the Republic and Phaedrus.
Hardcover 1998
Augustine the Reader
Brian Stock
Augustine of Hippo, a central figure in the history of Western thought, is also the author of a theory of reading that has had a profound influence on Western letters from the ages of Petrarch, Montaigne, Luther, and Rousseau to Freud and our own time. Brian Stock provides the first full account of this theory within the evolution of Augustine's early dialogues, his Confessions, and his systematic treatises.
Hardcover 1996 / Paperback 1998
The Bible As It Was
James L. Kugel
This is a guide to the Hebrew Bible unlike any other. Leading us chapter by chapter through its most important stories--from the Creation and the Tree of Knowledge through the Exodus from Egypt and the journey to the Promised Land--James Kugel shows how a group of anonymous ancient interpreters radically transformed the Bible and made it into the book that has come down to us today.
Hardcover 1997 / Paperback 1999
Black Doves Speak
Rosaria Munson
In Greek thought, barbaroi are utterers of unintelligible or inarticulate sounds. What importance does the text of Herodotus's Histories attribute to language as a criterion of ethnic identity? The answer to this question illuminates the empirical foundations of Herodotus's pluralistic worldview.
Paperback 2005
Caesar
Mattias Gelzer
Translated by Peter Needham
The political career of one of the great statesmen of Antiquity--indeed of all times--is here captured in a full, authoritative, and lively biography that has long been a classic.
Hardcover / Paperback
Catullus
Catullus
Edited by Elmer Truesdell Merrill
Hardcover 1965
Cicero, XXVIII, Letters to Quintus and Brutus. Letter Fragments. Letter to Octavian. Invectives. Handbook of Electioneering
Cicero
Edited and translated by D. R. Shackleton Bailey
Cicero's letters to his brother, Quintus, allow us an intimate glimpse of their world. Vividly informative too is Cicero's correspondence with Brutus dating from the spring of 43 BCE, which conveys the drama of the period following the assassination of Julius Caesar. These are now made available in a new Loeb Classical Library edition. Shackleton Bailey also provides in this volume a new text and translation of two invective speeches purportedly delivered in the Senate; these are probably anonymous ancient schoolbook exercises but have long been linked with the works of Sallust and Cicero. The Letter to Octavian, ostensibly by Cicero but probably dating from the third or fourth century CE, is included as well. Here too is the "Handbook of Electioneering," a guide said to be written by Quintus to his brother, an interesting treatise on Roman elections.
Hardcover 2002
Comparative Studies in Greek and Indic Meter
Gregory Nagy
View a video of Professor Greg Nagy leading discussion and commentary on one of the greatest epics of all time: The Iliad"

Hardcover 1974
A Concordance to Livy
David W. Packard
Hardcover 1968
Concordia Discors
Andrew Scholtz
Writing to a friend, Horace describes him as fascinated by "the discordant harmony of the cosmos, its purpose and power." Scholtz takes this notion of "discordant harmony" and argues for it as an aesthetic principle where classical Athenian literature addresses politics in the idiom of sexual desire. Drawing on theorists of the sociality of language, his approach is an untried one for this kind of topic.
Paperback 2008
The Consolation of Philosophy
Boethius
Translated by David R. Slavitt
Introduction by Seth Lerer
Composed while its author was imprisoned, this book remains one of Western literature’s most eloquent meditations on the transitory nature of earthly belongings, and the superiority of things of the mind. Slavitt’s translation captures the energy and passion of the original. And in an introduction intended for the general reader, Seth Lerer places Boethius’s life and achievement in context.
Hardcover 2008
The Craft of Zeus
John Scheid
Jesper Svenbro
Translated by Carol Volk
In this dazzling commentary on Greek and Roman myth and society, weaving emerges as a metaphor rich with possibility. From rituals symbolizing the cohesion of society to the erotic and marital significance of weaving, this lively book defines the logic of one of the central concepts in Greek and Roman thought.
Hardcover 1996 / Paperback 2001
The Culture of Kitharoidia
Timothy Power
The Culture of Kitharoidia is the first study dedicated exclusively to the art, practice, and charismatic persona of the citharode. Traversing a wide range of discourse and imagery about kitharoidia--poetic and prose texts, iconography, inscriptions--the book offers a nuanced account of the aesthetic and sociocultural complexities of citharodic song and examines the iconic role of the songmakers in the popular imagination.
Paperback 2009
Daphnis and Chloe. Anthia and Habrocomes
Longus
Xenophon of Ephesus
Edited and translated by Jeffrey Henderson
Hardcover 2009
The Death of Socrates
Emily Wilson
Socrates's death in 399 BCE has figured largely in our world ever since, shaping how we think about heroism and celebrity, religion and family life, state control and individual freedom, the distance of intellectual life from daily activity--many of the key coordinates of Western culture. In this book, Wilson analyzes the enormous and enduring power the trial and death of Socrates has exerted over the Western imagination.
Hardcover 2007
The Development of Greek Biography, Expanded Ed
Arnaldo Momigliano
Paperback
The Dialects of Ancient Gaul
Joshua Whatmough
Hardcover 1970
Dionysos at Large
Marcel Detienne
Translated by Arthur Goldhammer
Hardcover
Dreaming and Experience in Classical Antiquity
William V. Harris
Hardcover 2009
Epiloke
Thomas Cole
Hardcover 1988
Euripides and the Full Circle of Myth
Cedric H. Whitman
Hardcover 1974
Euripides, IV, Trojan Women. Iphigenia among the Taurians. Ion
Euripides
Edited and translated by David Kovacs
Trojan Women, a play about the causes and consequences of war, develops the theme of the tragic unpredictability of life. Iphigenia among the Taurians and Ion exhibit tragic themes and situations (the murder of close relatives); each ends happily with a joyful reunion.
