In recent years, much progress has been made towards elucidating the function of ekphrasis in Roman epistolography, especially with relation to the writings of Seneca and Pliny. Following on from these precedents, this article mines the epistles of three prominent Roman letter-writers, Cicero, Horace, and Ovid, for their intermedial elements. The motifs of oral quotations, handwriting, and human tear stains, which interweave the sources analysed, are shown not only to straddle the borders between distinct media, but also to engage with multiple senses as a result of their multiple medialities. Oral quotations integrate speech into written texts and thus necessitate both sight and hearing. Handwriting likewise consists of both a ‘basic media...
2019-04-17In my dissertation, I investigate how and why Cicero quotes early Latin poetry, with the a...
This thesis is a study on the use of works of art in Greek novels, based on the idea that the noveli...
The template of the body—swollen or emaciated, weak or strong, gangly or graceful—forms and informs ...
Traditionally Latin prose letters have been classified in one of two ways: often they are seen as hi...
This dissertation examines the hermeneutic role of the material epistula in the correspondence of th...
Ancient letters have generally been treated as “snapshots” of everyday life or “mirrors” of their au...
This dissertation investigates the “epistolary habit” of the Roman elite in the late Republic and ea...
This study aims to determine the distinguishing features that are characteristic of Cicero’s epistol...
In this paper I try to examine some of Pliny's well known letters as pieces of literary fiction. The...
The aim of my thesis is to extend the current discussions of ethnography, epistolarity and the ancie...
What especially delights me is a rhetorical poem and a poetical oration, in which you can see the po...
vii, 48 p. A print copy of this thesis is available through the UO Libraries under the call number:...
In the wake of Caesar’s assassination, Cicero was without the necessary magisterial and martial auth...
Authors often convey meaning by referring to or imitating prior works of literature, a process that ...
This study observes Horace’s Satires (Book 1 published c. 36-35 BCE, and Book 2 c. 30 BCE) through a...
2019-04-17In my dissertation, I investigate how and why Cicero quotes early Latin poetry, with the a...
This thesis is a study on the use of works of art in Greek novels, based on the idea that the noveli...
The template of the body—swollen or emaciated, weak or strong, gangly or graceful—forms and informs ...
Traditionally Latin prose letters have been classified in one of two ways: often they are seen as hi...
This dissertation examines the hermeneutic role of the material epistula in the correspondence of th...
Ancient letters have generally been treated as “snapshots” of everyday life or “mirrors” of their au...
This dissertation investigates the “epistolary habit” of the Roman elite in the late Republic and ea...
This study aims to determine the distinguishing features that are characteristic of Cicero’s epistol...
In this paper I try to examine some of Pliny's well known letters as pieces of literary fiction. The...
The aim of my thesis is to extend the current discussions of ethnography, epistolarity and the ancie...
What especially delights me is a rhetorical poem and a poetical oration, in which you can see the po...
vii, 48 p. A print copy of this thesis is available through the UO Libraries under the call number:...
In the wake of Caesar’s assassination, Cicero was without the necessary magisterial and martial auth...
Authors often convey meaning by referring to or imitating prior works of literature, a process that ...
This study observes Horace’s Satires (Book 1 published c. 36-35 BCE, and Book 2 c. 30 BCE) through a...
2019-04-17In my dissertation, I investigate how and why Cicero quotes early Latin poetry, with the a...
This thesis is a study on the use of works of art in Greek novels, based on the idea that the noveli...
The template of the body—swollen or emaciated, weak or strong, gangly or graceful—forms and informs ...