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2025To Top

Potter, Amanda and Strong, Anise K. eds. (2025). Classical Receptions and Impact of Xena: Warrior Princess. Bloomsbury.

Fear, Trevor (2025). Cleopatra in the Xenaverse. In: Potter, Amanda and Strong, Anise K. eds. Classical Receptions and Impact of Xena: Warrior Princess. Bloomsbury.

Potter, Amanda (2025). Xena Mythology-based Fanfiction. In: Potter, Amanda and Strong, Anise K. eds. Classical Receptions and Impact of Xena: Warrior Princess. Bloomsbury, pp. 126–143.

Robson, James (2025). An Enviable Life or Worse than Death? Reconstructing Women's Experience of Marriage and Sex in Classical Athens. In: Clark, Anna and Williams, Elizabeth W. eds. Sources and Methods in the History of Sexuality. Routledge Guides to Using Historical Sources. London and New York: Routledge, pp. 102–118.

2024To Top

Bullen, David and Plastow, Christine eds. (2024). Greek Tragedy, Education, and Theatre Practices in the UK Classics Ecology. Classics In and Out of the Academy. London, UK: Routledge.

Gilles, Greg; Frank, Karolina; Plastow, Christine and Webb, Lewis eds. (2024). Female Agency in the Ancient Mediterranean World. Women in Ancient Cultures - Ancient History & Classics. Liverpool, UK: Liverpool University Press.

Allan, William and Swift, Laura (2024). Euripides: Bacchae. Cambridge Greek and Latin Classics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Barker, Elton (2024). The Hero in Homer. In: Allison, Scott; Beggan, James and Goethals, George eds. Encyclopedia of Heroism Studies. Cham: Springer, pp. 1–7.

Barker, Elton; Palladino, Chiara and Gordin, Shai (2024). Digital approaches to investigating space and place in Classical Studies. The Classical Review, 74(1) pp. 1–19.

Gilles, Greg; Frank, Karolina; Plastow, Christine and Webb, Lewis (2024). Introduction. In: Gilles, Greg; Frank, Karolina; Plastow, Christine and Webb, Lewis eds. Female Agency in the Ancient Mediterranean World. Women in Ancient Cultures - Ancient History & Classics. Liverpool, UK: Liverpool University Press.

Graham, Emma-Jayne (2024). The haptic production of religious knowledge among the Vestal Virgins: A hands-on approach to Roman ritual. In: Abigail, Graham and Blanka, Misic eds. Senses, Cognition, and Ritual Experience in the Roman World. Ancient Religion and Cognition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 59–88.

Graham, Emma-Jayne (2024). Death's ritual symbolic performance. In: Erasmo, Mario ed. A Cultural History of Death in Antiquity. The Cultural Histories Series, 1. London, UK: Bloomsbury Publishing, pp. 67–82.

Graham, Emma-Jayne (2024). Moving with time and space at the sanctuary of Juno, Gabii (Italy). In: Jordan, Pamela; Mura, Sara and Hamilton, Sue eds. New Sensory Approaches to the Past: Applied Methods in Sensory Heritage and Archaeology. London: UCL Press, (In press).

Hardwick, Lorna; Harrison, Stephen and Vandiver, Elizabeth (2024). Rupert Brooke, Charles Sorley, Isaac Rosenberg, & Wilfred Owen: Classical Connections. Oxford Classical Reception Commentaries. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.

Hobden, Fiona (2024). The trouble with Xenophon: marching with the Ten Thousand in 21st-century fiction. In: Farrell, C and Gish, D eds. Brill's Companion to the Reception of Xenophon. Brill (In press).

Holton, Stephanie (2024). Prognosis and psyche: the medical dream before Aristotle. In: ONEIRATA: Sleep, Dreams, and Divination in Aristotle and his Predecessors, 22-23 May 2024, University of Durham, Durham, UK.

Hope, Valerie M. (2024). Dead and Dying Bodies. In: Erasmo, Mario ed. A Cultural History of Death in Antiquity. A Cultural History of Death. London: Bloomsbury, pp. 15–31.

King, Helen (2024). Immaculate Forms: Uncovering the History of Women's Bodies. Wellcome Collection. London, UK: Profile Books Ltd..

Konstantinidou, Maria; Pavlopoulos, John and Barker, Elton (2024). Exploring intertextuality across the Homeric poems through language models. In: Proceedings of the 1st Workshop on Machine Learning for Ancient Languages (ML4AL 2024) (Pavlopoulos, John; Sommerschield, Thea; Assael, Yannis; Gordin, Shai; Cho, Kyunghyun; Pasarotti, Marco; Sprugnoli, Rachele; Liu, Yudong; Li, Bin and Anderson, Adam eds.), Association for Computational Linguistics, pp. 260–268.

Perkins, P. and Warden, P. G. (2024). The Vicchio stele and Poggio Colla. Studi Etruschi, LXXXVII

Plastow, Christine (2024). Towards Co-creation: Roles of Classics Academics in Modern Productions of Greek Tragedy. In: Bullen, David and Plastow, Christine eds. Greek Tragedy, Education, and Theatre Practices in the UK Classics Ecology. Classics In and Out of the Academy. London, UK: Routledge.

Plastow, Christine and Bullen, David (2024). Introducing the Classics Ecology. In: Bullen, David and Plastow, Christine eds. Greek Tragedy, Education, and Theatre Practices in the UK Classics Ecology. Classics In and Out of the Academy. London, UK: Routledge.

Robson, James (2024). Sex in Athens in the Fifth and Fourth Centuries BCE. In: Wiesner-Hanks, M. E. and Kuefler, M. eds. Sites of Knowledge and Practice. The Cambridge World History of Sexualities, 3. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 1–26.

Tsoumpra, Natalia (2024). Knights: Political Satire. In: Farmer, Matthew C. and Lefkowitz, Jeremy B. eds. A Companion to Aristophanes. Wiley, pp. 107–126.

2023To Top

Filonik, Jakub; Plastow, Christine and Zelnick-Abramovitz, Rachel eds. (2023). Citizenship in Antiquity: Civic Communities in the Ancient Mediterranean. Rewriting Antiquity. London: Routledge.

Barker, Elton; Konstantinidou, Kyriaki; Kiesling, Brady and Foka, Anna (2023). Journeying through Space and Time with Pausanias’s Description of Greece. Literary Geographies, 9(1) pp. 124–160.

Filonik, Jakub; Plastow, Christine and Zelnick-Abramovitz, Rachel (2023). Citizenship in antiquity: current perspectives and challenges. In: Filonik, Jakub; Plastow, Christine and Zelnick-Abramovitz, Rachel eds. Citizenship in Antiquity: Civic Communities in the Ancient Mediterranean. Rewriting Antiquity. London: Routledge, pp. 1–22.

Foka, Anna; Barker, Elton; Konstantinidou, Kyriaki; Mostofian, Nasrin; Kiesling, Brady; Talatas, Linda; Cenk Demiroglu, O. and Palm, Kajsa (2023). A Digital Periegesis: Implementing Spatial Research Infrastructures for Classical History and Archaeology. In: Petrulevich, Alexandra and Skovgaard Boeck, Simon eds. Digital Spatial Infrastructures and Worldviews in Pre-Modern Societies. Collection Development, Cultural Heritage, and Digital Humanities - ARC. Leeds: ARC Humanities Press, pp. 205–223.

Hobden, Fiona (2023). [Book Review] Xenophon and the Athenian Democracy: The Education of an Elite Citizenry, written by Matthew R. Christ. Polis: The Journal for Ancient Greek and Roman Political Thought, 40(1) pp. 175–178.

King, Helen (2023). Being Flesh: Bodies, History and LLF. Modern Believing, 64(1) pp. 36–43.

King, Helen (2023). From print to wool: Vesalius and the ‘knit your own womb’ movement. In: Représenter le sexe féminin [Uncovering the Female Sexual Anatomy] (Cazes, Hélène ed.), University of Victoria Libraries Press, Victoria, British Columbia, (In Press).

Landeschi, Giacomo and Betts, Eleanor (2023). Capturing the Senses: Digital Methods for Sensory Archaeologies. Quantitative Methods in the Humanities and Social Sciences. Cham, Switzerland: Springer.

Plastow, Christine (2023). Places of citizenship in Athenian forensic oratory. In: Filonik, Jakub; Plastow, Christine and Zelnick-Abramovitz, Rachel eds. Citizenship in Antiquity: Civic Communities in the Ancient Mediterranean. Rewriting Antiquity. London: Routledge, pp. 355–368.

Pratt, Kim Emmerson (2023). Polyphemos’ Lament. Limina: A Journal of Historical and Cultural Studies, 28(2) pp. 67–68.

Robson, James (2023). Aristophanes: Lysistrata. Bloomsbury Ancient Comedy Companions. London: Bloomsbury Publishing.

Rothe, Ursula; Hamelink, Anique and Delferrière, Nicolas (2023). Roman Clavus Decoration on Gallic Dress: A Reevaluation Based on New Discoveries. American Journal of Archaeology, 127(4) pp. 545–562.

Solly, Dominic S. (2023). How Claudian changed epic to praise Stilicho. Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) thesis The Open University.

Ward, Marchella (2023). Blindness and Spectatorship in Ancient and Modern Theatres: Towards New Ways of Looking and Looking Back. Classics after Antiquity. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.

Yamagata, N. (2023). Thetis and the Shield of Achilles – Reading the Iliad with Auden. In: Paprocki, M; Vos, G. P. and Wright, D. J. eds. The Staying Power of Thetis: Allusion, Interaction, and Reception from Homer to the 21st Century. De Gruyter, pp. 395–410.

Yamagata, Naoko (2023). Thetis and the Shield of Achilles — Reading the Iliad with Auden: Allusion, Interaction, and Reception from Homer to the 21st Century. In: Paprocki, Maciej; Vos, Gary Patrick and Wright, David John eds. The Staying Power of Thetis. Trends in Classics, 140. De Gruyter, pp. 395–410.

2022To Top

Swift, Laura ed. (2022). A Companion to Greek Lyric. Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World. Wiley-Blackwell.

Anderson, Stephen; Maclennan, Keith and Yamagata, Naoko (2022). Reading Homer: Iliad Books 16 and 18. The Joint Association of Classical Teachers' Greek Course: Reading Greek. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Foka, Anna; Demiroglu, Osman Cenk; Barker, Elton; Mostofian, Nasrin; Konstantinidou, Kyriaki; Kiesling, Brady; Talatas, Linda and Palm, Kajsa (2022). Visualizing Pausanias’s Description of Greece with contemporary GIS. Digital Scholarship in the Humanities, 37(3) pp. 716–724.

Foka, Anna; Konstantinidou, Kyriaki; Talatas, Linda; Mostofian, Nasrin; Kiesling, John Brady; Barker, Elton; Demiroglu, Cenk O.; Palm, Kajsa; McMeekin, David and Vekselius, Johan (2022). Heritage metadata: a digital Periegesis. In: Koraljka, Golub and Ying-Hsang, Liu eds. Information and Knowledge Organisation in Digital Humanities: Global Perspectives. Routledge Research in Arts and Humanities. London: Routledge, pp. 227–242.

Holton, Stephanie (2022). Sleep and Dreams in Early Greek Thought: Presocratic and Hippocratic Approaches. Medicine and the Body in Antiquity. Abingdon, UK: Routledge.

King, Helen (2022). The body and botany: “the first step toward the brothel”. In: Santos Pinheiro, Cristina; Silva, Gabriel A. F.; Fonseca, Rui Carlos; Mota, Bernardo Machado and Pinheiro, Joaquim eds. Gynecia: Studies on Gynaecology in Ancient, Medieval and Early-modern Texts. Porto: Edições Afrontamento, pp. 11–26.

Perkins, Phil (2022). The bucchero from Poggio Colla. In: Gaucci, Andrea and Cappuccini, Luca eds. Officine e artigianato ceramic nei siti etruschi dell’Appennino tosco-emiliano tra VII e IV sec. a.C. Instituto Nazionale di Studi Etruschi ed Italici, 66. Rome: “L’Erma” di Bretschneider, pp. 363–383.

Swift, Laura (2022). Dramatic Lyric. In: Swift, Laura ed. A Companion to Greek Lyric. Wiley, pp. 377–388.

Wilding, Alexandra (2022). Reinventing the Amphiareion at Oropos. Mnemosyne Supplements, 445. Leiden: Brill.

2021To Top

Barker, Elton (2021). Geography. In: Baron, Christopher ed. The Herodotus Encyclopedia. John Wiley & Sons.

Barker, Elton and Christensen, Joel (2021). An epic Heracles. In: Ogden, Daniel ed. The Oxford Handbook of Heracles. Oxford Handbooks Online. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 283–300.

Barker, Elton; Isaksen, Leif and O'Doherty, Marianne (2021). Introduction to the Pelagios special issue. International Journal of Humanities and Arts Computing, 15(1-2) pp. 1–4.

Bridges, Emma and Stead, Henry (2021). [Subject Review] Reception. Greece and Rome, 68(2) pp. 348–352.

Fallas, Rebecca (2021). ‘Infertile’ and ‘sub-fertile’ semen in the Hippocratic Corpus and the biological works of Aristotle. In: Bradley, Mark; Leonard, Victoria and Totelin, Laurence eds. Bodily Fluids in Antiquity. Routledge, pp. 120–133.