Hardcover 1999
Euripides, V, Helen. Phoenician Women. Orestes
Euripides
Edited and translated by David Kovacs
In this fifth volume of the new Loeb Classical Library Euripides, in Helen the poet employs an alternative history in which a virtuous Helen never went to Troy but spent the war years in Egypt, falsely blamed for the adulterous behavior of her divinely created double in Troy. This volume also includes Phoenician Women, Euripides' treatment of the battle between the sons of Oedipus for control of Thebes; and Orestes, a novel retelling of Orestes' lot after he murdered his mother, Clytaemestra. Each play is annotated and prefaced by a helpful introduction.
Hardcover 2002
Euripides, VII, Fragments
Euripides
Edited and translated by Christopher Collard
Edited and translated by Martin Cropp
The extant plays and the fragments together make Euripides by far the best known of the classic Greek tragedians. This edition offers the first complete English translation of the fragments together with a selection of testimonia bearing on the content of the plays. Each play is prefaced by a select bibliography and an introductory discussion of its mythical background, plot, and location of the fragments, general character, chronology, and impact on subsequent literary and artistic traditions.
Hardcover 2008
Euripides, VIII, Fragments
Euripides
Edited and translated by Christopher Collard
Edited and translated by Martin Cropp
The extant plays and the fragments together make Euripides by far the best known of the classic Greek tragedians. This edition of the fragments, concluded in this second volume, offers the first complete English translation together with a selection of testimonia bearing on the content of the plays. The texts are based on the recent comprehensive edition of R. Kannicht.
Hardcover 2009
The Feast of Poetry
Pavlos Sfyroeras
Situated at the intersection of various approaches to the comic genre, this book adopts a synchronic viewpoint to focus on comedy within the dramatic festival of Dionysus. By inscribing Aristophanes's plays in the poetic and ritual traditions of Greece, it attempts to reconstruct a fifth-century view of the performance of comedy as a sacrificial offering that both honors the god and is shared by the assembled citizen body.
Paperback
Fragments of Sappho
Dimitrios Yatromanolakis
Representing the beginnings of women’s poetry in European cultures, Sappho’s songs have become an influential and complex sociopolitical paradigm related to female same-sex intimacy in modern eras. The first large-scale commentary in English in the last fifty years, this book fills a major gap in research on archaic Greece and provides interdisciplinary introductory studies and comprehensive commentary on major fragments of Sappho.
Paperback 2008
Genos Dikanikon
Victor Bers
Under the Athenian democracy, litigants were expected to speak for themselves, though they could memorize a speech written for them. These amateur performances often manifested an unmanly yielding to emotions of anger or fear; professional speech, Bers seeks to demonstrate, was to a large degree crafted in reaction to amateur stumbling.
Paperback 2009
The Golden Age of the Classics in America
Carl J. Richard
Hardcover 2009
Greek Elegiac Poetry
Edited and translated by Douglas E. Gerber
Tyrtaeus
Solon
Theognis
Mimnermus
The Greek poetry of the archaic period that we call elegy was composed primarily for banquets and convivial gatherings. Its subject matter consists of almost any topic, excluding only the scurrilous and obscene. In this completely new Loeb Classical Library edition, Douglas Gerber provides a faithful translation of the fragments and significant testimonia that have come down to us, with full explanatory notes.
Hardcover 1999
Greek Epic Fragments
Edited and translated by Martin L. West
Greek epics of the archaic period include poems that narrate particular heroic episodes and poems that recount the history of families or peoples. They are an important source of mythological record. Here is a new text and translation of the examples of this poetry that have come down to us. The heroic epics include poems about Hercules and Theseus and two great epic cycles: the Theban Cycle and the Trojan Cycle. Among the genealogical epics are poems that create prehistories for Corinth and for Samos.
Hardcover 2003
Greek Grammar
Herbert Weir Smyth
Revised by Gordon M. Messing
Hardcover
Greek Iambic Poetry
Edited and translated by Douglas E. Gerber
Archilochus
Semonides
Hipponax
The poetry of the archaic period that the Greeks called iambic is characterized by scornful criticism of friend and foe and by sexual license. The purpose of these poems is unclear, but they seem to have some connection with cult songs used in religious festivals--for example, those honoring Dionysus and Demeter. In this completely new Loeb Classical Library edition of early Greek iambic poetry, Douglas Gerber provides a faithful and fully annotated translation of the fragments that have come down to us.
Hardcover 1999
Greek Ritual Poetics
Edited by Dimitrios Yatromanolakis
Edited by Panagiotis Roilos
Investigating ritual in Greece from cross-disciplinary and transhistorical perspectives, this book offers novel readings of the pivotal role of ritual in Greek traditions by exploring a broad spectrum of texts, art, and social practices. This collection of essays written by an international group of leading scholars in a number of disciplines presents a variety of methodological approaches to secular and religious rituals, and to the narrative and conceptual strategies of their reenactment and manipulation in literary, pictorial, and social discourses.
Paperback 2005
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 100,
Edited by Charles Segal
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 21st century.
Hardcover 2002
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 102,
Edited by Albert Henrichs
Hardcover 2006
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 103,
Edited by Albert Henrichs
Hardcover 2008
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 104,
Edited by Nino Luraghi
Among other articles, This volume includes Iliad 4.384 Tudê, Iliad 15.339 Mêkistê, and Odyssey 19.136 Odysê by Jeremy Rau; “Craft Similes and the Construction of Heroes in the Iliad” by Naomi Rood.
