Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
  • Cited by 40
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Online publication date:
September 2009
Print publication year:
2008
Online ISBN:
9780511482298

Book description

In this book on intertextuality in Pliny the Younger, Professor Marchesi invites an alternative reading of Pliny's collection of private epistles: the letters are examined as the product of an authorial strategy controlling both the rhetorical fabric of individual units and their arrangement in the collection. By inserting recognisable fragments of canonical authors into his epistles, Pliny imports into the still fluid practice of letter-writing the principles of composition and organisation that for his contemporaries characterised other writings as literature. Allusions become the occasion for a metapoetic dialogue, especially with the collection's privileged addressee, Tacitus. An active participant in the cultural politics of his time, Pliny entrusts to the letters his views on poetry, oratory and historiography. In defining a model of epistolography alternative to Cicero's and complementing those of Horace, Ovid and Seneca, he also successfully carves a niche for his work in the Roman literary canon.

Reviews

Review of the hardback:'… perhaps the most ambitious literary examination of Pliny's letters produced in the last eighty years … Marchesi successfully exposes the complexity of Pliny's enterprise, giving a clear sense of its richness and its detailed interaction directly and through intermediaries with both the literature of his own time and that of canonical stature.'

Source: International Journal of the Classical Tradition

Refine List

Actions for selected content:

Select all | Deselect all
  • View selected items
  • Export citations
  • Download PDF (zip)
  • Save to Kindle
  • Save to Dropbox
  • Save to Google Drive

Save Search

You can save your searches here and later view and run them again in "My saved searches".

