This paper discusses Tibullus I 4 with particular attention to three Callimachean intertexts, namely Iambus 9, Aetia fr. 41 and Iambus 3. Iambus 3 in particular proves to be a crucial intertext for the last portion of Priapus’ lecture on love. The paper argues that Tibullus does not merely echo the Alexandrian text but reacts to it and dramatically alters its implications. The Roman poet places this allusion at a crucial point, that is, at the end of Priapus’ lecture on homoerotic love. The appropriation and subversion of Callimachus’ Iambus 3 has a central place in Tibullus’ strategy of establishing the literary prestige of his own elegiac endeavor
In the last poem of his elegiac cycle the lover poet Lygdamus bides his sad farewell to the unfaith...
This dissertation was submitted for the Ph.D. in the Department of Classical Studies of the Universi...
This paper argues that Tibullus’ practice of altering the gender of his intertextual references dest...
This paper discusses Tibullus I 4 with particular attention to three Callimachean intertexts, namely...
Tibullus’ sixteen canonical poems owe a debt to Horace’s invective Epodes, sixteen of which are in m...
The characteristic places of love elegy are doorway, bed, symposium, and Rome. The paper explores h...
Callimachean allusions in Propertius' elegy 4,9, and analysis of the topoi of paraklausithyron inclu...
This paper explores the use of archaic iambus in Callimachus’ own Iambi.Qua iambographer the Helleni...
We intend to analyze the elocution of poems 1.1 and 1.4 from the first book called corpus tibullianu...
A treatise on rhetorical tropes is attributed in manuscripts to the first-century grammarian Trypho:...
Comprehensive survey of the importance of Callimachus in Classical Roman poetry and of the transform...
A treatise on rhetorical tropes is attributed in manuscripts to the first-century grammarian Trypho:...
This book provides a new literary treatment of an often-overlooked collection of fragmentary poems f...
Tibullus occasionally uses a transitional device employed by Propertius in a number of his own elegi...
Two poems of Catullian Liber (V and VII) contain allusions to Callimachus, particularly to proem of...
In the last poem of his elegiac cycle the lover poet Lygdamus bides his sad farewell to the unfaith...
This dissertation was submitted for the Ph.D. in the Department of Classical Studies of the Universi...
This paper argues that Tibullus’ practice of altering the gender of his intertextual references dest...
This paper discusses Tibullus I 4 with particular attention to three Callimachean intertexts, namely...
Tibullus’ sixteen canonical poems owe a debt to Horace’s invective Epodes, sixteen of which are in m...
The characteristic places of love elegy are doorway, bed, symposium, and Rome. The paper explores h...
Callimachean allusions in Propertius' elegy 4,9, and analysis of the topoi of paraklausithyron inclu...
This paper explores the use of archaic iambus in Callimachus’ own Iambi.Qua iambographer the Helleni...
We intend to analyze the elocution of poems 1.1 and 1.4 from the first book called corpus tibullianu...
A treatise on rhetorical tropes is attributed in manuscripts to the first-century grammarian Trypho:...
Comprehensive survey of the importance of Callimachus in Classical Roman poetry and of the transform...
A treatise on rhetorical tropes is attributed in manuscripts to the first-century grammarian Trypho:...
This book provides a new literary treatment of an often-overlooked collection of fragmentary poems f...
Tibullus occasionally uses a transitional device employed by Propertius in a number of his own elegi...
Two poems of Catullian Liber (V and VII) contain allusions to Callimachus, particularly to proem of...
In the last poem of his elegiac cycle the lover poet Lygdamus bides his sad farewell to the unfaith...
This dissertation was submitted for the Ph.D. in the Department of Classical Studies of the Universi...
This paper argues that Tibullus’ practice of altering the gender of his intertextual references dest...