Foka, Anna; McMeekin, David A.; Konstantinidou, Kyriaki; Mostofian, Nasrin; Barker, Elton; Demiroglu, O. Cenk; Chiew, Ethan; Kiesling, Brady and Talatas, Linda (2021). Mapping Ancient Heritage Narratives with Digital Tools. In: Champion, E. M. ed. Virtual Heritage: A Guide. London: Ubiquity Press, pp. 55–65.

Graham, Emma-Jayne (2021). Interactional sensibilities: bringing ancient disability studies to its archaeological senses. In: Adams, Ellen ed. The Forgotten Other: Disability Studies and the Classical Body. Studies in Ancient Disabilities. Abingdon: Routledge, pp. 165–191.

Haywood, Jan (2021). Lade. In: Baron, Christopher ed. The Herodotus Encyclopedia. Wiley-Blackwell.

Hobden, Fiona (2021). Travels with Odysseus and the Odyssey in twenty-first-century television documentaries. In: Potter, Amanda and Gardner, Hunter eds. Ancient Epic in Film and Television. Screening Antiquity. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, pp. 135–151.

Kahn, Rebecca; Isaksen, Leif; Barker, Elton; Simon, Rainer; de Soto, Pau and Vitale, Valeria (2021). Pelagios – Connecting Histories of Place. Part II: From Community to Association. International Journal of Humanities and Arts Computing, 15(1-2) pp. 85–100.

King, Helen (2021). Seeing the bigger picture: what is gynaecology for? Ágora: Estudos Clássicos em Debate, 23(1) pp. 17–48.

King, Helen (2021). A history of our own?: Using Classics in disability histories. In: Adams, Ellen ed. Disability Studies and the Classical Body: The Forgotten Other. Routledge Studies in Ancient Disabilities. London: Routledge, pp. 237–263.

King, Helen (2021). Opening the body of fluids: Taking in and pouring out in Renaissance readings of Classical women. In: Bradley, Mark; Leonard, Victoria and Totelin, Laurence eds. Bodily Fluids in Antiquity. London: Routledge, pp. 381–398.

King, Helen (2021). ‘Treating the Patient, Not Just the Disease’: Reading Ancient Medicine in Modern Holistic Medicine. In: Thumiger, Chiara ed. Holism in Ancient Medicine and its Reception. Leiden: Brill, pp. 402–424.

Paul, Joanna (2021). In Search of the Lost City: The Enduring Absence of Pompeii. In: Geue, Tom and Giusti, Elena eds. Unspoken Rome: Absence in Latin Literature and its Reception. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 250–269.

Paul, Joanna (2021). Afterword. In: Potter, Amanda and Gardner, Hunter eds. Ancient Epic in Film and Television. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, pp. 233–239.

Perkins, Phil (2021). The Etruscan pithos revolution. In: Gleba, Margarita; Marín-Aguilera, Beatriz and Dimova, Bela eds. Making cities: Economies of production and urbanization in Mediterranean Europe, 1000–500 BC. McDonald Institute Conversations. Cambridge, UK: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, pp. 231–258.

Plastow, Christine (2021). [Book review] Democratic Law in Classical Athens, written by Michael Gagarin. Polis: The Journal for Ancient Greek and Roman Political Thought, 38(2) pp. 332–335.

Swift, Laura (2021). Sappho and the Gods. In: Finglass, Patrick and Kelly, Adrian eds. The Cambridge Companion to Sappho. Cambridge Companions to Literature. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 209–222.

Swift, Laura (2021). Negotiating hegemony in early Greek Poetry. In: Zucchetti, Emilio and Cimino, Anna Maria eds. Antonio Gramsci and the Ancient World. Routledge Monographs in Classical Studies. London: Routledge, pp. 44–62.

Vitale, Valeria; de Soto, Pau; Simon, Rainer; Barker, Elton; Isaksen, Leif and Kahn, Rebecca (2021). Pelagios – Connecting Histories of Place. Part I: Methods and Tools. International Journal of Humanities and Arts Computing, 15(1-2) pp. 5–32.

2020To Top

Barker, Elton (2020). What would Indy do? Resisting post-truth through the practice of annotation. In: Roosevelt, Chris ed. Spatial Webs: Mapping Anatolian Pasts for Research and the Public. ANAMEDD: Research Center for Anatolian Civilizations. Istanbul: Koç University Research Centre for Anatolian Civilizations, pp. 5–31.

Barker, Elton; Foka, Anna and Konstantinidou, Kyriaki (2020). Coding for the Many, Transforming Knowledge for All: Annotating Digital Documents. Publications of the Modern Language Association, 135(1) pp. 195–202.

Foka, Anna; Barker, Elton; Konstantinidou, Kyriaki; Mostofian, Nasrin; Demiroglu, O. Cenk; Kiesling, Brady and Talatas, Linda (2020). Semantically geo-annotating an ancient Greek "travel guide" Itineraries, Chronotopes, Networks, and Linked Data. In: Proceedings of the 4th ACM SIGSPATIAL Workshop on Geospatial Humanities, ACM.

Graham, Emma-Jayne (2020). Hand in hand: Rethinking anatomical votives as material things. In: Gasparini, V; Patzelt, M; Raja, R; Rieger, A-K; Rupke, J and Urciuoli, E eds. Lived Religion in the Ancient Mediterranean World: Approaching Religious Transformations from Archaeology, History and Classics. De Gruyter, pp. 209–236.

Graham, Emma-Jayne (2020). Mobility impairment: identifying lived experiences in Roman Italy. In: Laes, Christian ed. A Cultural History of Disability in Antiquity. London: Bloomsbury, pp. 31–45.

Greenhalgh, Claire Elizabeth (2020). The Depiction of Slavery in Ancient World Television Drama: Politics, Culture and Society. Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) thesis The Open University.

Haywood, Jan (2020). Alice Oswald's Memorial, a new Iliad. In: Silva, Maria de Fátima; Bouvier, David and Augusto, Maria das Graças eds. A Special Model of Classical Reception: Summaries and Short Narratives. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, pp. 73–90.

Hobden, Fiona (2020). Xenophon. Ancients in Action. London: Bloomsbury Academic.

Hobden, Fiona and Potter, Amanda (2020). Redirecting the gaze: the woman and the gladiator on television in the twenty-first century. New Voices in Classical Reception Studies. Conference Proceedings Volume Two, article no. 3.

Hope, Valerie (2020). Life at Sea, Death on Land: the Funerary Commemoration of the Sailors of Roman Misenum. In: Bargfeldt, Niels and Hjarl Petersen, Jane eds. Reflections: Harbour City Deathscapes in Roman Italy and Beyond. Rome: Quasar, pp. 79–98.

Hope, Valerie (2020). Octavia: a Roman mother in mourning. In: Sharrock, Alison and Keith, Alison eds. Maternal conceptions in classical literature and philosophy. University of Toronto Press.

Hughes, Jessica (2020). A Sense of Disruption. Material Religion, 16(3) pp. 371–373.

King, Helen (2020). Hippocrates Now: The 'Father of Medicine' in the Internet Age. Bloomsbury Studies in Classical Reception. London: Bloomsbury.

King, Helen (2020). The body beyond Laqueur: Hippocratic sex and its rediscovery. In: Höfele, Andreas and Kellner, Beate eds. Natur-Geschlecht-Politik: Denkmuster und Repräsentationsformen vom Alten Testament bis in die Neuzeit. Wilhelm Fink Verlag, pp. 199–216.

King, Helen (2020). Hippocratic whispers: telling the story of the life of Hippocrates on the internet. In: Totelin, Laurence and Flemming, Rebecca eds. Medicine and Markets: Essays on Ancient Medicine in honour of Vivian Nutton. Classical Press of Wales, pp. 143–160.

Lymberopoulou, Angeliki (2020). The five senses in Hell. Material religion, 16(3) pp. 364–367.

Perkins, Phil; Nocentini, Alessandro and Warden, P. Gregory (2020). Ricerca e scavi a Albagino (2017-2019). In: Arbeid, Barbara and Pessina, Andrea eds. Tutela & Restauro 2016 . 2019. Notiziario della Soprintendenza archeologia belle arti e paesaggio per la città metropolitana di Firenze e le province di Pistoia e Prato. Sesto Fiorentino: All'Insegna del Giglio, pp. 414–416.

Rabinowitz, Nancy; Bell, Marcus; Bullen, David and Plastow, Christine (2020). The Orestes Project. Practitioners' Voices in Classical Reception Studies(11)

Swift, Laura (2020). Phoenician Women. In: Markantonatos, Andreas ed. The Brill Companion to Euripides. Brill's Companions to Classical Studies. Leiden: Brill, pp. 342–358.

Yamagata, Naoko (2020). Thetis: the goddess between four worlds. In: Christopoulos, M. and Païzi-Apostolopoulou, M. eds. The Upper and the Under World in Homeric and Archaic Epic: Proceedings of the 13th International Symposium on the Odyssey, Ithaca, August 25-29, 2017. Ithaca, Greece: Centre for Odyssean Studies, pp. 11–30.

Yamagata, Naoko (2020). Homeric Summaries in Plato. In: de Fátima Silva, M; Bouvier, D and das Graças Augusto, M eds. A Special Model of Classical Reception: Summaries and Short Narratives. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, pp. 22–33.

2019To Top

Archibald, Zosia and Haywood, Jan eds. (2019). The Power of Individual and Community in Ancient Athens and Beyond. Swansea: The Classical Press of Wales.

Archibald, Zosia and Haywood, Jan (2019). Preface. In: Archibald, Zosia and Haywood, Jan eds. The Power of Individual and Community in Ancient Athens and Beyond. Swansea: The Classical Press of Wales, ix-xxvii.

Barker, Elton; Simon, Rainer; Vitale, Valeria; Kahn, Rebecca and Isaksen, Leif (2019). Revisiting Linking Early Geospatial Documents with Recogito. e-Perimetron, 14(3) pp. 150–163.

Graham, Emma-Jayne (2019). Pilgrimage, mobile behaviours and the creation of religious place in early Roman Latium. In: Kuuliala, Jenni and Rantala, Jussi eds. Travel, Pilgrimage and Social Interaction from Antiquity to the Middle Ages. Routledge, pp. 15–36.

Hobden, Fiona (2019). Spartacus: Blood and Sand (STARZ, 2010): a necessary fiction? In: van Helden, Daniël and Witcher, Robert eds. Researching the Archaeological Past through Imagined Narratives: A Necessary Fiction. Routledge Studies in Archaeology. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge, pp. 238–254.

Hope, Valerie M. (2019). An Emperor's Tears: the significance of the mourning of the Julio-Claudian emperors. Thersites: Journal for Transcultural Presences and Diachronic identities from antiquity to date, 9 pp. 117–146.

Hughes, Jessica (2019). Tiny and Fragmented Votive Offerings from Classical Antiquity. In: Martin, S. Rebecca and Langin-Hooper, Stephanie M. eds. The Tiny and the Fragmented : Miniature, Broken, or Otherwise Incomplete Objects in the Ancient World. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 48–71.

King, Helen (2019). Reflection: Phrontis: The Patient Meets the Text. In: Adamson, Peter ed. Health: A History. Oxford University Press, pp. 95–102.

Paul, Joanna (2019). Archaeology, historical fiction and Classical Reception Studies. In: Witcher, Robert and van Helden, Daniël P. eds. Researching the Archaeological Past through Imagined Narratives: A Necessary Fiction. Routledge Studies in Archaeology. Routledge, pp. 255–262.

Plastow, Christine (2019). Doctors in Attic Forensic Oratory. Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies, 59(4) pp. 575–595.

Plastow, Christine (2019). The Devil's in the Detail: Including 'irrelevant' details in homicide narratives. In: Edwards, Mike and Spatharas, Dimos eds. Forensic Narratives in Athenian Courts. Routledge, pp. 40–54.

Plastow, Christine (2019). Space, place, and identity in Antiphon 'On the Murder of Herodes'. In: Filonik, Jakub; Griffith-Williams, Brenda and Kucharski, Janek eds. The Making of Identities in Athenian Oratory. Routledge, pp. 191–205.

Robson, James and Lloyd, Mair (2019). Making IT Count: Measuring Student Engagement with Online Resources at the Open University. In: Natoli, Bartolo and Hunt, Steven eds. Teaching Classics with Technology. London: Bloomsbury, pp. 39–52.

Rothe, Ursula (2019). The Toga and Roman Identity. London: Bloomsbury Academic.

Swift, Laura (2019). Ajax the Hero. In: Stuttard, David ed. Looking at Ajax. Bloomsbury Academic, pp. 29–41.

Yamagata, Naoko (2019). 第六章 ホメロスの英雄像—アキレウスとヘクトル、サルぺドン、パトロクロス— [Chapter 6 Images of Homeric heroes – Achilles, Hector, Sarpedon and Patroclus]. In: 川島重成、古澤ゆう子、小林薫編 [Kawashima, S.; Furusawa, Y. and Kobayashi, K. eds.] 『ホメロス『イリアス』への招待』 [An Invitation to Homer’s Iliad]. Tokyo: Pinakes, pp. 163–189.

2018To Top

Allan, William and Swift, Laura eds. (2018). Moralizing Strategies in Early Greek Poetry. Mouseion, 15 (1). Toronto: University of Toronto Press.

Harvey, Graham and Hughes, Jessica eds. (2018). Sensual Religion: Religion and the Five Senses. Religion and the Senses. Sheffield: Equinox.

Hobden, Fiona and Wrigley, Amanda eds. (2018). Ancient Greece on British Television. Screening Antiquity. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.

Betts, Eleanor (2018). [Review] Grieco, Anthony. Shepherds in the Cave. London: The RAI, 2016. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 24(2) pp. 401–402.

