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  1. Io's World: intimations of theodicy in 'Prometheus Bound'.Stephen White - 2001 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 121:107-140.
    The conflict between Prometheus and Zeus has long dominated critical discussion of the play and diverted attention from the only mortal to appear onstage. Prometheus is widely applauded as humanity's saviour and Zeus condemned as an oppressive tyrant, but the fate of the maiden Io is largely discounted. Her encounter with Prometheus, however, is the longest and most complex episode in the play, and it provides a very different perspective on events. The elaborate forecast of her journeys delivered by Prometheus (...)
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  • Archilochus 222W and 39W: Allusion and Reception, Hesiod and Catullus.Shane Hawkins - 2019 - Philologus: Zeitschrift für Antike Literatur Und Ihre Rezeption 163 (1):16-46.
    This article is a contribution to our understanding of how Archilochean poetics may be situated in the longer poetic tradition. In examining two fragments that have received little attention, I hope to illustrate how Archilochus’ poetry both engaged with its predecessors and was in turn engaged by its successors. Fragment 222W employs a theme that was perhaps already conventional for Hesiod, in which the incompatibility of the sexes is implicated in the cycle of seasons, an idea that also seems relevant (...)
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  • The imprisonment of women in Greek tragedy.Richard Seaford - 1990 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 110:76-90.
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  • The Attribution of Aeschylus, Choephoroi 691–9.Richard Seaford - 1989 - Classical Quarterly 39 (02):302-.
    These lines are the first reaction to the false news of the death of Orestes. Their attribution has been much discussed. What prompts my intervention is the recent development, on this important problem, of a confident unanimity which seems to me certainly mistaken. I have been unable to find a single translator, editor, or commentator in recent years who gives the lines to Electra. The case for Electra was best made by Headlam–Thomson in 1938, and a few extra points were (...)
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  • The Attribution of Aeschylus, Choephoroi 691–9.Richard Seaford - 1989 - Classical Quarterly 39 (2):302-306.
    These lines are the first reaction to the false news of the death of Orestes. Their attribution has been much discussed. What prompts my intervention is the recent development, on this important problem, of a confident unanimity which seems to me certainly mistaken. I have been unable to find a single translator, editor, or commentator in recent years who gives the lines to Electra. The case for Electra was best made by Headlam–Thomson in 1938, and a few extra points were (...)
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  • A dithyramb for Augustus: Horace, odes 4.2.Alex Hardie - 2015 - Classical Quarterly 65 (1):253-285.
    Odes4.2 ostensibly looks forward to two public events lying at some indeterminate point in the future, Augustus' return from campaign in Gaul, and a triumph over the Sygambri. The celebrations anticipated for these occasions frame the second half of the ode; but they do not supply its dramatic setting or timing, and the latter is evidently associated with the period following Augustus' departure for Gaul in summer 16b.c., or at any rate with a time when the Sygambri were felt still (...)
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  • Countless Deeds of Valour: Bacchylides 11.Richard Garner - 1992 - Classical Quarterly 42 (02):523-.
    There was a time when the detractors of Bacchylides singled out his eleventh ode as inept even by Bacchylidean standards: it was like the unfortunate tenor who was so stupid that even the other tenors noticed. The time of such criticism is gone, and the unfavourable verdict against Bacchylides' ode has nearly disappeared as well. The mythical journey in time which proceeds from the building of Artemis' altar back to the madness of Proetus' daughters and back further to the quarrel (...)
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  • Countless Deeds of Valour: Bacchylides 11.Richard Garner - 1992 - Classical Quarterly 42 (2):523-525.
    There was a time when the detractors of Bacchylides singled out his eleventh ode as inept even by Bacchylidean standards: it was like the unfortunate tenor who was so stupid that even the other tenors noticed. The time of such criticism is gone, and the unfavourable verdict against Bacchylides' ode has nearly disappeared as well. The mythical journey in time which proceeds from the building of Artemis' altar back to the madness of Proetus' daughters and back further to the quarrel (...)
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