Hardcover 2008
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 71,
Department of Classics Harvard University
Hardcover 1967
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 72,
Department of Classics Harvard University
Hardcover 1968
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 73,
Department of Classics Harvard University
Hardcover 1969
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 74,
Department of Classics Harvard University
Hardcover 1970
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 75,
Department of Classics Harvard University
Hardcover 1971
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 76,
Department of Classics Harvard University
Hardcover 1972
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 77,
Department of Classics Harvard University
Hardcover 1973
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 78,
Department of Classics Harvard University
Hardcover 1974
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 79,
Department of Classics Harvard University
Hardcover 1976
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 80,
Department of Classics Harvard University
Hardcover 1976
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 81,
Department of Classics Harvard University
Hardcover 1977
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 82,
Edited by Albert Henrichs
Hardcover 1979
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 83,
Edited by Albert Henrichs
Hardcover 1980
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 84,
Edited by D. R. Shackleton Bailey
Hardcover 1981
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 85,
Edited by D. R. Shackleton Bailey
Hardcover 1982
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 86,
Edited by Wendell Clausen
Hardcover 1982
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 87,
Edited by D. R. Shackleton Bailey
Hardcover 1983
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 88,
Edited by D. R. Shackleton Bailey
Hardcover 1984
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 89,
Edited by D. R. Shackleton Bailey
Hardcover 1985
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 90,
Edited by R. J. Tarrant
Hardcover 1987
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 91,
Edited by R. J. Tarrant
Hardcover 1988
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 92,
Edited by R. J. Tarrant
Hardcover 1990
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 94,
Edited by Wendell Clausen
Hardcover
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 95,
Edited by Wendell Clausen
Hardcover
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 96,
R. J. Tarrant
Hardcover
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 97, Greece in Rome
Edited by Charles Segal
Hardcover 1998
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Volume 99,
Edited by Charles Segal
Hardcover 2000
Herodotean Narrative and Discourse
Mabel Lang
Hardcover 1984
Hesiod, I, Theogony. Works and Days. Testimonia
Hesiod
Edited and Translated by Glenn W. Most
Hesiod's exact dates are unknown, but he has often been considered a younger contemporary of Homer. This volume of the new Loeb Classical Library edition contains his two extant poems, along with a selection of testimonia from a wide variety of ancient sources.
Hardcover 2007
Hesiod, II, The Shield. Catalogue of Women. Other Fragments
Hesiod
Edited and translated by Glenn W. Most
This volume, which completes the new Loeb Classical Library edition of Hesiod, contains The Shield and extant fragments of other poems, including the Catalogue of Women, that were attributed to Hesiod in antiquity. None of these is now thought to be by Hesiod himself, but all have considerable literary and historical interest. The volume concludes with a comprehensive index to the complete edition.
Hardcover 2007
Hippota Nestor
Douglas G. Frame
Paperback 2009
Homer and the Nibelungenlied
Bernard Fenik
Hardcover 1986
Homer the Classic
Gregory Nagy
Paperback 2006
Homer's Odyssey
John H. Finley
Throughout his book, Finley applies a lifetime's learning to a work that is universally recognized as one of the highest achievements of our civilization. At a time when Homer is in danger of being swallowed by specialists, it is important to recognize and uphold the poet's basic concern for life and myth and legend. Such sympathy combined with knowledge is Finley's fine achievement.
Hardcover 1978
Homeric Conversation
Deborah Beck
Homeric Conversation is the first full-length study of conversation in the Homeric poems. Deborah Beck argues that conversation should be considered a traditional Homeric type scene, alongside recognized types such as arrival, sacrifice, battle, and hospitality. This book is a wide-ranging, closely argued aesthetic analysis of repetition and variation in the Homeric epics.
Paperback 2006
Homeric Hymns. Homeric Apocrypha. Lives of Homer
Edited and translated by Martin L. West
Thirty-three poems have come down to us under the title Homeric Hymns. Among the longest are the hymn To Demeter, which tells the story of the Eleusinian Mysteries, and To Hermes, distinctive for being amusing. The comic poems gathered as Homeric Apocrypha include Margites and the Battle of Frogs and Mice. The edition of Lives of Homer presented here contains The Contest of Homer and Hesiod as well as nine other biographical accounts.
Hardcover 2003
Horace, I, Odes and Epodes
Horace
Edited and translated by Niall Rudd
The poetry of Horace (born 65 BCE) is richly varied, its focus moving between public and private concerns, urban and rural settings, Stoic and Epicurean thought. Here is a new Loeb Classical Library edition of the great Roman poet's Odes and Epodes.
Hardcover 2004
Horace, II, Satires. Epistles. The Art of Poetry
Horace
Translated by H. Rushton Fairclough
In the style originated by Lucilius, Horace in his satires mocks himself as well as the world's vices and follies. The main purpose of the first book (published about 35 BCE) is to entertain; attacks on moral and literary faults frequently are directed at specific individuals, but the poet's tone is rarely abusive. The poems in the second book make playful use of dramatic presentation and humorous situations. The verse epistles, addressed to real people, seem to reveal many aspects of the poet's opinions and way of life. This volume also contains the Art of Poetry (Ars Poetica), a series of often memorably expressed maxims for the guidance of young poets, which famously set forth Horace's literary theory and critical judgments about theater as well as the poet's craft.
Hardcover 1926
Humanist Educational Treatises
Translated by Craig W. Kallendorf
This volume provides new translations, commissioned for the I Tatti Renaissance Library, of four of the most important theoretical statements that emerged from the early humanists’ efforts to reform medieval education.
