Anna’s laments are grounded in a Greek tradition of female lamentation and reflect her deliberate decision to add a female voice along side the historian’s conventional dispassion
The genre of the epigram is a privileged field of investigation for the study of women's voices in t...
The discipline of classical reception has, in the last decade, taken considerable steps forward in c...
Based on the research hypothesis that fiction portraying powerful historical women can help to open ...
ii This thesis examines Anna Komnene and her use of authorial intrusion in the Alexiad. The goal is ...
The Alexiad, written in the twelfth century by a Byzantine princess, Anna Komnene, tells the story o...
“Time…sweeps up and carries away with it everything that has seen the light of day and plunges it in...
I shall focus specifically on the function of female lament as an expression of individual and colle...
This article presents an overview of recent work by Byzantinists on the Alexiad of Anna Comnena, in ...
Anna Komnena (1083—1153/1154), the daughter of emperor Alexios I, was involved in the most important...
In order to rest and regroup the pilgrim masses of the First Crusade collected in the city of Consta...
Study of lament has begun to be a major part of the feminist reinterpretation of epic, including bot...
This essay examines the relationship among gender, lamentation, and death in the Greek lament tradit...
The funeral lament is the type of speech most closely associated with, and representative of, the fe...
Diether Roderich Reinsch (Trad.), Anna Komnene. Alexias. . In: Revue des études byzantines, tome 60,...
Plutarch expresses a sentiment common in Graeco-Roman literature, that women should keep their voice...
The genre of the epigram is a privileged field of investigation for the study of women's voices in t...
The discipline of classical reception has, in the last decade, taken considerable steps forward in c...
Based on the research hypothesis that fiction portraying powerful historical women can help to open ...
ii This thesis examines Anna Komnene and her use of authorial intrusion in the Alexiad. The goal is ...
The Alexiad, written in the twelfth century by a Byzantine princess, Anna Komnene, tells the story o...
“Time…sweeps up and carries away with it everything that has seen the light of day and plunges it in...
I shall focus specifically on the function of female lament as an expression of individual and colle...
This article presents an overview of recent work by Byzantinists on the Alexiad of Anna Comnena, in ...
Anna Komnena (1083—1153/1154), the daughter of emperor Alexios I, was involved in the most important...
In order to rest and regroup the pilgrim masses of the First Crusade collected in the city of Consta...
Study of lament has begun to be a major part of the feminist reinterpretation of epic, including bot...
This essay examines the relationship among gender, lamentation, and death in the Greek lament tradit...
The funeral lament is the type of speech most closely associated with, and representative of, the fe...
Diether Roderich Reinsch (Trad.), Anna Komnene. Alexias. . In: Revue des études byzantines, tome 60,...
Plutarch expresses a sentiment common in Graeco-Roman literature, that women should keep their voice...
The genre of the epigram is a privileged field of investigation for the study of women's voices in t...
The discipline of classical reception has, in the last decade, taken considerable steps forward in c...
Based on the research hypothesis that fiction portraying powerful historical women can help to open ...