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Analogie und Attizismus

Hermes 85 (2):170-205 (1957)

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  1. Gender, Class and Ideology: The Social Function of Virgin Sacrifice in Euripides' Children of Herakles.Erik Gunderson, Sean Gurd & David Kawalko Roselli - 2007 - Classical Antiquity 26 (1):81-169.
    This paper explores how gender can operate as a disguise for class in an examination of the self-sacrifice of the Maiden in Euripides' Children of Herakles. In Part I, I discuss the role of human sacrifice in terms of its radical potential to transform society and the role of class struggle in Athens. In Part II, I argue that the representation of women was intimately connected with the social and political life of the polis. In a discussion of iconography, the (...)
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  • L. Cornelius Sisenna and the Early First Century B.C.Elizabeth Rawson - 1979 - Classical Quarterly 29 (02):327-.
    The most important historical work in Latin that was actually written in the first half of the first century B C. was L. Cornelius Sisenna's history of the War of the Allies and the Civil Wars which followed it, up to Sulla's dictatorship or conceivably death-the most important one that was not written being of course Cicero's. Sallust praised Sisenna's work highly in the Jugurtba, though complaining that it was not sufficiently frank about Sulla, and his own lost histories began, (...)
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  • L. Cornelius Sisenna and the Early First Century B.C.Elizabeth Rawson - 1979 - Classical Quarterly 29 (2):327-346.
    The most important historical work in Latin that was actually written in the first half of the first century B C. was L. Cornelius Sisenna's history of the War of the Allies and the Civil Wars which followed it, up to Sulla's dictatorship or conceivably death-the most important one that was not written being of course Cicero's. Sallust praised Sisenna's work highly in theJugurtba, though complaining that it was not sufficiently frank about Sulla, and his own lost histories began, very (...)
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  • Cicero and Editorial Revision.Sean Gurd - 2007 - Classical Antiquity 26 (1):49-80.
    In this essay I discuss Cicero's practice of submitting his texts to others for comment, arguing that the mutual reading and correction of friends' works played an important social function. By discussing what would make a text better, Cicero and his collaborators worked to forge and maintain social ties. In addition, I pursue an important corollary: for a text to provoke this activity, it must present itself as unfinished or in progress. Cicero was aware of this corollary, and in the (...)
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