Paperback 2008
Ideology in Cold Blood
Is Lucan's brilliant and grotesque epic Civil War an example of ideological poetry at its most flagrant, or is it a work that despairingly proclaims the meaninglessness of ideology? Shadi Bartsch offers a startlingly new answer to this split debate on the Roman poet's magnum opus.
Hardcover 1998 / Paperback 2001
Iliad, I
Homer
Translated by William Wyatt
Translated by A. T. Murray
The works attributed to Homer include the two oldest and greatest European epic poems, the Odyssey and the Iliad. These have been published in the Loeb Classical Library for three quarters of a century, the Greek text facing a faithful and literate prose translation by A. T. Murray. William F. Wyatt brings the Loeb's Iliad up to date, with a rendering that retains Murray's admirable style but is written for today's readers.
Hardcover 1924
Iliad, II
Homer
Translated by A. T. Murray
Hardcover 1925
The Inner Citadel
Pierre Hadot
Translated by Michael Chase
Written by the Roman emperor for his own private guidance and self-admonition, the Meditations set forth principles for living a good and just life. Hadot probes Marcus Aurelius's guidelines and convictions and discerns the hitherto unperceived conceptual system that grounds them.
Hardcover 1998 / Paperback 2001
Invectives
Francesco Petrarca
Edited and translated by David Marsh
Francesco Petrarca (1304-1374), one of the greatest of Italian poets, was also the leading spirit in the Renaissance movement to revive ancient Roman language and literature. His four Invectives were intended to revive the eloquence of the great Roman orator Cicero. The Invectives are directed against the cultural idols of the Middle Ages--against scholastic philosophy and medicine and the dominance of French culture in general. This volume provides a new critical edition of the Latin text based on the two autograph copies, and the first English translation of three of the four invectives.
Hardcover 2004
Invectives
Francesco Petrarca
Translated by David Marsh
Petrarca, one of the greatest of Italian poets, was also the leading spirit in the Renaissance movement to revive ancient Roman language and literature. Petrarch’s four Invectives, written in Latin, were inspired by the eloquence of the great Roman orator Cicero. The new translations in this volume include the first English translation of three of the four invectives.
Paperback 2008
The Invention of Jane Harrison
Mary Beard
Jane Ellen Harrison (1850-1928) is the most famous female Classicist in history, the author of books that revolutionized our understanding of Greek culture and religion. This lively and innovative portrayal of a fascinating woman raises the question of who wins (and how) in the competition for academic fame. Questioning the common criteria for identifying intellectual "influence" and "movements," Mary Beard exposes the mythology that is embedded in the history of Classics. At the same time she provides a vivid picture of a sparkling intellectual scene.
Hardcover 2000 / Paperback 2002
Juvenal and Persius
Juvenal
Persius
Edited and translated by Susanna Morton Braund
Juvenal and Persius are seminal as well as stellar figures in the history of satirical writing. Juvenal especially had a lasting influence on English writers of the Renaissance and succeeding centuries. The bite and wit of these two satirists are captured here in a new Loeb Classical Library edition.
Hardcover 2004
King of Sacrifice
Sarah Hitch
Descriptions of animal sacrifice in Homer offer us some of the most detailed accounts of this attempt at communication between man and gods. This book explores the structural and thematic importance of animal sacrifice as an expression of the quarrel between Akhilleus and Agamemnon through the differing perspectives of the primary narrative and character speech.
Paperback 2009
Labored in Papyrus Leaves
Edited by Benjamin Acosta-Hughes
Edited by Elizabeth Kosmetatou
Edited by Manuel Baumbach
This colloquium volume celebrates a new Hellenistic epigram collection attributed to the third-century B.C.E. poet Posidippus, one of the most significant literary finds in recent memory. Included in this collection are an unusual variety of voices and perspectives: papyrological, art historical, archaeological, historical, literary, and aesthetic.
Paperback 2004
Latin Poetry
Jacopo Sannazaro
Translated by Michael C. J. Putnam
Hardcover 2009
The Learned Banqueters, I, Books 1-3.106e
Athenaeus
Edited and translated by S. Douglas Olson
In The Learned Banqueters, Athenaeus describes a series of dinner parties at which the guests quote extensively from valuable Greek works that have been lost. Athenaeus also preserves a wide range of information about Greek culture. S. Douglas Olson has undertaken to produce a complete new edition of the work, replacing the previous seven-volume Loeb Athenaeus (published under the title Deipnosophists).
Hardcover 2007
The Learned Banqueters, II, Books 3.106e-5
Athenaeus
Edited and translated by S. Douglas Olson
In The Learned Banqueters, Athenaeus describes a series of dinner parties at which the guests quote extensively from valuable Greek works that are now lost. Athenaeus also preserves a wide range of information about Greek culture. S. Douglas Olson has undertaken to produce a complete new edition of the work, replacing the previous seven-volume Loeb Athenaeus (published under the title Deipnosophists).
Hardcover 2007
The Learned Banqueters, III, Books 6-7
Athenaeus
Edited and translated by S. Douglas Olson
In The Learned Banqueters (late-2nd century CE), Athenaeus describes a series of dinner parties at which the guests quote extensively from Greek literature. Olson has undertaken to produce a complete new edition of the work, replacing the previous seven-volume Loeb Athenaeus (published under the title Deipnosophists).
Hardcover 2008
The Learned Banqueters, IV, Books 8-10.420e
Athenaeus
Edited and translated by S. Douglas Olson
Athenaeus describes a series of dinner parties at which the guests quote extensively from Greek literature. The work (which dates to the very end of the second century CE) is amusing and of extraordinary value as a treasury of quotations from works now lost.
