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  1. A Stichometric Allusion to Catullus 64 in the Culex.Dunstan Lowe - 2014 - Classical Quarterly 64 (2):862-865.
    In a recent note, I collected instances of ‘stichometric allusion’, the technique in which poets allude, in one or more of their own verses, to source verses with corresponding line numbers. The technique existed in Hellenistic Greek poetry, but seems more prevalent (or at least, detectable) among the Latin poets of the Augustan era, who applied it to Greek and Latin predecessors alike, as well as internally to their own work. New illustrations of each type may be added here to (...)
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  • Ghostwriting elegy in propertius 4.7.Jonathan Wallis - 2016 - Classical Quarterly 66 (2):556-572.
    Propertian elegy is not an obstinately male genre. It is engendered as masculine in its discursive mastery over the female object of its erotics and poetics, but engenders itself as effeminate in its association with softness, submissiveness, and impotence, and as feminine especially in its self-critique and its interrogation of Roman gender and sexuality.M. Wyke,The Roman Mistress, 189.
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