Dobinson, Colin; Ferraby, Rose; Lucas, Jason; Millett, Martin and Wallace, Lacey (2018). Archaeological Field Survey in the Environs of Aldborough (Isurium Brigantum). Yorkshire Archaeological Journal, 90(1) pp. 29–58.

Hardwick, Lorna (2018). The poetics of cultural memory: WWI refractions of ancient peace. Classical Receptions Journal, 10(4) pp. 393–414.

Haywood, Jan (2018). From Croesus to Pausanias: Tragic Individuals in Early Greek Historiography. In: Archibald, Z. and Haywood, J. eds. The Power of the Individual in Ancient Athens: Essays in Honour of John K. Davies. Swansea: Classical Press of Wales.

Haywood, Jan and Mac Sweeney, Naoise (2018). Homer's Iliad and the Trojan War: Dialogues on Tradition. Bloomsbury Studies in Classical Reception (1). London: Bloomsbury.

Hobden, Fiona (2018). Augustus and the politics of the past today in television documentaries. In: Goodman, Penelope ed. Afterlives of Augustus, AD 14 - 2014. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 294–321.

Hobden, Fiona (2018). Are We the Greeks? Understanding Antiquity and Ourselves in Television Documentaries. In: Hobden, Fiona and Wrigley, Amanda eds. Ancient Greece on British Television. Screening Antiquity. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, pp. 24–43.

Hobden, Fiona and Wrigley, Amanda (2018). Broadcasting Greece: an introduction to Greek antiquity on the small screen. In: Hobden, Fiona and Wrigley, Amanda eds. Ancient Greece on British Television. Screening Antiquity. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, pp. 1–23.

Hope, Valerie (2018). Vocal expression in Roman mourning. In: Butler, Shane and Nooter, Sarah eds. Sound and the Ancient Senses. The Senses in Antiquity. London and New York: Routledge, pp. 61–76.

Hope, Valerie (2018). Funerary practice in the city of Rome. In: Holleran, Claire and Claridge, Amanda eds. A Companion to the City of Rome. Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World. Wiley Blackwell, pp. 383–401.

Hope, Valerie (2018). Dead people's clothes: Materialising mourning and memory in ancient Rome. In: Newby, Zahra and Toulson, Ruth eds. The Materiality of Mourning: Cross-disciplinary Perspectives. London: Routledge, pp. 23–39.

Hughes, Jessica (2018). Phallic Fertility in Pompeii. In: Hopwood, Nick; Flemming, Rebecca and Kassell, Lauren eds. Reproduction: Antiquity to the Present Day. Cambridge: CUP.

Hughes, Jessica and Flemming, Rebecca (2018). Exhibit 40 - The Room of the Ribbons. In: Hopwood, Nick; Flemming, Rebecca and Kassell, Lauren eds. Reproduction: Antiquity to the Present Day. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p. 672.

Huskinson, Janet (2018). Early Christian Art and Archaeology in Sixteenth and Seventeenth Century Rome. In: Jensen, Robin M. and Ellison, Mark D. eds. The Routledge Handbook of Early Christian Art. Routledge, pp. 364–379.

King, Helen (2018). 'First behead your viper’: acquiring knowledge in Galen’s poison stories. In: Grell, Ole Peter; Cunningham, Andrew and Arrizabalaga, Jon eds. "It All Depends on the Dose": Poisons and Medicines in European History. Abingdon: Routledge, pp. 25–42.

King, Helen (2018). Women and Doctors in Ancient Greece. In: Hopwood, Nick; Flemming, Rebecca and Kassell, Lauren eds. Reproduction: Antiquity to the Present Day. Cambridge University Press, pp. 39–52.

King, Helen and Green, Monica H (2018). On the misuses of medical history. Lancet, 391(10128) pp. 1354–1355.

King, Helen and Zuccolin, Gabriella (2018). Rethinking nosebleeds: gendering spontaneous bleedings in medieval and early modern medicine. In: Johnson, Bonnie Lander and DeCamp, Eleanor eds. Blood Matters. Studies in European Literature and Thought, 1400-1700. Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press, pp. 79–91.

Robson, James and Graham, Emma-Jayne (2018). Classics online at the Open University: teaching and learning with interactive resources. In: Holmes-Henderson, Arlene; Hunt, Steven and Musié, Mai eds. Forward with Classics: Classical Languages in Schools and Communities. London: Bloomsbury, pp. 217–299.

Rothe, Ursula (2018). Veiling in Pannonia. In: Ivleva, Tatiana; De Bruin, Jasper and Driessen, Mark eds. Embracing the Provinces: Society and Material Culture of the Roman Frontier Regions. Oxford: Oxbow Books, pp. 93–100.

Rothe, Ursula (2018). The Roman Villa: Definitions And Variations. In: Marzano, Annalisa and Métraux, Guy P. R. eds. The Roman Villa in the Mediterranean Basin: Late Republic to Late Antiquity. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 42–58.

Rothe, Ursula; Kenkel, Frauke and Zerbini, Andrea (2018). Excavations in Area III on Tall Zar‘ā. Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan, 58 pp. 257–273.

Swift, Laura (2018). Thinking with Brothers in Sappho and Beyond. Mouseion: Journal of the Classical Association of Canada, 15(1) pp. 71–87.

Swift, Laura (2018). Competing generic narratives in Aeschylus' Oresteia. In: Andujar, Rosa; Hadjimichael, Theodora and Coward, Thomas eds. Paths of Song: The Lyric Dimension of Greek Tragedy. De Gruyter, pp. 119–136.

2017To Top

Betts, Eleanor (2017). Introduction: Senses of empire. In: Betts, Eleanor ed. Senses of the Empire: Multisensory Approaches to Roman Culture. London: Routledge, pp. 1–12.

Betts, Eleanor (2017). The multivalency of sensory artefacts in the city of Rome. In: Betts, Eleanor ed. Senses of the Empire: Multisensory Approaches to Roman Culture. Abingdon: Routledge, pp. 23–38.

Betts, Eleanor (2017). Afterword: Towards a methodology for Roman sensory studies. In: Betts, Eleanor ed. Senses of the Empire: Multisensory Approaches to Roman Culture. Abingdon: Routledge, pp. 193–199.

Graham, Emma-Jayne (2017). Babes in arms? Sensory dissonance and the ambiguities of votive objects. In: Betts, Eleanor ed. Senses of the Empire: Multisensory Approaches to Roman Culture. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge, pp. 120–136.

Graham, Emma-Jayne (2017). Partible humans and permeable gods: enacting human-divine personhood in the sanctuaries of Hellenistic Italy. In: Draycott, Jane and Graham, Emma-Jayne eds. Bodies of Evidence: Ancient Anatomical Votives Past, Present and Future. Medicine and the Body in Antiquity. London and New York: Routledge, pp. 45–62.

Graham, Emma-Jayne and Draycott, Jane (2017). Introduction: Debating the anatomical votive. In: Draycott, Jane and Graham, Emma-Jayne eds. Bodies of Evidence: Ancient Anatomical Votives Past, Present and Future. Medicine and the Body in Antiquity. London and New York: Routledge, pp. 1–19.

Hancock-Jones, Robert; Renshaw, James and Swift, Laura (2017). Greek Theatre and Imperial Image: OCR Classical Civilisation AS and A Level Components 21 and 22. Bloomsbury Academic.

Hobden, Fiona (2017). Ancient world documentaries. In: Pomeroy, Arthur ed. A Companion to Ancient Greece and Rome on Screen. Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 491–514.

Hope, Valerie (2017). Living without the dead: finding solace in ancient Rome. In: Tappenden, Frederick S. and Daniel-Hughes, Carly eds. Coming Back to Life: The Permeability of Past and Present, Mortality and Immortality, Death and Life in the Ancient Mediterranean. Montreal, Quebec: McGill Scholarly Publishing, pp. 39–70.

Hope, Valerie M. (2017). A sense of grief: the role of the senses in the performance of Roman mourning. In: Betts, Eleanor ed. Senses of the Empire. Multisensory Approaches to Roman Culture. Abingdon: Routledge, pp. 86–103.

Hughes, Jessica (2017). Votive Body Parts in Greek and Roman Religion. Cambridge Classical Studies. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Hughes, Jessica (2017). Studying Votives Across Cultures. Material Religion, 13(1) pp. 104–106.

Paul, Joanna (2017). The Half-Blood Hero: Percy Jackson and Mythmaking in the Twenty-First Century. In: Zajko, Vanda and Hoyle, Helena eds. A Handbook to the Reception of Classical Mythology. Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 231–242.

Perkins, Phil (2017). DNA and Etruscan identity. In: Naso, Alessandro ed. Etruscology. Berlin: De Gruyter, pp. 109–118.

Perkins, Phil (2017). The landscape and environment of Etruria. In: Naso, Alessandro ed. Etruscology. Berlin: De Gruyter, pp. 1239–1250.

Robson, James (2017). Aristophanes. In: Burgess, J.; Kneebone, E.; Liapis, V. and Swift, L. eds. The Literary Encyclopedia, Volume 1.1.1: Archaic, Classical, Hellenistic and Imperial Greek Writing and Culture, 800-100 B.C.E., Volume 1.1.1. The Literary Encyclopedia.

Robson, James (2017). Humouring the masses: The Theatre Audience and the Highs and Lows of Aristophanic Comedy. In: Grig, Lucy ed. Popular Culture in the Ancient World. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 66–87.

Rothe, Ursula (2017). Ethnicity. In: Harlow, Mary ed. A Cultural History of Dress and Fashion, Vol. 1: Antiquity. Bloomsbury.

Simon, Rainer; Barker, Elton; Isaksen, Leif and de Soto Cañamares, Pau (2017). Linked Data Annotation Without the Pointy Brackets: Introducing Recogito 2. Journal of Map & Geography Libraries: Advances in Geospatial Information, Collections & Archives, 13(1) pp. 111–132.

Swift, Laura (2017). Narratorial Authority and its Subversion in Archilochus. In: Bakker, Egbert ed. Authorship and Greek Song: Authority, Authenticity, and Performance. Brill, pp. 161–177.

2016To Top

Barker, Elton; Bouzarovski, Stefan; Isaksen, Leif and Pelling, Chris eds. (2016). New Worlds from Old Texts: Revisiting Ancient Space and Place. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Draycott, Jane and Graham, Emma-Jayne eds. (2016). Bodies of Evidence: Ancient Anatomical Votives Past, Present and Future. Medicine and the Body in Antiquity. London: Routledge.

Swift, Laura and Carey, Chris eds. (2016). Iambus and Elegy: New Approaches. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Barker, Elton (2016). Orestes. In: McClure, Laura K. ed. A Companion to Euripides. Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 270–283.

Barker, Elton and Bouzarovski, Stefan (2016). Between east and west: movements and transformations in Herodotean topology. In: Barker, Elton; Bouzarovski, Stefan; Isaksen, Leif and Pelling, Chris eds. New Worlds from Old Texts: Revisiting Ancient Space and Place. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 155–180.

Barker, Elton; Bouzarovski, Stefan and Isaksen, Leif (2016). Introduction: Creating new worlds out of old texts. In: Barker, Elton; Bouzarovski, Stefan; Isaksen, Leif and Pelling, Chris eds. New Worlds from Old Texts: Revisiting Ancient Space and Place. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 1–21.

Barker, Elton; Isaksen, Leif and Ogden, Jessica (2016). Telling stories with maps: digital experiments with Herodotean geography. In: Barker, Elton; Bouzarovski, Stefan; Isaksen, Leif and Pelling, Chris eds. New Worlds from Old Texts: Revisiting Ancient Space and Place. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 181–224.

Barker, Elton and Pelling, Chris (2016). Space-Travelling in Herodotus 5. In: Barker, Elton; Bouzarovski, Stefan; Isaksen, Leif and Pelling, Chris eds. New Worlds from Old Texts: Revisiting Ancient Space and Place. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 225–251.

Barker, Elton; Simon, Rainer; Isaksen, Leif and de Soto Cañamares, Pau (2016). Peripleo: a Tool for Exploring Heterogeneous Data through the Dimensions of Space and Time. Code4Lib, 31

Barker, Elton; Simon, Rainer; Isaksen, Leif and de Soto Cañamares, Pau (2016). The Pleiades Gazetteer and the Pelagios Project. In: Berman, Merrick Lex; Mostern, Ruth and Southall, Humphrey eds. Placing Names: Enriching and Integrating Gazetteers. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, pp. 97–109.

Fentress, Elizabeth and Perkins, Phil (2016). Cosa and the Ager Cosanus. In: Cooley, Alison E. ed. A Companion to Roman Italy. Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 378–400.

Graham, Emma-Jayne (2016). Mobility impairment in the sanctuaries of early Roman Italy. In: Laes, Christian ed. Disability in Antiquity. Rewriting Antiquity. London and New York: Routledge, pp. 248–266.

Graham, Emma-Jayne and Hope, Valerie M. (2016). Funerary practices. In: Cooley, Alison E. ed. A Companion to Roman Italy. Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 159–180.

Haywood, Jan (2016). Character and Motivation in Aeschylus' Persae. Syllecta Classica, 27 pp. 29–63.

Hobden, Fiona (2016). Xenophon's Oeconomicus. In: Flower, Michael A. ed. The Cambridge Companion to Xenophon. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 152–173.

Hobden, Fiona (2016). Between media and genres: Pompeii and the construction of historical knowledge on British television today. In: Sabban, Annette and Jaki, Sylvia eds. Wissenformate in den Medien: Analysen aus Medienlinguistik und Medienwissenschaft. Kulturen – Kommunikation – Kontakte (25). Berlin: Frank & Timme, pp. 119–138.