Hardcover 2008
The Learned Banqueters, V, Books 10.420e-11
Athenaeus
Edited and translated by S. Douglas Olson
Hardcover 2009
The Lesser Declamations I
Quintilian
Edited and translated by D. R. Shackleton Bailey
The Lesser Declamations emanate from "the school of Quintilian." The collection represents classroom materials for budding Roman lawyers. The instructor who composed these specimen speeches for fictitious court cases adds his comments and suggestions concerning presentation and arguing tactics, thereby giving us insight into Roman law and education. The 145 surviving sample cases in the collection are now added to the Loeb Classical Library in a two-volume edition, with a fluent translation by D. R. Shackleton Bailey facing an updated Latin text.
Hardcover 2006
The Lesser Declamations II
Quintilian
Edited and translated by D. R. Shackleton Bailey
The Lesser Declamations emanate from "the school of Quintilian." The collection represents classroom materials for budding Roman lawyers. The instructor who composed these specimen speeches for fictitious court cases adds his comments and suggestions concerning presentation and arguing tactics, thereby giving us insight into Roman law and education. The 145 surviving sample cases in the collection are now added to the Loeb Classical Library in a two-volume edition, with a fluent translation by D. R. Shackleton Bailey facing an updated Latin text.
Hardcover 2006
The Literary Guide to the Bible
Edited by Robert Alter
Edited by Frank Kermode
Rediscover the incomparable literary richness and strength of a book that all of us live with an many of us live by. An international team of renowned scholars, assembled by two leading literary critics, offers a book-by-book guide through the Old and New Testaments as well as general essays on the Bible as a whole, providing an enticing reintroduction to a work that has shaped our language and thought for thousands of years.
Hardcover 1987 / Paperback 1990
A Loeb Classical Library Reader
Loeb Classical Library
This selection of lapidary nuggets drawn from thirty-three of antiquity's major authors includes poetry, dialogue, philosophical writing, history, descriptive reporting, satire, and fiction--giving a glimpse at the wide range of arts and sciences, thought and styles, of Greco-Roman culture. The selections span twelve centuries, from Homer to Saint Jerome. The texts and translations are reproduced as they appear in Loeb volumes, offering a taste of the ideas characteristic of the splendid culture to which we are heir.
Paperback 2006
Lore and Science in Ancient Pythagoreanism
Walter Burkert
Translated by Edwin L. Minar
Hardcover 1972
Master of the Game
Derek Collins
The interest in the performance of ancient Greek poetry has grown dramatically in recent years. But the competitive dimension of Greek poetic performances, while usually assumed, has rarely been directly addressed. This study provides for the first time an in-depth examination of a central mode of Greek poetic competition--capping, which occurs when speakers or singers respond to one another in small numbers of verses, single verses, or between verse units themselves.
Paperback 2005
Matrices of Genre
Edited by Mary Depew
Edited by Dirk Obbink
The literary genres given shape by the writers of classical antiquity are central to our own thinking about the various forms literature takes. Examining those genres, the essays collected here focus on the concept and role of the author and the emergence of authorship out of performance in Greece and Rome.
Hardcover 2000
Memorable Doings and Sayings, I
Valerius Maximus
Edited and translated by D. R. Shackleton Bailey
Valerius Maximus compiled his handbook of notable deeds and sayings during the reign of Tiberius (14-37 CE). D. R. Shackleton Bailey's is the first modern English translation. Valerius arranges his instructive examples in short chapters, each focused on a particular virtue, vice, religious practice, or traditional custom--including Omens, Dreams, Anger, Cruelty, Bravery, Fidelity, Gratitude, Friendship, Parental Love. The moral undercurrent of this collection is readily apparent. But Valerius tells us that the book's purpose is practical: he decided to select worthwhile material from famous writers so that people looking for illustrative examples might be spared the trouble of research. Whatever the author's intention, his book is an interesting source of information on Roman attitudes toward religion and moral values in the first century.
Hardcover 2000
Memorable Doings and Sayings, II
Valerius Maximus
Edited and translated by D. R. Shackleton Bailey
This concludes the Memorable Doings and Sayings.
Hardcover 2000
Menaechmi
Plautus
Hardcover 1961
Menander, III, Samia. Sikyonioi. Synaristosai. Phasma. Unidentified Fragments
Menander
Edited and translated by W. G. Arnott
Volume III begins with Samia (The Woman from Samos), which has come down to us nearly complete. Here too are the very substantial extant portions of Sikyonioi (The Sicyonians) and Phasma (The Apparition) as well as Synaristosai (Women Lunching Together), on which Plautus's Cistellaria was based. Arnott's edition of the great Hellenistic playwright has been garnering wide praise for making these fragmentary texts more accesible, elucidating their dramatic movement.
Hardcover 2000
Miles Gloriosus
Plautus
Edited by Mason Hammond
Edited by Arthur W. Mack
Edited by Walter Moskalew
Miles Gloriosus or "Braggart Warrior" is one of the best-known and liveliest Roman comedies. It shows Plautus at his ablest in ingenious plot construction, vivid characterization, fast-moving action, and humorous dialogue.
Paperback 1997
A New Introduction to Greek
Alston Hurd Chase
Henry Phillips
Hardcover 1961
New Perspectives on Plato, Modern and Ancient
Edited by Julia Annas
Edited by Christopher J. Rowe
In recent years, scholars have looked more closely at the philosophical importance of the imaginative and literary aspects of Plato's writing, and have begun to appreciate the methods of the ancient philosophers and commentators who studied Plato and their attitudes to Plato's appropriation of Socrates. This study brings together leading philosophical and literary scholars who investigate these new-old approaches and their significance in distancing us from the standard ways of reading Plato.
