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
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"Satis/Satura": Reconsidering the "Programmatic Intent" of Horace's "Satires 1.1". Basil Dufallo. The Classical World. (Jul. - Aug., 2000), pp. 579-590
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Ausonius' Juvenal and the Winstedt Fragment. Joshua D. Sosin. Classical Philology. (Apr., 2000), pp. 199-206
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The Memory of Philippi in Horace and the Interpretation of Epistle 1.20.23. Mario Citroni. Classical Journal. (Oct. - Nov., 2000), pp. 27-56
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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
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Propertius 4.2: Slumming with Vertumnus?. Kerill O'Neill. American Journal of Philology. (Summer, 2000), pp. 259-277
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Flaccus. Holt N. Parker. Classical Quarterly. (2000), pp. 455-462
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Juvenal, the Niphates, and Trajan's Column ("Satire 6.407-412"). Prudence Jones. Harvard Studies in Classical Philology. (2000), pp. 477-486
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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
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An Anthology of Early Latin Epigrams? A Ghost Reconsidered. Amiel D. Vardi. Classical Quarterly. (2000), pp. 147-158
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"The Most Desperate Textual Crux" in Lucretius-5.1442. Charles E. Murgia. Classical Philology. (Jul., 2000), pp. 304-317
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An Early Stage in Vergil's Career. Thomas D. Kohn. The Classical World. (Jan. - Feb., 2000), pp. 267-274
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Plautus' "Stichus" and the Political Crisis of 200 B.C.. William M. Owens. American Journal of Philology. (Autumn, 2000), pp. 385-407
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Isto Vilivs (Suetonius fr. 112, Terence Ad. 981). A. S. Gratwick. American Journal of Philology. (Spring, 2000), pp. 79-92
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A Trope by Any Other Name: "Polysemy," Ambiguity, and Significatio in Virgil. Richard F. Thomas. Harvard Studies in Classical Philology. (2000), pp. 381-407
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The Autopsy of C. Asinius Pollio. Llewelyn Morgan. Journal of Roman Studies. (2000), pp. 51-69
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Handouts at Dinner. W. J. Slater. The Phoenix. (Spring - Summer, 2000), pp. 107-122
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The Testamentary Phenomenon in Ancient Rome. Yaakov Stern. Historia: Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte. (4th Qtr., 2000), pp. 413-428
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Lucan and the Libyan Tale. Matthew Leigh. Journal of Roman Studies. (2000), pp. 95-109
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Contextual Learning and Latin Language Textbooks. Polly Hoover. The Classical World. (Autumn, 2000), pp. 56-60
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Trajan's Engines. Neville Morley. Greece & Rome. (Oct., 2000), pp. 197-210
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Cuius in Usum? Recent and Future Editing. Michael Reeve. Journal of Roman Studies. (2000), pp. 196-206
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"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
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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
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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
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The Lyric Lover in Horace "Odes" 1.15 and 1.17. Rebecca Nagel. The Phoenix. (Spring - Summer, 2000), pp. 53-63
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