Hughes, Jessica (2016). Fractured Narratives: Writing the Biography of a Votive Offering. In: Weinryb, Ittai ed. Ex Voto: Votive Giving Across Cultures. Bard Graduate Center - Cultural Histories of the Material World. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, pp. 23–48.

Masterson, Mark and Robson, James (2016). Foreword: The Book and its Influence. In: Dover, K. J. ed. Greek Homosexuality (3rd edition). London: Bloomsbury, xv-xxvii.

Perkins, Philip (2016). Bucchero in context. In: Bell, Sinclair and Carpino, Alexandra A. eds. A Companion to the Etruscans. Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 224–236.

Robson, James (2016). The Frogs and Thesmophoriazusae. In: Singh, Alexandre ed. Causeries. Rotterdam, Netherlands: Witte de With Center for Contemporary Art, pp. 154–166.

Robson, James (2016). Aristophanes, Gender and Sexuality. In: Walsh, Philip ed. Brill's Companion to the Reception of Aristophanes. Brill's Companions to Classical Reception. Leiden and Boston: Brill, pp. 44–66.

Runeckles, Colin Anthony (2016). Accommodating the urban non-elite in Roman Italy. Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) thesis The Open University.

Simon, Rainer; Barker, Elton; Isaksen, Leif; de Soto, Pau; Vitale, Valeria and Kahn, Rebecca (2016). Recogito.

Swift, Laura (2016). Greek Tragedy: Themes and Contexts. Classical World. London: Bloomsbury Academic.

Swift, Laura (2016). Visual Imagery in Parthenaic Song. In: Cazzato, Vanessa and Lardinois, André eds. The Look of Lyric: Greek Song and the Visual. Studies in Archaic and Classical Greek Song (1). Leiden: Brill, pp. 255–287.

Swift, Laura (2016). Medea. In: McClure, Laura ed. A Companion to Euripides. Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World. Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 80–91.

Swift, Laura (2016). Poetics and precedents in Archilochus’ erotic imagery. In: Swift, Laura and Carey, Chris eds. Iambus and Elegy: New Approaches. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 253–270.

2015To Top

Devlin, Zoë L. and Graham, Emma-Jayne eds. (2015). Death Embodied: Archaeological Approaches to the Treatment of the Corpse. Studies in Funerary Archaeology, 9. Oxford: Oxbow.

Hughes, Jessica and Buongiovanni, Claudio eds. (2015). Remembering Parthenope: The Reception of Classical Naples from Antiquity to the Present. Classical Presences. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Masterson, Mark; Rabinowitz, Nancy Sorkin and Robson, James eds. (2015). Sex in Antiquity: Exploring Gender and Sexuality in the Ancient World. Rewriting Antiquity. Abingdon, New York: Routledge.

Buongiovanni, Claudio and Hughes, Jessica (2015). Introduction: Entering the siren's city. In: Hughes, Jessica and Buongiovanni, Claudio eds. Remembering Parthenope: The Reception of Classical Naples from Antiquity to the Present. Classical Presences. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 1–18.

Graham, Emma-Jayne (2015). Corporeal concerns: the role of the body in the transformation of Roman mortuary practices. In: Devlin, Zoë L. and Graham, Emma-Jayne eds. Death Embodied: Archaeological Approaches to the Treatment of the Corpse. Studies in Funerary Archaeology (9). Oxford: Oxbow, pp. 41–62.

Graham, Emma-Jayne (2015). Embodying death in archaeology. In: Devlin, Zoe and Graham, Emma-Jayne eds. Death Embodied: Archaeological Approaches to the Treatment of the Corpse. Studies in Funerary Archaeology 9. Oxford: Oxbow Books, pp. 1–17.

Hope, Valerie (2015). Bodies on the Battlefield: the spectacle of Rome's fallen soldiers. In: Hope, Valerie and Bakogiannia, Anastasia eds. War as Spectacle. Ancient and Modern Perspectives on the Display of Armed Conflict. London: Bloomsbury, pp. 157–178.

Hughes, Jessica (2015). 'No retreat, even when broken': classical architecture in the Presepe Napoletano. In: Hughes, Jessica and Buongiovanni, Claudio eds. Remembering Parthenope: Receptions of Classical Naples from Antiquity to the Present. Classical Presences. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 284–309.

Hughes, Jessica and Graham, Emma-Jayne (2015). The votives project. Material Religion, 11(1) pp. 129–131.

James, Paula (2015). Hercules as a Symbol of Labour: A Nineteenth-century Class-conflicted Hero. In: Stead, Henry and Hall, Edith eds. Greek and Roman classics in the British struggle for social reform. Bloomsbury Studies in Classical Reception. London, New York: Bloomsbury Academic, pp. 138–154.

King, Helen (2015). Between male and female in ancient medicine. In: Boschung, Dietrich; Shapiro, Alan and Waschek, Frank eds. Bodies in Transition: Dissolving the Boundaries of Embodied Knowledge. Morphomata (23). Paderborn: Fink Verlag, pp. 249–264.

Paul, Joanna (2015). ‘‘Time is only a mode of thought, you know’: Ancient History, Empire, and Imagination in E. Nesbit’s Stories for Children’. In: Maurice, Lisa ed. The Reception of Ancient Greece and Rome in Children’s Literature: Eagles and Heroes. Metaforms (6). Leiden: Brill, pp. 30–55.

Robson, James (2015). Fantastic sex: fantasies of sexual assault in Aristophanes. In: Masterson, Mark; Rabinowitz, Nancy Sorkin and Robson, James eds. Sex in Antiquity: Exploring Gender and Sexuality in the Ancient World. Rewriting Antiquity. Abingdon: Routledge, pp. 315–331.

Swift, Laura (2015). Lyric visions of epic combat: the spectacle of war in archaic personal song. In: Bakogianni, Anastasia and Hope, Valerie eds. War as Spectacle: Ancient and Modern Perspectives on the Display of Armed Conflict. London: Bloomsbury Academic, pp. 93–109.

Swift, Laura (2015). Stesichorus on Stage. In: Finglass, P. J. and Kelly, A. eds. Stesichorus in Context. Cambridge University Press, pp. 125–144.

Wilding, Alexandra (2015). Aspirations and identities: Proxenia at Oropos during the fourth to second centuries BC. Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies, 58(2) pp. 55–81.

Yamagata, Naoko (2015). 'From Our Own Correspondent: Authorial Commentary on the "Spectacles of War" in Homer and in the Tale of the Heike'. In: Bakogianni, Anastasia and Hope, Valerie M. eds. War as Spectacle: Ancient and Modern Perspectives on the Display of Armed Conflict. London: Bloomsbury, pp. 43–55.

2014To Top

Carroll, Maureen and Graham, Emma-Jayne eds. (2014). Infant Health and Death in Roman Italy and Beyond. Journal of Roman Archaeology Supplementary Series, 96. Ann Arbor: Journal of Roman Archaeology.

Baker, Patty; King, Helen and Totelin, Laurence (2014). Teaching ancient medicine: the issues of abortion. In: Rabinowitz, Nancy Sorkin and McHardy, Fiona eds. From Abortion to Pederasty: Addressing Difficult Topics in the Classics Classroom. Columbus, OH: Ohio State University Press, pp. 71–91.

Barker, Elton and Christensen, Joel (2014). Even Herakles had to die: Homeric ‘heroism’, mortality and the epic tradition. Trends in Classics, 6(2) pp. 249–277.

Bridges, Emma (2014). Imagining Xerxes: Ancient Perspectives on a Persian King. Bloomsbury Studies in Classical Reception. London: Bloomsbury.

Graham, Emma-Jayne (2014). Infant votives and swaddling in Hellenistic Italy. In: Carroll, Maureen and Graham, Emma-Jayne eds. Infant Health and Death in Roman Italy and Beyond. Journal of Roman Archaeology Supplementary Series (96). Ann Arbor: Journal of Roman Archaeology, pp. 23–46.

Graham, Emma-Jayne and Carroll, Maureen (2014). Introduction: Infant health and death in Roman Italy and beyond. In: Carroll, Maureen and Graham, Emma-Jayne eds. Infant health and death in Roman Italy and beyond. Journal of Roman Archaeology Supplementary Series (96). Portsmouth, Rhode Island: Journal of Roman Archaeology, pp. 9–22.

Hobden, Fiona (2014). Andron. In: Smith, Claire ed. Encyclopedia of Global Archaeology. New York, NY: Springer, pp. 243–247.

Hobden, Fiona (2014). Symposion. In: Smith, Claire ed. Encyclopedia of Global Archaeology. New York, NY: Springer, pp. 7189–7193.

Hope, Valerie (2014). Inscriptions and Identity. In: Millet, Martin; Revell, Louise and Moore, Alison eds. The Oxford Handbook of Roman Britain. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Hughes, Jessica (2014). Memory and the Roman viewer: looking at the Arch of Constantine. In: Galinsky, Karl ed. Memoria Romana: Memory in Rome and Rome in Memory. Supplements to the Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome (10). Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, pp. 103–116.

Isaksen, Leif; Simon, Rainer; Barker, Elton T. E. and de Soto Cañamares, Pau (2014). Pelagios and the emerging graph of ancient world data. In: WebSci '14: Proceedings of the 2014 ACM conference on Web science, ACM, pp. 197–201.

James, Paula (2014). Book Review: Literature and Identity in The Golden Ass of Apuleius. Ancient Narrative, 11 pp. 229–236.

Yamagata, Naoko, ed. A New Interpretation of Sophocles’ Oedipus Tyrannus: In the Light and Darkness of Apollo. By Shigenari Kawashima (2014). Edwin Mellen Press (2014). Translated from Japanese [日本語]

King, Helen and Brown, Jo (2014). Thucydides and the plague. In: Morley, Neville and Lee, Christine eds. A Handbook to the Reception of Thucydides. Chichester: Wiley, pp. 447–473.

King, Helen and Toner, Jerry (2014). Medicine and the senses: humours, potions and spells. In: Toner, Jerry ed. A Cultural History of the Senses in Antiquity, 500 BCE-500 CE. A Cultural History of the Senses. London: Bloomsbury, pp. 139–161.

Mays, S.; Robson-Brown, K.; Vincent, S.; Eyers, J.; King, H. and Roberts, A. (2014). An infant femur bearing cut marks from Roman Hambleden, England. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology, 24(1) pp. 111–115.

Perkins, Phil (2014). Oinochoe di bucchero, tipo B di Batignani, decorata con un fregio di sfingi e volatile modellato sul coperchio. In: Bruschetti, Paolo; Giulierini, Paolo; Gialluca, Bruno; Reynolds, Suzanne and Swaddling, Judith eds. Seduzione Etrusca: Dai segreti di Holkham Hall alle meraviglie del British Museum. Milan: Skira, pp. 417–418.

Perkins, Phil (2014). Oinochoe di bucchero decorate con un fregio di volatili, tipo A di Batignani. In: Bruschetti, Paolo; Giulierini, Paolo; Gialluca, Bruno; Reynolds, Suzanne and Swaddling, Judith eds. Seduzione Etrusca: Dai segreti di Holkham Hall alle meraviglie del British Museum. Milan: Skira, pp. 418–419.

Perkins, Phil (2014). Processes of urban development in northern and central Etruria in the Orientalizing and Archaic periods. In: Robinson, Elizabeth C. ed. Papers on Italian urbanism in the first Millennium B.C. Journal of Roman Archaeology supplementary Series, Supplement (97). Portsmouth, Rhode Island: Journal of Roman Archaeology, pp. 62–80.

Potter, Amanda Jayne (2014). Viewer reception of classical myth in Xena: warrior princess and Charmed. Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) thesis The Open University.

Robson, James (2014). Slipping one in: the introduction of obscene lexical items in Aristophanes. In: Olson, S. Douglas ed. Ancient Comedy and Reception: Essays in Honor of Jeffrey Henderson. Berlin: De Gruyter, pp. 29–50.

Rothe, Ursula (2014). Ethnicity in the Roman north-west. In: McInerney, Jeremy ed. A Companion to Ethnicity in the Ancient Mediterranean. Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 497–513.

Simon, Rainer; Pilgerstorfer, Peter; Isaksen, Leif and Barker, Elton (2014). Towards semi-automatic annotation of toponyms on old maps. e-Perimetron, 9(3) pp. 105–112.

Swift, Laura (2014). The animal fable and Greek iambus: ainoi and half-ainoi in Archilochus. In: Werner, C. and Sebastini, B. eds. Gêneros poéticos na Grécia antiga: Confluências e fronteiras. São Paulo: Humanitas, pp. 49–77.

Yamagata, Naoko (2014). The Justice of Zeus revisited. In: Christopoulos, Menelaos and Paizi-Apostolopoulou, Machi eds. Crime and Punishment in Homeric and Archaic Epic: Proceedings of the 12th International Symposium on the Odyssey, Ithaca, September 3-7, 2013. Ithaca, Greece: Centre for Odyssean Studies, pp. 47–56.

2013To Top

Hobden, Fiona and Kempf, Damien eds. (2013). Envisioning Landscapes: Adaptation & Renewal. Special Issue of Cultural History, volume 2.2. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.

Barker, Elton (2013). All mod cons: power, openness and text in a digital turn. In: Hardwick, Lorna and Harrison, Stephen eds. Classics in the Modern World: A ‘Democratic Turn’? Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 411–426.