Hardcover 2003
The New Sappho on Old Age
Edited by Ellen Greene
Edited by Marilyn Skinner
Paperback 2009
On Architecture, I
Vitruvius
Translated by Frank Granger
Vitruvius' classic work on architecture is the only book of its kind to survive antiquity. Vitruvius was himself an architect and engineer, but this is not a handbook for professionals; rather it serves readers who want to understand architecture. Book 1 discusses town planning and architecture in general; Book 2, building materials; 3 and 4, temples and the architectural orders; 5, other civic buildings. In his preface Vitruvius takes note of the "eminent dignity" of the public buildings Augustus constructed, which express "the majesty of the empire."
Hardcover 1931
On Architecture, II
Vitruvius
Translated by Frank Granger
Book 6 concerns houses; 7, pavements, mosaics, and wall decoration; 8, water supply; 9, measurements; 10, machines.
Hardcover 1934
The Oral Palimpsest
Christos Tsagalis
Oral intertextuality is an innate feature of the web of myth, whose interrelated fabrics allow the audience of epic songs access to an entire horizon of story variations. The Oral Palimpsest argues that just as the discarded text of a palimpsest still carries traces of its previous writing, so the Homeric tradition unfolds its awareness of alternate versions as it reveals signs of their erasure.
Paperback 2008
The Orator's Education, I
Quintilian
Edited and translated by Donald A. Russell
Quintilian was born in Spain about 35 CE; he became a well-known and prosperous teacher of rhetoric in Rome, probably the first to receive a salary as such from public funds. His Institutio Oratoria (Training of an Orator), a comprehensive training program in twelve books, draws on his own rich experience. Here Quintilian gives guidelines for proper schooling (beginning with the young boy); analyzes the structure of speeches and recommends devices for engaging listeners and appealing to their emotions; reviews a wide range of Greek and Latin authors of use to the orator; and counsels on memory, delivery, and gestures. This practical guide, in lucid style, provides valuable insight on Roman education. The work also yields many a memorable comment on the styles of various writers.
Hardcover 2002
The Orator's Education, II
Quintilian
Edited and translated by Donald A. Russell
Hardcover 2002
The Orator's Education, III
Quintilian
Edited and translated by Donald A. Russell
Hardcover 2002
The Orator's Education, IV
Quintilian
Edited and translated by Donald A. Russell
Hardcover 2002
The Orator's Education, V
Quintilian
Translated by Donald A. Russell
Hardcover 2002
The Orientalizing Revolution
Walter Burkert
Translated by Margaret Pinder
The splendid culture of the ancient Greeks has often been described as emerging like a miracle from a genius of its own, owing practically nothing to its neighbors. Walter Burkert offers a decisive argument against that distorted view, pointing toward a balanced picture of the archaic period "in which, under the influence of the Semitic East--from writers, craftsmen, merchants, healers--Greek culture began its unique flowering, soon to assume cultural hegemony in the Mediterranean.
Paperback 1998 / Hardcover
Paradise Earned
Yannis Tzifopoulos
This is a study of the twelve small gold lamellae from Crete that were tokens for entrance into a golden afterlife. The lamellae are placed within the context of a small corpus of similar texts, and published with extensive commentary on their topography, lettering and engraving, dialect and orthography, meter, chronology, and usage. This work adduces parallels to the texts on the lamellae from the Byzantine period and modern Greece to illuminate the everlasting and persistent human quest for "earning Paradise."
Paperback 2009
Pindar, I, Olympian Odes. Pythian Odes
Pindar
Translated by William H. Race
William H. Race gives us, in two volumes, a new edition and translation of Pindar's four books of victory odes, along with surviving fragments of his other poems. Brief introductions to each ode and full explanatory footnotes afford invaluable guidance throughout. Like Simonides and Bacchylides, Pindar wrote elaborate odes in honor of prize-winning athletes. His 45 victory odes celebrate triumphs in athletic contests at the four great Panhellenic festivals: the Olympic, Pythian (at Delphi), Nemean, and Isthmian games. In these poems, Pindar commemorates the achievement of athletes and powerful rulers against the backdrop of divine favor, human failure, heroic legend, and the moral ideals of aristocratic Greek society. Readers have long savored their rich poetic imagery, moral maxims, and vivid portrayals of sacred myths.
Hardcover 1997
Pindar, II, Nemean Odes. Isthmian Odes. Fragments
Pindar
Translated by William H. Race
Pindar's forty-five victory odes celebrate triumphs in athletic contests at the four great Panhellenic festivals: the Olympic, Pythian (at Delphi), Nemean, and Isthmian games. In these complex poems, Pindar commemorates the achievement of athletes and powerful rulers against the backdrop of divine favor, human failure, heroic legend, and the moral ideals of aristocratic Greek society.
Hardcover 1997
Plato's Symposium
Edited by James H. Lesher
Edited by Debra Nails
Edited by Frisbee Sheffield
In his Symposium, Plato crafted a set of speeches in praise of love that has influenced writers and artists from antiquity to the present. Early Christian writers read the dialogue's "ascent passage" as a vision of the soul's journey to heaven. The dialogue's view of love is still of enormous philosophical interest in its own right. Nevertheless, questions remain concerning the meaning of specific features, the significance of the dialogue as a whole, and the character of its influence. This volume brings together an international team of scholars to address such questions.
