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  1. Senecan Progressor Friendship and the Characterization of Nero in Tacitus' Annals.Jula Wildberger - 2015 - In Christoph Kugelmeier (ed.), Translatio humanitatis: Festschrift zum 60. Geburtstag von Peter Riemer. Röhrig Universitätsverlag. pp. 471-492.
    Argues that Tacitus’ shaped his account of Seneca and the characterization of Nero within his social environment according to features characteristic of Seneca’s conception of friendship. Surprisingly, Tacitus assigns to Nero an active power: The emperor drives a ubiquitous inversion of the social values promoted by his mentor. Patterns of Seneca’s social thought are adduced to characterize not only the portrayed emperor but also the political institution itself.
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  • Hadrian’s Adoption Speech in Cassius Dio’s Roman History and the Problems of Imperial Succession.Caillan Davenport & Christopher Mallan - 2014 - American Journal of Philology 135 (4):637-668.
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  • Caractères et personnalité dans la biographie antique.Fabio Stock - 2020 - Argos 2 (39):9-30.
    L’article examine le rôle de la personnalité dans la biographie ancienne et sa relation avec la le concept de personnalité dans la biographie ancienne et sa relation avec la physionomiee les traits somatiques et psychiques héréditaires.
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  • From Source to Sermo: Narrative Technique in Livy 34.54.4-8.Cynthia Damon - 1997 - American Journal of Philology 118 (2):251-266.
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  • Spatial Contingencies in Thucydides' History.Karen Bassi - 2007 - Classical Antiquity 26 (2):171-218.
    This paper argues that spatial contingencies, defined by the relationship between where historical actors are in the narrative and what they say, are crucial for understanding the political and ideological effects of Thucydides' History. A comprehensive approach to these contingencies is linked to two related premises. First, that the city of Athens is the principal spatial referent in the History and, second, that Athens refers both to a set of “real” topographical features and to a transcendent and trans-historical ideal that (...)
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