Barker, Elton; Isaksen, Leif; Rabinowitz, Nick; Bouzarovski, Stefan and Pelling, Chris (2013). On using a digital resources for the study of an ancient text: the case of Herodotus’ Histories. In: Dunn, Stuart and Mahony, Simon eds. The Digital Classicist. Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies Supplement (122). Institute of Classical Studies, University of London, pp. 45–62.

Barker, Elton; Bouzarovski, Stefan; Isaksen, Leif and Pelling, Chris (2013). Writing space, living space: time, agency and place relations in Herodotus’s Histories. In: Heirman, Jo and Klooster, Jacqueline eds. The Ideologies of Lived Space in Literary Texts, Ancient and Modern. Ghent: Academia Press, pp. 229–247.

Barker, Elton; Bouzarovski, Stefan; Isaksen, Leif and Pelling, Chris (2013). Extracting, investigating and representing geographical concepts in Herodotus: the case of the Black Sea. In: The Bosporus: Gateway between the Ancient West and East (1st Millennium BC–5th Century AD) (Tsetskhladze, Gocha R.; Atasoy, Sümer; Avram, Alexandru; Dönmez, Şevket and Hargrave, James eds.), BAR International Series, Archaeopress, Oxford, pp. 7–17.

Barker, Elton and Christensen, Joel (2013). A Beginner’s Guide to Homer. London: One World.

Betts, Eleanor (2013). Cubrar matrer: goddess of the Picenes? Accordia Research Papers, 12 pp. 119–147.

Graham, Emma-Jayne (2013). Disparate lives or disparate deaths? Post-mortem treatment of the body and the articulation of difference. In: Laes, Christian; Goodey, Chris and Rose, M. Lynn eds. Disabilities in Roman Antiquity: Disparate Bodies ‘A Capite ad Calcem’. Leiden: Brill, pp. 249–274.

Hobden, Fiona (2013). The Symposion in Ancient Greek Society and Thought. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Hobden, Fiona (2013). The archaeological aesthetic in ancient world documentary. Media, Culture & Society, 35(3) pp. 366–381.

Hobden, Fiona and Kempf, Damien (2013). Introduction. Envisioning Landscapes: Adaptation & Renewal/Special Issue of Cultural History, 2(2) pp. 125–132.

James, P. (2013). Kiss Me Deadly (1955): Pandora and Prometheus in Robert Aldrich's cinematic subversion of Spillane. In: Cyrino, Monica S. ed. Screening Love and Sex in the Ancient World. Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 25–38.

King, Helen (2013). Commentary: Fighting through fiction. Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry, 37(4) pp. 668–693.

King, Helen (2013). Sex and gender: the Hippocratic case of Phaethousa and her beard. EuGeStA: Journal on Gender Studies in Antiquity, 3 pp. 124–142.

King, Helen (2013). Fear of flute girls, fear of falling. In: Harris, William V. ed. Mental Disorders in the Classical World. Columbia Studies in the Classical Tradition (38). Brill, pp. 265–282.

King, Helen (2013). Female fluids in the Hippocratic corpus: how solid was the humoral body? In: Horden, Peregrine and Hsu, Elisabeth eds. The Body in Balance: Humoral Medicines in Practice. Epistemologies of Healing (13). Oxford: Berghahn Books, pp. 25–49.

Paul, Joanna (2013). Subverting sex and love in Alejandro Amenabar's 'Agora'. In: Cyrino, Monica ed. Screening Sex and Love in the Ancient World. Palgrave Macmillan, p. 227.

Paul, Joanna (2013). Film and the Classical Epic Tradition. Classical Presences. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Paul, Joanna (2013). The Democratic Turn in (and through) pedagogy: a case study of the Cambridge Latin Course. In: Hardwick, Lorna and Harrison, Stephen eds. Classics in the Modern World: A 'Democratic Turn'? Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 143–156.

Paul, Joanna (2013). Madonna and whore: the many faces of Penelope in Camerini’s Ulysses. In: Nikoloutsos, Konstantinos P. ed. Ancient Greek Women in Film. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 139–162.

Ravenhill-Johnson, Annie and James, Paula (2013). The Art and Ideology of the Trade Union Emblem, 1850-1925. London: Anthem Press.

Robson, James (2013). Sex and Sexuality in Classical Athens. Debates and Documents. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.

Robson, James (2013). Beauty and sex appeal in Aristophanes. EuGeStA: Journal on Gender Studies in Antiquity, 3 pp. 43–66.

Robson, James (2013). The language(s) of love in Aristophanes. In: Sanders, Ed.; Thumiger, Chiara; Carey, Christopher and Lowe, Nick eds. Eros in Ancient Greece. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 251–266.

Rothe, Ursula (2013). Whose fashion? Men, women and Roman culture as reflected in dress in the cities of the Roman north-west. In: Hemelrijk, Emily and Woolf, Greg eds. Women and the Roman City in the Latin West. Mnemosyne Supplements, History and Archaeology of Classical Antiquity (360). Leiden: Brill, pp. 243–268.

Rothe, Ursula (2013). Die norisch-pannonische Tracht: gab es sie wirklich? In: Grabherr, G.; Kainarth, B. and Schierl, T. eds. Relations Abroad? Brooches and Other Elements of Dress as Sources for Reconstructing Interregional Movement and Group Boundaries from the Punic Wars to the Decline of the Western Empire. Ikarus. Innsbruck: Innsbruck University Press, pp. 33–48.

Rothe, Ursula (2013). Das norische Frauengewand. In: Tellenbach, Michael; Schulz, Regine and Wieczorek, Alfried eds. Die Macht der Toga: Dresscode im römischen Weltreich. Mannheim: Schnell und Steiner, pp. 189–193.

Swift, Laura (2013). Conflicting identities in the Euripidean chorus. In: Gagné, Renaud and Hopman, Marianne eds. Choral mediations in Greek tragedy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 130–154.

2012To Top

Hobden, Fiona and Tuplin, Christopher eds. (2012). Xenophon: Ethical Principles and Historical Inquiry. Mnemosyne, Supplements, History and Archaeology of Classical Antiquity, 348. Leiden: Brill.

Horstmansoff, Manfred; King, Helen and Zittel, Claus eds. (2012). Blood, Sweat and Tears – The Changing Concepts of Physiology from Antiquity into Early Modern Europe. Intersections: Interdisciplinary Studies in Early Modern Culture, 25. Leiden: Brill.

Hobden, Fiona and Tuplin, Christopher (2012). Introduction. In: Hobden, Fiona and Tuplin, Christopher eds. Xenophon: Ethical Principles and Historical Enquiry. Mnemosyne, Supplements, History and Archaeology of Classical Antiquity, 348. Leiden: Brill, pp. 1–41.

Isaksen, Leif; Barker, Elton; Kansa, Eric C. and Byrne, Kate (2012). GAP: a neogeo approach to classical resources. Leonardo, 45(1) pp. 82–83.

Jackson, Catherine (2012). What's Hecuba to him, or he to Hecuba? Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) thesis The Open University.

King, Helen (2012). Introduction. In: Horstmanshoff, Manfred; King, Helen and Zittel, Claus eds. Blood, Sweat and Tears – The Changing Concepts of Physiology from Antiquity into Early Modern Europe. Intersections Interdisciplinary Studies in Early Modern Culture (25). Leiden: Brill, pp. 1–17.

King, Helen (2012). History without historians? Medical history and the internet. Social History of Medicine, 25(1) pp. 212–221.

King, Helen (2012). Response to Shelton. Social History of Medicine, 25(1) pp. 232–238.

King, Helen (2012). Inside and outside, cavities and containers: the organs of generation in seventeenth-century English medicine. In: Baker, Patricia A.; Nijdam, Han and van 't Land, Karine eds. Medicine and Space: Body, Surroundings and Borders in Antiquity and the Middle Ages. Visualising the Middle Ages (4). Leiden: Brill, pp. 37–60.

King, Helen (2012). Midwifery, 1700-1800: the man-midwife as competitor. In: Borsay, Anne and Hunter, Billie eds. Nursing and Midwifery in Britain Since 1700. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 107–127.

King, Helen (2012). Knowing the body: renaissance medicine and the classics. In: Olmos, Paula ed. Greek Science in the Long Run: Essays on the Greek Scientific Tradition (4th c. BCE – 16th c. CE). Newcastle-upon-Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, pp. 281–300.

Perkins, Phil (2012). Fantastic animal stamps on bucchero from Poggio Colla. In: Biella, Maria Cristina; Giovanelli, Enrico and Perego, Lucio Giuseppe eds. Il Bestiario Fantastico di età Orientalizzante nella Penisola Italiana. Quaderni di Aristonothos. Trento: Tangram Edizioni Scientifiche, pp. 171–188.

Perkins, Philip (2012). Production and commercialization of Etruscan wine in the Albegna Valley. In: Zifferero, Andrea; Ciacci, Andrea and Rendini, Paola eds. Archeologia della vite e del vino in Toscana e nel Lazio. dalle tecniche dell’indagine archeologica alle prospettive della biologia molecolare. Florence: All’Insegna dell’ Giglio, pp. 413–416.

Rochelle, Pauline (2012). Using and abusing children in Greek tragedy. Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) thesis The Open University.

Rothe, Ursula (2012). Dress in the middle Danube provinces: the garments, their origins and their distribution. Jahreshefte des Österreichischen Archäologischen Instituts, 81 pp. 137–231.

Rothe, Ursula (2012). The “Third Way”: Treveran women’s dress and the “Gallic Ensemble”. American Journal of Archaeology, 116(2) pp. 235–252.

Rothe, Ursula (2012). Romanization. In: Bagnall, R.S.; Brodersen, K.; Champion, C.B.; Erskine, A. and Huebner, S. eds. The Encyclopedia of Ancient History. Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 5875–5881.

Rothe, Ursula (2012). Roman Empire, regional cultures. In: Bagnall, R.S.; Brodersen, K.; Champion, C.B.; Erskine, A. and Huebner, S. eds. The Encyclopedia of Ancient History. Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 5866–5870.

Rothe, Ursula (2012). Rome, resistance to (cultural). In: Bagnall, Roger S.; Broderson, Kai; Champion, Craige B.; Erskine, Andrew and Huebner, Sabine R. eds. The Encyclopedia of Ancient History. Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 5950–5953.

Rothe, Ursula (2012). Dress and cultural identity in the Roman Empire. In: Harlow, Mary ed. Dress and Identity. University of Birmingham IAA Interdisciplinary Series: Studies in Archaeology, History, Literature and Art (2). Oxford: Archaeopress, pp. 59–68.

Simon, Rainer; Barker, Elton and Isaksen, Leif (2012). Exploring Pelagios: a visual browser for geo-tagged datasets. In: International Workshop on Supporting Users' Exploration of Digital Libraries, 23-27 Sep 2012, Paphos, Cyprus.

Stead, Henry (2012). A Cockney Catullus: the reception of Catullus in the Romantic era. Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) thesis The Open University.

Swift, Laura (2012). Paeanic and Epinician healing in Euripides' Alcestis. In: Rosenbloom, David and Davidson, John eds. Greek Drama IV: Texts, Contexts, Performance. Oxford: Oxbow Books, pp. 149–168.

Yamagata, Naoko (2012). Use of Homeric references in Plato and Xenophon. The Classical Quarterly, 62(1) pp. 130–144.

Yamagata, Naoko (2012). Epithets with echoes: A study on formula-narrative interaction. In: Montanari, Franco; Rengakos, Antonios and Tsagalis, Christos C. eds. Homeric Contexts: Neoanalysis and the Interpretation of Oral Poetry. Trends in Classics: Supplementary Volumes (12). Berlin, Germany & New York, USA: Walter de Gruyter, pp. 445–468.

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Hales, Shelley and Paul, Joanna eds. (2011). Pompeii in the Public Imagination from its Rediscovery to Today. Classical Presences. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Barker, Elton (2011). ‘Possessing an unbridled tongue’: frank speech and speaking back in Euripides’ Orestes. In: Carter, David ed. Why Athens? A Reappraisal of Tragic Politics. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 145–162.

Barker, Elton; Bouzarovski, Stefan; Pelling, Chris and Isaksen, Leif (2011). HESTIA (the Herodotus Encoded Space-Text-Imaging Archive): An Interdisciplinary Project.

Barker, Elton and Christensen, Joel (2011). On not remembering Tydeus: Diomedes and the contest for Thebes. Materiali e discussioni per l’analisi dei testi classici, 66(1) pp. 9–44.

Betts, Eleanor (2011). Towards a multisensory experience of movement in the City of Rome. In: Laurence, Ray and Newsome, David J. eds. Rome, Ostia and Pompeii: Movement and Space. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 118–132.

Graham, Emma-Jayne (2011). From fragments to ancestors: re-defining the role of os resectum in rituals of purification and commemoration in Republican Rome. In: Carroll, Maureen and Rempel, Jane eds. Living through the Dead: Burial and Commemoration in the Classical World. Studies in Funerary Archaeology (5). Oxford: Oxbow, pp. 91–109.

Graham, Emma-Jayne (2011). Memory and materiality: re-embodying the Roman funeral. In: Hope, Valerie and Huskinson, Janet eds. Memory and Mourning: Studies on Roman Death. Oxford: Oxbow, pp. 21–39.

Hardwick, Lorna (2011). Antigone's journey: from Athens to Edinburgh via Athens and Tbilisi. In: Mee, Erin B. and Foley, Helene P. eds. Antigone on the Contemporary World Stage. Classical Presences. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 392–406.