Paperback 2007
Poetic and Performative Memory in Ancient Greece
Claude Calame
The Ancient Greeks not only spoke of time unfolding in a specific space, but also projected the past upon the future in order to make it active in the social practice of the present. Poetic and Performative Memory in Ancient Greece shows how the Ancient Greeks' collective memory was based on a remarkable faculty for the creation of ritual and narrative symbols.
Paperback 2009
Pointing at the Past
Egbert J. Bakker
With numerous fresh linguistic observations Bakker shows that the epic narrator makes the epic past come to the present: epic is not only a verbal artifact that points to the past; it also is a performer's act of pointing at a past that has become present in and through language. Building on his earlier work, Egbert Bakker demonstrates the power of discourse analysis as an essential tool for elucidating the poetics of the Homeric tradition.
Paperback 2006
The Power of Thetis and Selected Essays
Laura Slatkin
Laura Slatkin's influential and widely admired book explores the superficially minor role of Thetis in the Iliad. Slatkin uncovers alternative traditions about the power of Thetis and shows how an awareness of those myths brings a far greater understanding of Thetis's place in the thematic structure of the Iliad. This second edition also includes six additional essays, which cover a broad range of topics in the study of the Greek Epic.
Paperback 2009
Preface to Plato
Eric Havelock
Hardcover 1963 / Paperback
Profile of Horace
D. R. Shackleton Bailey
In this concise analysis, written with elegant wit, the greatest living textual critic of Latin authors offers new insight into the poetry of Horace. In a reading of all the poetry, but focusing especially on problematic areas, Bailey examines Horace's art of self-presentation.
Hardcover 1982
Recapturing a Homeric Legacy
Edited by Casey Due
Marcianus Graecus Z. 454 [= 822], known to Homeric scholars as the Venetus A, is the oldest complete text of the Iliad in existence, meticulously crafted during the tenth century ce. Two thousand years later, technology offers a new opportunity to rediscover this scholarship and better understand the epic that is the foundation of Western literature.
Hardcover 2009
Restraining Rage
William V. Harris
The angry emotions, and the problems they presented, were an ancient Greek preoccupation from Homer to late antiquity. Drawing on a wide range of ancient texts, and on recent work in anthropology and psychology, Restraining Rage explains the rise and persistence of this concern. W. V. Harris shows that the discourse of anger-control was of crucial importance in several different spheres, in politics--both republican and monarchical--in the family, and in the slave economy.
Hardcover 2002 / Paperback 2004
Ritual and Performativity
Anton Bierl
Translated by Alexander Hollmann
In this groundbreaking study, Anton Bierl uses recent approaches in literary and cultural studies to investigate the chorus of Old Comedy. After an extensive theoretical introduction that also serves as a general introduction to the dramatic chorus from the comic vantage point, a close reading of Aristophanes' Thesmophoriazusae shows that ritual is indeed present in both the micro- and macrostructure of Attic comedy, not as a fossilized remnant of the origins of the genre but as part of a still existing performative choral culture.
Paperback 2009
Sappho in the Making
Dimitrios Yatromanolakis
This book offers the first interdisciplinary and in-depth study of the cultural practices and ideological paradigms that conditioned the politics of the "reading" of Sappho's songs in the early and most pivotal stages of her reception. Yatromanolakis investigates visual representations and ancient texts in their synchronic and diachronic multilayeredness to trace the discursive nexuses that defined the making of "Sappho" in the late archaic, classical, and early Hellenistic periods.
Paperback 2008
Sappho's Immortal Daughters
Margaret Williamson
This book is a search for Sappho through the poetry she wrote, the culture she inhabited, and the myths that have arisen around her. It is an expert and thoroughly engaging introduction to one of the most enduring and enigmatic figures of antiquity.
Hardcover 1995 / Paperback 1998
Soliciting Darkness
John T. Hamilton
In discussing both poets and scholars from a broad historical span, with special emphasis on the German legacy of genius, Soliciting Darkness investigates how Pindar's obscurity has been perceived and confronted, extorted and exploited. As such, this study addresses a variety of pressing issues, including the recovery and appropriation of classical texts, problems of translation, representations of lyric authenticity, and the possibility or impossibility of a continuous literary tradition.
Paperback 2004 / Hardcover 2004
Sophocles, III, Fragments
Sophocles
Edited and translated by Hugh Lloyd-Jones
Sophocles, by common consent one of the world's greatest poets, wrote more than 120 plays. Only seven of these survive complete, but we have a wealth of fragments, from which much can be learned about Sophocles' language and dramatic art. This volume presents, in Greek and facing English translation, a collection of all the major fragments, ranging in length from two lines to a very substantial portion of the satyr play The Searchers. Prefatory notes provide frameworks for the fragments of the known plays. Among the lost plays of which we have large fragments, The Searchers shows the god Hermes, soon after his birth, playing an amusing trick on his brother Apollo; Inachus portrays Zeus coming to Argos to seduce Io, the daughter of its king; and Niobe tells how Apollo and his sister Artemis punish Niobe for a slight upon their mother by killing her twelve children. Throughout the volume, as in the extant plays, we see Sophocles drawing his subjects from heroic legend.
Hardcover 1996
Statius, I, Silvae
Statius
Edited and translated by D. R. Shackleton Bailey
Statius' Silvae, thirty-two occasional poems, were written probably between 89 and 96 CE Here the poet congratulates friends, consoles mourners, offers thanks, admires a monument or artistic object, describes a memorable scene. The verse is light in touch, with a distinct picture quality. Statius gives us in these impromptu poems clear images of Domitian's Rome. D. R. Shackleton Bailey's new edition of the Silvae, a freshly edited Latin text facing a graceful translation, replaces the earlier Loeb Classical Library edition with translation by J. H. Mozley.
