Thematic Index of Classics in JStor
horace, juvenal, satire, lucilius, persius, satires, poet, poem, maecenas, satirist, lines, martial, serm, himself, literary, poetry, satura, horatian, epistle, epistles, epist, ars_poetica, poets, nasidienus, sermones, satiric, rudd, umbricius, lucilian, line, verse, poems, patron, hendrickson, criticism, highet, passage, trebius, genre, old_comedy, catius, moral, virro, poetic, marx, invective, davus, tigellius, verses, freudenburg

2000

Horace and His Fathers: Satires 1.4 and 1.6. Catherine Schlegel. American Journal of Philology. (Spring, 2000), pp. 93-119 List themes Full text (1787 theme words)
"Satis/Satura": Reconsidering the "Programmatic Intent" of Horace's "Satires 1.1". Basil Dufallo. The Classical World. (Jul. - Aug., 2000), pp. 579-590 List themes Full text (970 theme words)
Ausonius' Juvenal and the Winstedt Fragment. Joshua D. Sosin. Classical Philology. (Apr., 2000), pp. 199-206 List themes Full text (335 theme words)
The Memory of Philippi in Horace and the Interpretation of Epistle 1.20.23. Mario Citroni. Classical Journal. (Oct. - Nov., 2000), pp. 27-56 List themes Full text (157 theme words)
Horace and Catullus: The Case of the Suppressed Precursor in "Odes" 1.22 and 1.32. Thomas K. Hubbard. The Classical World. (Autumn, 2000), pp. 25-37 List themes Full text (155 theme words)
Propertius 4.2: Slumming with Vertumnus?. Kerill O'Neill. American Journal of Philology. (Summer, 2000), pp. 259-277 List themes Full text (93 theme words)
Flaccus. Holt N. Parker. Classical Quarterly. (2000), pp. 455-462 List themes Full text (48 theme words)
Juvenal, the Niphates, and Trajan's Column ("Satire 6.407-412"). Prudence Jones. Harvard Studies in Classical Philology. (2000), pp. 477-486 List themes Full text (44 theme words)
Brevity, Conciseness, and Compression in Roman Poetic Criticism and the Text of Gellius' Noctes Atticae 19.9.10. Amiel D. Vardi. American Journal of Philology. (Summer, 2000), pp. 291-298 List themes Full text (39 theme words)
An Anthology of Early Latin Epigrams? A Ghost Reconsidered. Amiel D. Vardi. Classical Quarterly. (2000), pp. 147-158 List themes Full text (34 theme words)
"The Most Desperate Textual Crux" in Lucretius-5.1442. Charles E. Murgia. Classical Philology. (Jul., 2000), pp. 304-317 List themes Full text (32 theme words)
An Early Stage in Vergil's Career. Thomas D. Kohn. The Classical World. (Jan. - Feb., 2000), pp. 267-274 List themes Full text (29 theme words)
Plautus' "Stichus" and the Political Crisis of 200 B.C.. William M. Owens. American Journal of Philology. (Autumn, 2000), pp. 385-407 List themes Full text (20 theme words)
Isto Vilivs (Suetonius fr. 112, Terence Ad. 981). A. S. Gratwick. American Journal of Philology. (Spring, 2000), pp. 79-92 List themes Full text (16 theme words)
A Trope by Any Other Name: "Polysemy," Ambiguity, and Significatio in Virgil. Richard F. Thomas. Harvard Studies in Classical Philology. (2000), pp. 381-407 List themes Full text (14 theme words)
The Autopsy of C. Asinius Pollio. Llewelyn Morgan. Journal of Roman Studies. (2000), pp. 51-69 List themes Full text (13 theme words)
Handouts at Dinner. W. J. Slater. The Phoenix. (Spring - Summer, 2000), pp. 107-122 List themes Full text (12 theme words)
The Testamentary Phenomenon in Ancient Rome. Yaakov Stern. Historia: Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte. (4th Qtr., 2000), pp. 413-428 List themes Full text (10 theme words)
Lucan and the Libyan Tale. Matthew Leigh. Journal of Roman Studies. (2000), pp. 95-109 List themes Full text (10 theme words)
Contextual Learning and Latin Language Textbooks. Polly Hoover. The Classical World. (Autumn, 2000), pp. 56-60 List themes Full text (9 theme words)
Trajan's Engines. Neville Morley. Greece & Rome. (Oct., 2000), pp. 197-210 List themes Full text (9 theme words)
Cuius in Usum? Recent and Future Editing. Michael Reeve. Journal of Roman Studies. (2000), pp. 196-206 List themes Full text (6 theme words)
"Sponsio Quae in Verba Facta Est?" Two Lost Speeches and the Formula of the Roman Legal Wager. J. Bradford Churchill. Classical Quarterly. (2000), pp. 159-169 List themes Full text (6 theme words)
Beyond (Dis)belief: Rhetorical Form and Religious Symbol in Cicero's de Divinatione. Brian A. Krostenko. Transactions of the American Philological Association. (2000), pp. 353-391 List themes Full text (6 theme words)
Horace Epodes 11.15-18: What's Shame Got to Do with It?. Holt N. Parker. American Journal of Philology. (Winter, 2000), pp. 559-570 List themes Full text (5 theme words)
The Lyric Lover in Horace "Odes" 1.15 and 1.17. Rebecca Nagel. The Phoenix. (Spring - Summer, 2000), pp. 53-63 List themes Full text (5 theme words)