Hardwick, Lorna (2011). Fuzzy connections: classical texts and modern poetry in English. In: Parker, Jan and Mathews, Timothy eds. Tradition,Translation,Trauma: The Classic and the Modern. Classical Presences. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 39–60.

Hobden, Fiona (2011). Enter The Divine: Sympotic Performance And Religious Experience. In: Lardinois, André; Blok, Josine and Van Der Poel, Marc eds. Sacred Words: Orality, Literacy and Religion. Orality and Literature in the Ancient World, vol. 8. Mnemosyne, Supplements., 332. Leiden: Brill, pp. 37–58.

Hope, Valerie (2011). Remembering to mourn: personal mementos of the dead in ancient Rome. In: Hope, Valerie and Huskinson, Janet eds. Memory and Mourning: Studies on Roman Death. Oxford: Oxbow Books, pp. 176–195.

Hope, Valerie (2011). Livia's tears: the presentation of Roman mourning. In: Whittaker, Helène ed. In Memoriam: Commemoration, Communal Memory and Gender Values in the Ancient Graeco-Roman World. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Press, pp. 91–125.

Hope, Valerie M. (2011). Introduction. In: Hope, Valerie M. and Huskinson, Janet eds. Memory and Mourning: Studies on Roman Death. Oxford: Oxbow Books, xi-xxiv.

Hughes, Jessica (2011). The myth of return: restoration as reception in eighteenth-century Rome. Classical Receptions Journal, 3(1) pp. 1–28.

James, Paula (2011). Ovid's Myth of Pygmalion on Screen: In Pursuit of the Perfect Woman. Continuum Studies in Classical Reception. London: Continuum.

King, Helen (2011). Sex, medicine and disease. In: Golden, Mark and Toohey, Peter eds. A Cultural History of Sexuality in the Classical World. A Cultural History of Sexuality (1). Oxford and New York: Berg, pp. 107–124.

Paul, Joanna (2011). Pompeii, the Holocaust, and World War Two. In: Hales, Shelley and Paul, Joanna eds. Pompeii in the Public Imagination from its Rediscovery to Today. Classical Presences. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Peake, Jacqueline (2011). Tragic Apollo in Fifth-Century Athens : Text and Contexts. Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) thesis The Open University.

Perkins, P. (2011). The Etruscans, their DNA and the Orient. In: Duistermaat, Kim and Regulski, Ilona eds. Intercultural Contacts in the Ancient Mediterranean: Proceedings of the International Conference at the Netherlands-Flemish Institute in Cairo, 25th to 29th October 2008. Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta (202). Leuven: Peeters, pp. 171–180.

Swift, Laura A. (2011). Epinician and tragic worlds: the case of Sophocles' Trachiniae. In: Athanassaki, Lucia and Bowie, Ewen eds. Archaic and Classical Choral Song: Performance, Politics and Dissemination. Trends in Classics: Supplementary Volumes (10). Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, pp. 391–413.

Yamagata, Naoko (2011). Male and female spaces in Homer and in Heike monogatari. Japan Studies in Classical Antiquity, 1 pp. 27–41.

Yamagata, Naoko (2011). Penelope and early recognition: Vlahos, Harsh, and Eustathius. College Literature, 38(2) pp. 122–130.

2010To Top

Rebay-Salisbury, Katharina; Sorensen, Marie Louise Stig and Hughes, Jessica eds. (2010). Body Parts and Bodies Whole. Changing Relations and Meanings. Oxford: Oxbow.

Barker, Elton; Bouzarovski, Stefan; Pelling, Chris and Isaksen, Leif (2010). Mapping an ancient historian in a digital age: the Herodotus Encoded Space-Text-Image Archive (HESTIA). Leeds International Classical Studies, 9(2010) article no. 1.

Hardwick, Lorna (2010). Negotiating Translation for the Stage. In: Hall, Edith and Harrop, Stephe eds. Theorising Performance: Greek drama, cultural history and critical practice. London: Duckworth, pp. 192–207.

Hardwick, Lorna (2010). Lysistratas on the modern stage. In: Stuttard, David ed. Looking at Lysistrata. London: Duckworth, pp. 80–89.

Hobden, Fiona (2010). Did Euphiletus murder Eratosthenes? Omnibus, 59 pp. 11–13.

Hope, Valerie (2010). The end is to the beginning as the beginning is to the end. Birth, death and the classical body. In: Garrison, Daniel H. ed. A Cultural History of the Human Body in Antiquity. A Cultural History of the Human Body, 1. Oxford and New York: Berg Publishers, pp. 25–44.

Hughes, Jessica (2010). Dissecting the classical hybrid. In: Rebay-Salisbury, K.; Sorensen, M. L. S. and Hughes, J. eds. Body Parts and Bodies Whole. Changing Relations and Meanings. Oxford, UK: Oxbow, pp. 101–110.

King, Helen (2010). Gynecology. In: Grafton, Anthony; Most, Glenn W. and Settis, Salvatore eds. The classical tradition. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, pp. 416–417.

King, Helen (2010). Engendrer "la femme": Jacques Dubois et Diane de Poitiers. In: McClive, Cathy and Pellegrin, Nicole eds. Femmes en Fleurs, Femmes en Corps : Sang, Santé, Sexualité du Moyen Âge aux Lumières. L'école de Genre. Nouvelles Recherches (4). Saint-Étienne: Publications de l'Université de Saint-Etienne, pp. 125–138.

Paul, Joanna (2010). Cinematic receptions of antiquity: the current state of play. Classical Receptions Journal, 2(1) pp. 136–155.

Perkins, Phil (2010). The cultural and political landscape of the Ager Caletranus, North-West of Vulci. In: Fontaine, P. ed. L'Etrurie et l'ombrie avant Rome: Cité et Territoire. Institut Historique Belge de Rome Artes (1). Brussels, Belgium / Romr, Italy: Institut Historique Belge de Rome, pp. 103–121.

Robson, James (2010). Friends and foes: the people of Lysistrata. In: Stuttard, David ed. Looking at Lysistrata. London: Duckworth, pp. 49–60.

Rothe, Ursula (2010). Gallische Frauenkleidung in römischer Zeit. Mannheimer Geschichtsblätter, 19 pp. 65–80.

Swift, L. A. (2010). The hidden chorus: echoes of genre in tragic lyric. Oxford Classical Monographs. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Yamagata, Naoko (2010). Hesiod in Plato - Second fiddle to Homer? In: Boys-Stones, G. and Haubold, J. eds. Plato and Hesiod. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 68–88.

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Swaddling, Judith and Perkins, Philip eds. (2009). Etruscan by Definition: The Cultural, Regional and Personal Identity of the Etruscans. The British Museum Research Publications (173). London: The British Museum Press.

Hardwick, Lorna (2009). Is 'the Frail Silken Line' worth more than 'a Fart in a Bearskin'? or, how translation practice matters in poetry and drama. In: Harrison, S. J. ed. Living Classics: Greece and Rome in Contemporary Poetry in English. Classical presences. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 172–193.

Hardwick, Lorna (2009). Can (modern) poets do classical drama? The case of Ted Hughes. In: Rees, Roger ed. Ted Hughes and the Classics. Classical Presences. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, pp. 39–61.

Hobden, Fiona (2009). The Politics of the Sumposion. In: Graziosi, Barbara; Vasunia, Phiroze and Boys-Stones, George eds. The Oxford Handbook of Hellenic Studies. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 271–280.

Hobden, Fiona (2009). Symposion and the rhetorics of commensality in Demosthenes 19, On the False Embassy. In: Mann, Christian; Haake, Matthias and von den Hoff, Ralf eds. Rollenbilder in der athenischen Demokratie: Medien, Gruppen, Räume im politischen und sozialen System. Wiesbaden: Reichert Verlagen, pp. 71–87.

Hope, Valerie (2009). At home with the dead: Roman funeral traditions and Trimalchio's tomb. In: Prag, Jonathan R. W. and Repath, Ian D. eds. Petronius: a Handbook. Chichester: John Wiley and Sons Ltd, pp. 140–160.

James, Paula (2009). Crossing classical thresholds: Gods, monsters and Hell dimensions in the Whedon universe. In: Lowe, Dunstan and Shahabudin, Kim eds. Classics for All: Reworking Antiquity in Mass Culture. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, pp. 237–260.

King, Helen (2009). Medicine. In: Erskine, Andrew ed. A Companion to Ancient History. London: Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 403–413.

Llewellyn-Jones, Lloyd and Robson, James (2009). Ctesias' History of Persia: Tales of the Orient. Routledge Classical Translations. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge.

Paul, Joanna (2009). Oliver Stone’s Alexander and the cinematic epic tradition. In: Cartledge, Paul and Greenland, Fiona Rose eds. Responses to Oliver Stone’s Alexander: Film, History and Culture Studies. Madison, Wisconsin, USA: University of Wisconsin Press, pp. 15–35.

Paul, Joanna (2009). 'I fear it's potentially like Pompeii’: disaster, mass media and the ancient city. In: Lowe, Dunstan and Shahabudin, Kim eds. Classics for All: Reworking Antiquity in Mass Culture. Newcastle-upon-Tyne, UK: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, pp. 91–108.

Paul, Joanna (2009). Fellini-Satyricon: Petronius and Film. In: Prag, Jonathan R. W. and Repath, Ian D. eds. Petronius: A Handbook. Oxford, UK: Wiley - Blackwell, pp. 198–217.

Perkins, Phil (2009). Sicily. In: Gagarin, Michael ed. The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece and Rome. New York, USA: Oxford University Press.

Perkins, Phil and Schafer, Sally (2009). The Villa Pigneto Sacchetti excavation: a new interpretation. Papers of the British School at Rome, 77(2009) pp. 273–290.

Perkins, Philip (2009). DNA and Etruscan Identity. In: Perkins, Philip and Swaddling, Judith eds. Etruscan by Definition: Papers in Honour of Sybille Haynes. The British Museum Research Publications (173). London, UK: The British Museum Press, pp. 95–111.

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Robson, James (2009). Aristophanes: An Introduction. London: Duckworth.

Rothe, Ursula (2009). Dress and Cultural Identity in the Rhine-Moselle Region of the Roman Empire. British Archaeological Reports, 2009 (S2038). Oxford: Archaeopress.

Swift, L. A. (2009). The symbolism of space in Euripidean choral fantasy (Hipp. 732-85, Med. 824-65, Bacch. 370-433). Classical Quarterly, 59(2) pp. 364–382.

Swift, L. A. (2009). Sexual and familial distortion in Euripides' Phoenissae. Transactions of the American Philological Association, 139(1) pp. 53–87.

Van de Noort, Robert; Whitehouse, David; Becker, Marshall; Blagg, Thomas; Burnett, Douglas; Caruso, Ida; Claridge, Amanda; Clark, Gill; Costantini, Loredana; Costantini, Lorenzo; Hall Burke, Belinda; Lyttelton, Margaret; Napolitani, Gilberto; Patterson, Helen; Perkins, Philip; Rovelli, Alessia and Sutherland, Sheila (2009). Excavations at Le Mura di Santo Stefano, Anguillara Sabazia. Papers of the British School at Rome, 77(2009) pp. 159–223.

2008To Top

Barker, Elton T. E. (2008). Momos advises Zeus: changing representations of ‘Cypria’ fragment 1. In: Cingano, Ettore and Milano, Lucio eds. Papers on Ancient Literatures: Greece, Rome and the Near East: Proceedings of the “Advanced Seminar in the Humanities”, Venice International University 2004-2005. Padova: S.A.R.G.O.N. Editrice e Libreria, pp. 33–73.

Barker, Elton T. E. and Christensen, Joel P. (2008). Oedipus of many pains: Strategies of contest in Homeric poetry. Leeds International Classical Studies, 7/2008(2) article no. 7.2.

Hardwick, Lorna (2008). Translated Classics: Vibrant Hybrids or Shattered Icons? In: lianeri, Alexandra and Zajko, Vanda eds. Translation and the Classics: Identity as Change in the History of Culture. Classical Presences. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, pp. 341–366.

Hughes, Jessica (2008). Fragmentation as metaphor in the Classical healing sanctuary. Social History of Medicine, 21(2) pp. 217–236.

King, Helen (2008). Barbes, sang et genre: afficher la différence dans le monde antique. In: Wilgaux, Jérôme and Dasen, Véronique eds. Languages et Métaphores du Corps dans le Monde Antique. Rennes: Presses universitaires de Rennes, pp. 153–168.

Morris, Michael John (2008). 'A Manly Desire to Learn' : the Teaching of the Classics in Nineteenth Century Scotland. Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) thesis The Open University.

Paul, Jo (2008). Homer and Cinema: Translation and Adaptation in Le Mépris. In: Lianeri, Alekandra and Zajko, Vanda eds. Translation & The Classic: Identity as Change in the History of Culture. Classical Presences. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, pp. 148–165.

Paul, Joanna (2008). Rome ruined and fragmented: the cinematic city in Fellini-Satyricon and Roma. In: Wrigley, Richard ed. Cinematic Rome. Leicester, UK: Troubadour Publishing Ltd, pp. 109–120.

Swift, Laura (2008). Euripides: Ion. Duckworth Companions to Greek and Roman Drama. London: Duckworth.

2007To Top

Emlyn-Jones, Chris ed. (2007). Plato, Republic 1-2.368c4. Aris and Phillips Classical Commenatries Series. Oxford, UK: Oxbow Books.

Hardwick, Lorna and Gillespie, Carol eds. (2007). Classics in Post-Colonial Worlds. Classical Presences. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.