Hardcover 2003
Statius, II, Thebaid
Statius
Edited and translated by D. R. Shackleton Bailey
Statius published his Thebaid in the last decade of the first century. This epic recounting the struggle between the two sons of Oedipus for the kingship of Thebes is his masterpiece, a stirring exploration of the passions of civil war.
Hardcover 2004
Statius, III, Thebaid
Statius
Edited and translated by D. R. Shackleton Bailey
The extant portion of Statius's unfinished Achilleid is strikingly different in tone: this second epic begins as a charming account of Achilles' life. This two-volume edition of the epics completes Shackleton Bailey's new edition of Statius.
Hardcover 2004
Terence, I, The Woman of Andros. The Self-Tormentor. The Eunuch
Terence
Edited and translated by John Barsby
Terence came to Rome from North Africa as a slave in the household of a senator who freed him. His six plays (all of them extant), first performed in the 160s BCE in Rome, were all based on New Comedy models--like other Roman comedies of the time. In contrast to the exuberance and buffoonery of Plautus, Terence gives us realistic scenes and witty, refined Latin. Volume I contains a substantial introduction and three plays: The Woman of Andros, a romantic comedy; The Self-Tormentor, which looks at contrasting father-son relationships; and The Eunuch, whose characters include the most sympathetically drawn courtesan in Roman comedy.
Hardcover 2001
Terence, II, Phormio. The Mother-in-Law. The Brothers
Terence
Edited and translated by John Barsby
The other three plays are in Volume II: Phormio, a comedy of intrigue with an engaging trickster; The Mother-in-Law, unique among Terence's plays in that the female characters are the admirable ones; and The Brothers, which explores contrasting approaches to parental education of sons.
Hardcover 2001
Three Classical Poets
Richard Jenkyns
In this engaging essay Jenkyns shows us how to read three quite different ancient poets. In a close and sensitive reading of Sappho, Catullus, and Juvenal, he delineates the uniqueness of the poet's individual voice in relation to poetic traditions. His book constitutes a challenge to the view that one method will suffice for the interpretation of ancient poetry.
Hardcover 1982
Tragedy and Civilization
Charles Segal
Hardcover 1981
Tragic Ways of Killing a Woman
Nicole Loraux
In ordinary life an Athenian woman was allowed no accomplishments beyond leading a quiet and exemplary existence as wife and mother. Her glory was to have no glory. In Greek tragedy, however, women die violently and, through violence, master their own fate. It is a genre that delights in blurring the formal frontier between masculine and feminine. Through the subtlety of her reading of these powerful and ambiguous texts, Nicole Loraux elicits an array of insights into Greek attitudes toward death, sexuality, and gender.
Hardcover 1987 / Paperback 1991
The Transmission of the Text of Lucan in the Ninth Century
Harold C. Gotoff
Hardcover 1971
Unruly Eloquence
Bracht Branham
Hardcover
Verse with Prose from Petronius to Dante
Peter Dronke
Hardcover
Victim of The Muses
Todd Merlin Compton
This book probes the narratives of poets who are exiled, tried or executed for their satire. It views the scapegoat as a group's dominant warrior, sent out to confront predators or besieging forces. Both poets and warriors specialize in madness and aggression and are necessary, yet dangerous, to society.
Paperback 2006
Virgil, I, Eclogues. Georgics. Aeneid
Virgil
Translated by H. Rushton Fairclough
Revised by G. P. Goold
For this revised edition of the Loeb Classical Library's Virgil, G. P. Goold has corrected the text in accord with recent scholarship, revised the translation to reflect current idiom, and supplied a new introduction and explanatory notes. Fairclough's edition, long a faithful standard, has thus been thoroughly updated.
Hardcover 1916
Virgil, II, Aeneid
Virgil
Translated by H. Rushton Fairclough
Revised by G. P. Goold
The Loeb edition of Virgil, long a standard, has now been thoroughly updated. Retaining the excellence of Fairclough's "heroic prose" translation but pruning away its archaisms, G. P. Goold gives us a revised reading that reflects current idiom. Goold has also amended the text and apparatus and provides a new Introduction and explanatory notes. In a preface to the Appendix Vergiliana he addresses the provenance and attribution of these poems traditionally ascribed to Virgil and previously collected as his "Minor Poems."
Hardcover 1918
Weaving Truth
Ann Bergren
"What if truth were a woman?" asked Nietzsche. In ancient Greek thought, truth in language has a special relation to the female by virtue of her pre-eminent art-form--the one Freud believed was even invented by women--weaving. The essays in this book explore the implications of this nexus: language, the female, weaving, and the construction of truth.
Paperback 2008
Written Voices, Spoken Signs
Edited by Egbert J. Bakker
Edited by Ahuvia Kahane
Written Voices, Spoken Signs is a stimulating introduction to new perspectives on Homer and other traditional epics. Taking advantage of recent research on language and social exchange, the nine innovative essays in this volume--by leading scholars of Homer, oral poetics, and epic--focus on performance and audience reception of oral poetry.
Hardcover 1997
The Yavanajataka of Sphujidhvaja
Edited and translated by David Pingree
Hardcover 1978
Zeus in the Odyssey
J. Marks
This book makes the case that the plot of the Odyssey is represented within the narrative as a plan of Zeus, Dios boulê, that serves as a guide for the performing poet and as a hermeneutic for the audience. The “Zeus-centric” reading proposed here offers fresh perspectives on the tenor of interactions among the Odyssey’s characters.
Paperback 2008