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  1. Writing, copying, and autograph manuscripts in ancient Rome.Myles Mcdonnell - 1996 - Classical Quarterly 46 (02):469-.
    A familiar image from the Roman world is a Pompeian portrait of a man and woman sometimes identified as Terentius Neo and his wife. He has a papyrus roll under his chin, while she looks out with a writing tablet in one hand, a stylus held to her lips in the other. The message of the attributes presented would seem to be: ‘ We can and do read and write’. But how should the message be interpreted? To judge from the (...)
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  • Le Platon de Panétius.Jean-Baptiste Gourinat - 2008 - Philosophie Antique 8:139-151.
    Dans le Peri alypias de Galien, qui vient d’être redécouvert et édité par V. Boudon-Millot, Galien mentionne « le Platon de Panétius ». Étant donné le contexte, il est presque certain qu’il s’agit d’une édition de Platon par le philosophe stoïcien Panétius, édition dont on ignorait jusqu’ici l’existence.
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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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