Hardwick, Lorna and Stray, Christopher eds. (2007). A Companion to Classical Receptions. Oxford, UK: Wiley - Blackwell.

Emlyn-Jones, Chris (2007). Poets on Socrates' stage: Plato's reception of dramatic art. In: Hardwick, Lorna and Stray, Christopher eds. Companion to Classical Receptions. Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World. Oxford, UK: Blackwell Publishing, pp. 38–49.

Fear, Trevor (2007). Of Aristocrats and Courtesans: Seneca, De Beneficiis 1.14. Hermes: Zeitschrift für klassische philologie, 135(4) pp. 460–468.

Green, Monica and King, Helen (2007). Structures and subjectivities in 16th-century gynaecology, or how the father of medicine reclaimed his paternity. In: Hartman, Joan E. and Seeff, Adele eds. Structures and subjectivities: Attending to early modern women. Center for Renaissance & Baroque Studies. Newark, DE: University of Delaware Press, pp. 100–101.

Hammond, Kate (2007). Lost voices in the poetry of Catullus: a study in persona and politics. Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) thesis The Open University.

Hardwick, Lorna (2007). Shades of multi-lingualism and multi-vocalism in modern performances of Greek tragedy in post-colonial contexts. In: Hardwick, Lorna and Gillespie, Carol eds. Classics in Post-Colonial Worlds. Classical Presences. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 305–338.

Hardwick, Lorna (2007). Translating greek tragedy to the modern stage. Theatre Journal, 59(3) pp. 358–361.

Hardwick, Lorna (2007). Singing across the faultlines: cultural shifts in twentieth century receptions of Homer. In: Graziosi, Barbara and Greenwood, Emily eds. Homer in the 20th Century: Between World Literature and the Western Canon. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, pp. 47–71.

Hardwick, Lorna (2007). Contests and Continuities in Classical Traditions: African Migrations in Greek Drama. In: Hilton, John and Gosling, Anne eds. Alma Parens Originalis? The Receptions of Classical Literature and Thought in Africa, Europe, the United States, and Cuba. Oxford, UK: Peter Lang, pp. 43–72.

Hardwick, Lorna (2007). Decolonising the mind?: Controversial productions of Greek Drama in late Twentieth-Century Britain and Ireland. In: Stray, Christopher ed. Remaking the Classics: literature, genre and media in Britain 1800-2000. London, UK: Duckworth, pp. 89–105.

Hardwick, Lorna (2007). Text and Performance in Ancient Greek Plays on the Modern Stage: The Case of Aristophanes 'Ecclesiazusai'. In: Vivilakis, I. ed. Stephanos: Tribute to Walter Puchner. Athens: Ergo Editions, pp. 493–500.

Hope, Valerie (2007). Death in Ancient Rome: A sourcebook. London, UK: Routledge.

Hope, Valerie M. (2007). Age and the Roman soldier: the evidence of tombstones. In: Harlow, Mary and Laurence, Ray eds. Age and Ageing in the Roman Empire. Journal of Roman Archaeology, Supplementary Series (65). Portsmouth, RI, USA: Journal of Roman Archaeology, pp. 111–129.

Huskinson, Janet (2007). Constructing childhood on Roman funerary memorials. In: Cohen, Ada and Rutter, Jeremy B eds. Constructions of Childhood in Greek and Roman Antiquity, Volume Supplement (Hesperia). USA: American School of Classical Studies at Athens, pp. 323–338.

Huskinson, Janet (2007). Growing up in Ravenna: evidence from the decoration of children's sarcophagi. In: Harlow, Mary and Laurence, Ray eds. Age and aging in the Roman empire. Journal of Roman Archaeology, Supplement. USA: John Humphreys, pp. 55–79.

King, Helen (2007). Midwifery, Obstetrics and the Rise of Gynaecology: The Uses of a Sixteenth-Century Compendium. Women and Gender in the Early Modern World. Aldershot: Ashgate.

King, Helen (2007). When is a foetus not a foetus? Diagnosing false conceptions in early modern France. In: Dasen, Veronique ed. L' Embryon humain à travers l' histoire: Images, savoirs et rites. Testimonia. Gollion: Infolio, pp. 223–238.

King, Helen (2007). Ancient medicine. In: Malti-Douglas, Fedwa ed. Encyclopedia of sex and gender, Volume 3. Detroit: Macmillan Reference USA, pp. 982–985.

Paul, Joanna (2007). Working with film: theories and methodologies. In: Hardwick, Lorna and Stray, Christopher eds. A Companion to Classical Receptions. Oxford, UK: Wiley - Blackwell, pp. 303–314.

Perkins, Philip (2007). Etruscan Bucchero in the British Museum. British Museum Research Publication, 165. London, UK: The British Museum Press.

Perkins, Philip (2007). Aliud in Sicilia? Cultural development in Rome's first Province. In: Van Dommelen, P. and Terranato, N. eds. Articulating Local Cultures: Power and identity under the expanding Roman Republic. International Roman Archaeology Conference Series, Journal of (63). Rhode Island, USA: Journal of Roman Archaeology, pp. 33–53.

Robson, James (2007). Catullus 22: Suffenus iste – A Catullan Riddle? Classica et Mediaevalia, 58 pp. 209–214.

Robson, James (2007). Lost in Translation? The problem of (Aristophanic) humour. In: Hardwick, Lorna and Stray, Christopher eds. A Companion to Classical Receptions. Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World. Oxford, UK: Blackwell Publishing, pp. 168–182.

Rothe, Ursula (2007). The comparative and interdisciplinary approach and Romanisation studies. In: Schroeder, H.; Bray, P.; Gardner, P.; Jefferson, V. and Macaulay-Lewis, E. eds. Crossing Frontiers: The Opportunities and Challenges of Interdisciplinary Approaches to Archaeology. Proceedings of a Conference held at the University of Oxford, 25-26 June 2005. Oxford University School of Archaeology monograph (66). Oxford: Oxford University School of Archaeology, pp. 99–110.

2006To Top

Barker, Elton and Christensen, Joel (2006). Flight club: the new Archilochus and its resonance with Homeric epic. Materiali e discussioni per l'analisi dei testi classici, 57(2) pp. 9–41.

Graham, Emma-Jayne (2006). Discarding the destitute: ancient and modern attitudes towards burial practice and memory preservation amongst the lower classes of Rome. In: Croxford, Ben; Goodchild, Helen; Lucas, Jason and Nick, Ray eds. TRAC 2005: Proceedings of the Fifteenth Annual Theoretical Roman Archaeology Conference. Birmingham 2005. Oxford: Oxbow, pp. 57–71.

Hardwick, Lorna (2006). Post-colonial studies. In: Kallendorf, Craig ed. A Companion to the Classical Tradition. Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World. Oxford, UK: Blackwell, pp. 312–327.

Hardwick, Lorna (2006). Remodelling receptions: Greek drama as diaspora in performance. In: Martindale, C. and Thomas, R. eds. Classics and the uses of reception. Classical Receptions. Oxford, UK: Blackwell, pp. 204–215.

Hardwick, Lorna (2006). Staging Sophocles in post-colonial contexts. In: Shiafkalis, Nicos ed. The Influence of Sophocles on Contemporary Theatre. Nicosia: International Theatre Institute, pp. 258–276.

James, Paula (2006). Ritualistic behaviour in THE WICKER MAN: a classical and carnivalesque perspective on the 'true nature of sacrifice'. In: Franks, Benjamin; Harper, Stephen; Murray, Jonathan and Stevenson, Lesley eds. The Quest for the Wicker Man: history, folklore and Pagan perspectives. Edinburgh: Luath Press, pp. 44–55.

James, Paula and O'Brien, Maeve (2006). To baldly go: a last look at Lucius and his counter-humiliation strategies. In: Keulen, W.H.; Nauta, R.R. and Panayotakis, S. eds. Lectiones Scrupulosae: Essays on the Text and Interpretation of Apuleius’ Metamorphoses in Honour of Maaike Zimmerman. Ancient Narrative Series, Ancient Na (Supplement). Groningen, Netherlands: Barkhuis Publishing, pp. 234–251.

King, Helen (2006). The origins of medicine in the second century AD. In: Goldhill, Simon and Osborne, Robin eds. Rethinking revolutions through Ancient Greece. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 246–263.

Robson, James (2006). Humour, obscenity and Aristophanes. Drama - studien zum antiken drama und seiner rezeption, 1. Tuebingen, Germany: Gunter Narr Verlag.

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Fear, Trevor (2005). Propertian closure: the elegiac inscription of the liminal male and ideological contestation in Augustan Rome. In: Ancona, Ronnie and Greene, Ellen eds. Gendered Dynamics in Latin Love Poetry. Arethusa Books. Baltimore, US: The John Hopkins University Press, pp. 13–40.

Graham, Emma-Jayne (2005). Dining al fresco with the living and the dead in Roman Italy. In: Carroll, Maureen; Hadley, D. M. and Willmott, Hugh eds. Consuming Passions: Dining from Antiquity to the Eighteenth Century. Revealing history. Stroud: Tempus, pp. 49–65.

Graham, Emma-Jayne (2005). The quick and the dead in the extra-urban landscape: the Roman cemetery at Ostia/Portus as a lived environment. In: Bruhn, James; Croxford, Ben and Grigoropoulos, Dimitris eds. TRAC 2004: Proceedings of the Fourteenth Annual Theoretical Roman Archaeology Conference, Durham 2004. Oxford: Oxbow Books, pp. 133–143.

Hardwick, Lorna (2005). The comic in the tragic: parody and critique in modern productions of Euripides’ Hecuba. Documenta (Special issue: The Performance of the Comic - eds Kolk, M. and Decreus, F.)), 23(3) pp. 306–315.

Hardwick, Lorna (2005). Refiguring Classical Texts: Aspects of the Postcolonial Condition. In: Goff, Barbara ed. Classics and Colonialism. London, UK: Duckworth, pp. 107–117.

Hardwick, Lorna (2005). Staging Agamemnon: the languages of translation. In: Macintosh, F.; Michelakis, P.; Hall, E. and Taplin, O. eds. Agamemnon in Performance 458 BC to AD 2004. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, pp. 207–222.

Hobden, Fiona (2005). Reading Xenophon's Symposium. Ramus, 34(2) pp. 93–111.

Huskinson, Janet (2005). Disappearing children?: Children on Roman funerary monuments of the second to Fourth Century AD. In: Mustakallio, Katariina; Hanska, Jussi; Sainio, Hanna-Leena and Vuolanto, Ville eds. Hoping for continuity: Childhood, education and death in Antiquity and the Middle Ages. Acta Instituti Romani Finlandiae (33). Rome, Italy: Institutum Romanum Finlandiae, pp. 91–104.

Huskinson, Janet (2005). Rivers of Roman Antioch. In: Stafford, Emma and Herrin, Judith eds. Personifications in the Greek World: From Antiquity to Byzantium. Publications for the Centre for Hellenic Studies, King’s College London (7). Surrey, UK: Ashgate Press, pp. 247–264.

James, Paula (2005). Real and metaphorical mimicking birds in the Metamorphoses of Apuleius. In: Harrison, Stephen; Paschalis, Michael and Frangoulidis, Stavros eds. Metaphor in the Ancient Novel. Ancient narrative (Suppementu). Netherlands: Barkhuis Publishing, pp. 210–224.

King, Helen ed. (2005). Health in Antiquity. Abingdon: Routledge.

King, Helen (2005). Introduction: what is health? In: King, Helen ed. Health in Antiquity. Abingdon: Routledge, pp. 1–11.

King, Helen (2005). Women's health and recovery in the Hippocratic corpus. In: King, Helen ed. Health in Antiquity. Abingdon: Routledge, pp. 150–161.

King, Helen (2005). The mathematics of sex: one to two, or two to one? In: Soergel, Philip M. and Barnes, Andrew eds. Sexuality and culture in medieval and renaissance Europe. Studies in Medieval and Renaissance History, 2 (3). New York, NY U.S.: AMS Press, pp. 47–58.

Perkins, Phil (2005). Who lived in the Etruscan Albegna Valley? In: Attema, Peter; Nijboer, Albert and Zifferero, Andrea eds. Papers in Italian Archaeology VI: Communities and settlements from the Neolithic to the Early Medieval Period. British Archaeological Reports Series (1452 (1)). Oxford: Archaeopress, pp. 109–117.

Robson, James (2005). New clothes, a new you: clothing and character in Aristophanes. In: Cleland, Liza; Harlow, Mary and Llewellyn-Jones, Lloyd eds. The Clothed Body in the Ancient World. Oxford, UK: Oxbow Books, pp. 65–74.

Robson, James (2005). Aristophanes on how to write tragedy: what you wear is what you are. In: McHardy, Fiona; Robson, James and Harvey, David eds. Lost dramas of classical Athens: Greek tragic fragments. Exeter, UK: Exeter University Press, pp. 171–186.

Rothe, Ursula (2005). Die Anfänge der Romanisierungsforschung. In: Schoerner, Günther ed. Romanisierung - Romanisation. Theoretische Modelle und praktische Fallbeispiele. British Archaeological Reports (BAR) (S1427). Oxford: Archaeopress, pp. 1–13.

Rothe, Ursula (2005). Kleidung und Romanisierung: der Raum Rhein-Mosel. In: Schörner, Günther ed. Romanisierung - Romanisation. Theoretische Modelle und praktische Fallbeispiele. British Archaeological Reports (B.A.R.) (S1427). Oxford: Archaeopress, pp. 169–178.

