Idealized and Barbarous Rome: Militarism in Tacitus’ Germania
Introduction[1] 1§1 Tacitus reexamines Roman stereotypes about the Germanic tribes in his ethnographical work, Germania. The Romans considered the German tribes a primitive and savage people, like many...
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1§1 In his cycle of five epigrams on dramatic poets, Dioscorides assembles a “dead dramatists society” whose curious and unprecedented inclusion of both archaic and contemporaneous figures—Thespis,...
View ArticleThe Writing on the Walls: Reading the Sexual Passivity of the Women of...
1§1 Ancient graffiti– drawings and text inscribed onto the face of a wall– are increasingly acknowledged as valuable sources for studying the daily lives of the ancients. Unlike monumental inscriptions...
View ArticleAn Unidentifiable Icon: Nikolaos Gyzis
1§1 Some artists defy all artistic labels. They bounce from named style to named style, never staying long enough to fully earn the title of adherent. These artists synthesize the various styles they...
View ArticleHeavenly Haircuts & Missing Bodies: An Examination of Berenice’s Absence from...
1§1 The narrative, fantasy, and representation of Berenice II continue to provide a sense of mystery and intrigue. In the third century BCE, Callimachus forever repositioned perceptions and receptions...
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