Yamagata, Naoko (2005). Plato, memory, and performance. Oral Tradition, 20(1) pp. 111–129.

Yamagata, Naoko (2005). Disaster revisited - Ate and the Litai in Homer's Iliad. In: Stafford, Emma and Herrin, Judith eds. Personification in the Greek world: from Antiquity to Byzantium. Aldershot, UK: Ashgate, pp. 21–28.

2004To Top

Barker, Elton (2004). Between a rock and a safe place: the chorus becoming citizens in Sophocles’ Ajax. In: Sófocles el hombre, Sófocles el poeta: Actas del Congreso Internacional con motivo del XXV Centenario del nacimiento de Sófocles (Pérez Jiménez, Aurelio; Alcalde Martín, Carlos and Caballero, Raúl eds.), Charta Antiqua, Malaga pp. 259–272.

Emlyn-Jones, Chris (2004). The dramatic poet and his audience: Agathon and Socrates in Plato's "Symposium". Hermes: Zeitschrift für klassische philologie, 132(4) pp. 389–405.

Feldherr, Andrew and James, Paula (2004). Making the most of Marsyas. Arethusa, 37(1) pp. 75–104.

Fentress, Elizabeth; Fontana, Sergio; Hitchner, R. Bruce and Perkins, Philip (2004). Accounting for ARS: fineware and sites in Sicily and Africa. In: Alcock, Susan E. and Cherry, John F. eds. Side-by-side survey: comparative regional studies in the Mediterranean world. Oxford, UK: Oxbow Books, pp. 147–162.

Hardwick, Lorna (2004). Translating words, Translating Cultures. Classical Inter/Faces. London, U.K.: Duckworth.

Hardwick, Lorna (2004). Shards and suckers: modern receptions of homer. In: Fowler, Robert ed. The Cambridge companion to homer. The Cambridge Companion. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 344–362.

Hardwick, Lorna (2004). Greek drama and anti-colonialism: de-colonising classics. In: Hall, E.; Macintosh, F. and Wrigley, A. eds. Dionysus since 69: Greek tragedy at the dawn of the third millennium. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, pp. 219–242.

Hobden, Fiona (2004). How to be a good symposiast and other lessons from Xenophon's Symposium. Proceedings of the Cambridge Philological Society, 50 pp. 121–140.

James, Paula (2004). What lies beneath: fluid subtexts in Ovid's Metamorphoses. In: Zimmerman, Maaike and Van der Paardt, Rudi eds. Metamorphic Reflections: essays presented to Ben Hijmans on his 75th birthday. Leuwen: Peeters, pp. 1–19.

King, Helen (2004). Illness and other personal crises in Greek and Roman religions. In: Johnston, Sarah Iles ed. Religions of the ancient world: A guide. Harvard: Harvard University Press, pp. 464–467.

King, Helen (2004). Cellier, Elizabeth (fl. 1668–1688). In: Matthews, Henry Colin Gray and Harrison, Brian Howard eds. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Volume 10. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, pp. 807–808.

King, Helen (2004). Hodges, Nathaniel (1629–1688). In: Matthews, Henry Colin Gray and Harrison, Brian Howard eds. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Volume 27. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, p. 456.

Emlyn-Jones, Chris and Hamilton, Walter (trans.), eds. Gorgias. By Plato (1960). London, Penguin Books (2004).

Robson, James (2004). 'Night was departing ...': using translations in post-beginners' language teaching. In: Fitzpatrick, David ed. Different lights, different hands: working with translations in classics and ancient history at university. Milton Keynes, UK: The Open University, pp. 85–100.

2003To Top

Sandwell, Isabella and Huskinson, Janet eds. (2003). Culture and Society in late Roman Antioch. Oxford, UK: Oxbow.

Betts, Eleanor (2003). The sacred landscape of Picenum (900-100 BC): towards a phenomenology of cult places. In: Wilkins, John B. and Herring, Edward eds. Inhabiting Symbols: symbol and image in the ancient Mediterranean. Accordia Specialist Studies on the Mediterranean (5). London: Accordia Research Institute, University of London, pp. 101–120.

Hardwick, Lorna (2003). Reception Studies. Greece and Rome: New Surveys in the Classics (33). Oxford, U.K.: Oxford University Press.

Hope, Valerie M. (2003). Trophies and tombstones: commemorating the Roman soldier. World Archaeology, 35(1) pp. 79–97.

Hope, Valerie M. (2003). Remembering Rome: memory, funerary monuments and the Roman soldier. In: Williams, Howard ed. Archaeologies of remembrance: death and memory in past societies. New York, USA: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers, pp. 113–140.

Huskinson, Janet (2003). Theatre, performance and theatricality in some mosaic pavements from Antioch. Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies, 46 pp. 131–165.

Huskinson, Janet (2003). Surveying the scene: Antioch mosaic pavements as a source of historical evidence. In: Sandwell, Isabella and Huskinson, Janet eds. Culture and Society in Late Roman Antioch. Oxford, UK: Oxbow Publications, pp. 134–152.

Yamagata, Naoko (2003). Hesiod: the cosmology of a farmer-poet. In: Kawashima, S and Takada, Y eds. Ennepe Mousa: an invitation to the Ancient Greek Literature. Tokyo: Sanriku Publishing, pp. 63–78.

2002To Top

Huskinson, Janet (2002). Representing Women on Roman sarcophagi. In: McClanan, Anne l. and Encarnacion, Karen Rosoff eds. The material culture of sex, procreation and marriage in pre-modern Europe. New York, USA: Palgrave/St Martin's Press, pp. 11–31.

James, Paula (2002). Keeping Apuleius in the Picture: a dialogue between Apuleius' Metamorphoses and the Luis Bunuel's Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie. In: Zimmerman de Graaf, M and Van Der Paard t, R eds. Ancient Narrative, Volume 1. Groningen: Roelf Barkhuis, pp. 185–207.

King, Helen (2002). Creating the world: the origins of all things in ancient Greek myth and medicine. Interdisciplinary Science Reviews, 27(4) pp. 271–277.

King, Helen (2002). De dokter aan het sterfbed. Raster, 99 pp. 90–106.

King, Helen (2002). The power of paternity: the Father of Medicine meets the Prince of Physicians. In: Cantor, David ed. Reinventing Hippocrates. The History of Medicine in Context. Aldershot: Ashgate, pp. 21–36.

King, Helen (2002). The limits of normality in Hippocratic gynaecology. In: Thivel, Antoine and Zucker, Arnaud eds. Le normal et le pathologique dans la Collection hippocratique. Nice: Publications de le Faculté des Lettres, Arts et Sciences Humaines de Nice, pp. 563–574.

Robson, James (2002). Commentaries and post-beginners' language teaching. In: Fitzpatrick, David; Hardwick, Lorna; Ireland, Stanley and Montserrat, Dominic eds. Old wine, new bottles: texts for classics in a changed learning environment at university. Milton Keynes, UK: The Open University, pp. 51–60.

2001To Top

Hardwick, Lorna (2001). Who owns the plays?: Issues in the translation and performance of Greek drama on the modern stage. Eirene (Studia Graeca et Latina, Theatralia)(XXXVll, Th) pp. 23–29.

Hope, Valerie M. (2001). Constructing identity: the Roman funerary monuments of Aquileia, Mainz and Nimes. British Archaeological Reports, International Series (960). Oxford, UK: Archaeopress.

James, Paula (2001). From prologue to story: metaphor and narrative construction in the opening of the Metamorphoses. In: Kahane, Ahuvia and Laird, Andrew eds. Companion to the prologue to Apuleius' Metamorphoses. Oxford: Oxford University press, pp. 256–266.

King, Helen (2001). Recovering hysteria from history: Herodotus and “the first case of shell shock”. In: Halligan, Peter; Bass, Christopher and Marshall, John eds. Contemporary Approaches to the Science of Hysteria: Clinical and Theoretical Perspectives. Oxford University Press, pp. 36–48.

2000To Top

Hardwick, Lorna (2000). Theatres of the mind: Greek tragedy in women's writings in English in the nineteenth century. In: Hardwick, Lorna; Easterling, P.E.; Ireland, S.; Lowe, N. and Macintosh, F. eds. Theatre Ancient and Modern. Milton Keynes, U.K.: Dept of Classical Studies, The Open University, pp. 68–81.

Yamagata, Naoko (2000). Linear B. In: Speake, G ed. Encyclopedia of Greece and the Hellenic Tradition. Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers, pp. 950–952.

1999To Top

Hardwick, Lorna (1999). Placing Prometheus. In: Hardwick, Lorna ed. Tony Harrison's Poetry, Drama and Film: The Classical Dimension. Milton Keynes, U.K.: Dept of Classical Studies, the Open University, pp. 1–15.

King, Helen (1999). Comparative perspectives on medicine and religion in the ancient world. In: Hinnells, John R. and Porter, Roy eds. Religion, Health and Suffering: a Cross-Cultural Study of Attitudes to Suffering and the Implications for Medicine in a Multi-Religious Society. London: Kegan Paul International, pp. 276–294.

King, Helen (1999). Chronic pain and the creation of narrative. In: Porter, James I. ed. Constructions of the Classical Body. Michigan: University of Michigan Press, pp. 269–286.

King, Helen (1999). Hippocratic gynaecological therapy in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. In: Aspetti della Terapia nel Corpus Hippocraticum (Atti del IXe Colloque hippocratique), 25-29 Sep 1996, Pisa, Italy.

Perkins, Phil (1999). Etruscan Settlement, Society and Material Culture in Central Coastal Etruria. British Archaeological Reports International Series (788). Oxford: J. and E. Hedges.

1998To Top

Godwin, John (1998). Aesthetic ethics in the De Rerum Natura of Lucretius. Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) thesis The Open University.

1997To Top

Robson, James (1997). Bestiality and Bestial Rape in Greek Myth. In: Deacy, S and Pearce, K eds. Rape in Antiquity: Sexual Violence in the Greek and Roman Worlds. London: Duckworth, pp. 65–96.

Yamagata, Naoko (1997). Anax and basileus in Homer. Classical Quarterly, 47(1) pp. 1–14.

Yamagata, Naoko (1997). Classics for multilingual Europe. Kleos(2) pp. 275–284.

1995To Top

Coello, Terence Arnold (1995). Unit sizes in the Late Roman army. Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) thesis The Open University.

King, Helen (1995). 'As if none understood the art that cannot understand Greek': the education of midwives in seventeenth century England. In: Nutton, Vivian and Porter, Roy eds. The History of Medical Education in Britain. Clio Medica: Perspectives in Medical Humanities (30). Atlanta, GA: Editions Rodopi B. V., pp. 184–198.

King, Helen (1995). Conversion disorder and hysteria. In: Berrios, G. E. and Porter, Roy eds. History of Clinical Psychiatry: the Origin and History of Psychiatric Disorders. London: Athlone Press, pp. 442–450.

King, Helen (1995). Half-human creatures. In: Cherry, John ed. Mythical Beasts. London: British Museum Press, pp. 138–166.

King, Helen (1995). Medical texts as a source for women's history. In: Powell, Anton ed. The Greek World. Routledge Worlds. London: Routledge, pp. 199–218.

King, Helen (1995). Food and blood in Hippokratic gynaecology. In: Wilkins, John; Harvey, David and Dobson, Michael J. eds. Food in Antiquity. Exeter: University of Exeter Press, pp. 351–358.

Yamagata, Naoko (1995). Ritual offerings in Homer and in Linear B. Studi Micenei ed Egeo-Anatolici(35) pp. 57–68.

Yamagata, Naoko (1995). Why Classics today - and tomorrow? Scholia(4) pp. 108–109.

1994To Top

King, Helen (1994). Producing woman: Hippocratic gynaecology. In: Archer, Leonie; Fischler, Susan and Wyke, Maria eds. Women in Ancient Societies: an Illusion of the Night:. New York: Macmillan, pp. 102–114.

King, Helen (1994). Sowing the field: Greek and Roman sexology. In: Porter, Roy and Teich, Mikulas eds. Sexual Knowledge, Sexual Science: the History of Attitudes to Sexuality. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 29–46.

Yamagata, Naoko (1994). Homeric Morality. Mnemosyne, Bibliotheca Classica Batava Supplementum. Brill Academic Publishers.

1993To Top

King, Helen (1993). The politick midwife: models of midwifery in the work of Elizabeth Cellier. In: Marland, Hilary ed. The Art of Midwifery: Early Modern Midwives in Europe. Wellcome Institute Series in the History of Medicine. London: Routledge, pp. 115–130.

Walters, Bryan (1993). The Forest of Dean Iron Industry 1st to 4th centuries A.D. Master of Philosophy (MPhil) thesis The Open University.

Yamagata, Naoko (1993). Young and Old in Homer and in 'Heike Monogatari'. Greece & Rome, 40(1) pp. 1–10.

1992To Top

Mackintosh, Majorie Carol (1992). The divine horseman in the art of the western Roman Empire. Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) thesis The Open University.

1991To Top

Yamagata, Naoko (1991). Phoenix's speech - Is Achilles punished? Classical Quarterly, 41(1) pp. 1–15.

1990To Top

Yamagata, Naoko (1990). Aisima pareipon - A moral judgement by the poet? Parola del Passato, 45 pp. 420–430.

1989To Top

Yamagata, Naoko (1989). The apostrophe in Homer as part of the oral technique. Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies, 36(1) pp. 91–103.

1987To Top

1984To Top

Cobb, Jennifer Mary (1984). The Cult of Vesta in the Roman World. Master of Philosophy (MPhil) thesis The Open University.

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