Please provide a title, maximum of 40 characters.
×

Contents

List of works cited
Adamik, T. (1976) “Pliny and Martial.” Annales Universitatis Scientiarum Budapestensis Sect. Class. 4: 63–72
Adams, J. N. (1982) The Latin Sexual Vocabulary. Baltimore
Adams, J. N. (2003) Bilingualism and the Latin Language. Cambridge
Adler, E. (1981) Catullan Self-revelation. New York
Albrecht, M. (1971) “Plinius der Jüngere (cos. 100 n. Chr.). Jagdglück eines Schriftstellers,” in Meister römischer Prosa von Cato bis Apuleius. Interpretationen. Heidelberg
Alföldy, G. (1999) “Die Inschriften des jüngeren Plinius und seine Mission in Pontus et Bithynia,” in Städte, Eliten und Gesellschaft in der Gallia Cisalpina. Epigraphisch-historische Untersuchungen. Stuttgart: 221–44
Allain, E. (1901–2) Pline le Jeune et ses héritiers. Paris
Altman, J. G. (1982) Epistolarity: Approaches to a Form. Columbus
André, J.-M. (1966) L'Otium dans la vie morale et intellectuelle romaine, des origines à l’époque augustéenne. Paris
André, J.-M., Dangel, M. and Demont, P. eds. (1996) Les loisirs et l'héritage de la culture classique: actes du ⅩⅢe congrès de l'Association Guillaume Budé, Dijon, 27–31 aoÛt 1993. Brussels
Armstrong, D. (1986) “Stylistics and the Date of Calpurnius Siculus.” Philologus 130: 113–36
Asbach, I. (1881) “Zur Chronologie der Briefe des jüngeren Plinius.” Rheinisches Museum für Philologie 36: 38–49
Ash, R. (1997) “Warped Intertextualities: Naevius and Sallust at Tacitus Histories 2.12.2.” Histos1
Ash, R. (2003) “Aliud est enim epistulam, aliud historiam … scribere (Epistles 6.16.22): Pliny the Historian?,” in R. Gibson and R. Morello eds.: 211–26
Aubrion, E. (1989) “La correspondance de Pline le Jeune: Problèmes et orientations actuelles de la recherche.” Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt 2.33.1: 304–74
Auhagen, U. (2003) “Lusus und Gloria – Plinius’ Hendecasyllabi (Epist. 4, 14; 5, 3 und 7, 4),” in L. Castagna and E. Lefèvre eds.: 3–13
Aymard, J. (1951) Essai sur les chasses romaines, des origines à la fin du siècle des Antonins. Paris
Baier, T. (2003) “KTHMA oder ΑΓωΝIΣΜΑ: Plinius über historischen und rhetorischen Stil,” in L. Castagna and E. Lefèvre eds.: 69–81
Bailey, D. R. Shackleton (1965–70) Cicero's Letters to Atticus. 7 vols. Cambridge
Bailey, D. R. Shackleton (1971) Cicero. London
Bailey, D. R. Shackleton (1977) Cicero: Epistulae ad Familiares, 2 vols. Cambridge
Bailey, D. R. Shackleton (1980) Epistulae ad Quintum Fratrem et Marcum Brutum. Cambridge
Baker, R. J. (1982) “Sallustian Silence.” Latomus 41: 801–2
Baker, S. (1960) “Catullus 38.” Classical Philology 55: 37–63
Bakhtin, M. (1968) Rabelais and His World. Trans. H. Iswolsky. Cambridge, MA
Barchiesi, A. (1984) La traccia del modello: effetti omerici nella narrazione virgiliana. Pisa
Barchiesi, A. (2001a) Speaking Volumes: Narrative and Intertext in Ovid and other Latin poets. Trans. M. Fox and S. Marchesi. London
Barchiesi, A. (2001b) “The Crossing,” in S. J. Harrison ed.: 142–63
Barchiesi, A. (2005) Ovidio, Metamorfosi i–ii. Milan
Baron, H. (1970) “La construction du ‘moi’ par la poésie,” in Propositions sur Catulle. Brussels: 131–40
Bartsch, S. (1994) Actors in the Audience: Theatricality and the Doublespeak from Nero to Hadrian. Cambridge, MA
Baxter, R. T. S. (1971) “Virgil's Influence on Tacitus in Book 3 of the Histories.” Classical Philology 66: 93–107
Baxter, R. T. S. (1972) “Virgil's Influence on Tacitus in Books 1 and 2 of the Annals.” Classical Philology 67: 246–69
Beard, M. (2002) “Ciceronian Correspondences: Making a Book out of Letters,” in Classics in Progress. Wiseman, T. P. ed. Oxford and New York: 103–44
Bell, A. A. (1989) “A Note on Revision and Authenticity in Pliny's Letters.” American Journal of Philology 110: 460–6
Benveniste, E. (1971) Problems in General Linguistics. Trans. M. E. Meek. Miami
Bergmann, B. (1995) “Visualizing Pliny's Villas.” Journal of Roman Archaeology 8: 406–20
Berthet, J. (1979) “Sénèque lecteur d'Horace d'après les Lettres à Lucilius.” Latomus 38: 940–54
Beutel, F. (2000) Vergangenheit als Politik: Neue Aspeckte im Werk des jüngeren Plinius. Frankfurt am Main
Birley, A. R. (2000) Onomasticon to the Younger Pliny. Letters and Panegyric. Munich–Leipzig
Blanchot, M. (1981) “The Gaze of Orpheus,” in The Gaze of Orpheus and Other Literary Essays. Barrytown, NY.: 99–104
Bloom, H. (1973) The Anxiety of Influence: A Theory of Poetry. New York
Bloomer, M. (1997) Latinity and Literary Society at Rome. Philadelphia
Bo, D. (1993) Le principali problematiche del “Dialogus de oratoribus.”Hildesheim
Boccuto, G. (1991) “Plinio Ep. Ⅶ 9, 11: un'affermazione letteraria in distici elegiaci.” Atene e Roma 36: 26–36
Bodel, J. (1994) “Trimalchio's Underworld,” in The Search for the Ancient Novel. Tatum, J. ed. Baltimore: 237–59
Bodel, J. (1999) “The Cena Trimalchionis,” in Latin Fiction: The Latin Novel in Context. Hofmann, H. ed. London and New York: 38–51
Bonner, S. F. (1977) Education in Ancient Rome: From the Elder Cato to the Younger Pliny. Berkeley
Bradley, K. R. (1979) “Holidays for Slaves.” Symbolae Osloenses 54: 111–18
Braund, S. Morton. (1998) “Praise and Protreptic in Early Imperial Panegyric: Cicero, Seneca, Pliny,” in The Propaganda of Power. Whitby, M. ed. Leiden and Boston: 53–76
Brooks, P. (1984) Reading for the Plot: Design and Intention in Narrative. Cambridge, MA
Brown, P. (1988) Power and Persuasion in Late Antiquity: Towards a Christian Empire. Madison, WI
Bruère, R. T. (1954) “Tacitus and Pliny's Panegyricus.” Classical Philology 49: 161–79
Buchheit, V. (1961) “Catull an Cato von Utica (c. 56).” Hermes 89: 345–56
Buchheit, V. (1976) “Catullus c. 50 als Programm und Bekenntnis.” Rheinisches Museum für Philologie 119: 162–80
Buren, A. W. (1948) “Pliny's Laurentine Villa.” Journal of Roman Studies 38: 35–6
Bütler, H.-P. (1970) Die geistige Welt des jüngeren Plinius: Studien zur Thematik seiner Briefe. Heidelberg
Castagna, L. and Lefèvre, E. eds. (2003) Plinius der Jüngere und seine Zeit. Munich and Leipzig
Champlin, E. (1986) “History and the date of Calpurnius Siculus.” Philologus 130: 104–12
Chaplin, J. (2000) Livy's Exemplary History. Oxford
Citroni, M. (1975) M. Valerii Martialis Epigrammaton Liber Ⅰ. Florence
Citroni, M. (1995) Poesia e lettori di Roma antica. Bari
Clausen, W. (1976) “Catulli Veronensis Liber.” Classical Philology 71: 37–43
Coleman, K. (1999) [2000] “Latin Literature After A.D. 96: Change or Continuity?.” American Journal of Ancient History 15: 19–39
Conte, G. B. (1974) Memoria dei poeti e sistema letterario. Turin
Conte, G. B. (1984) Virgilio, il genere e i suoi confini. Milan
Conte, G. B. (1992) “Proems in the Middle.” Yale Classical Studies 29: 147–60
Conte, G. B. (1996) The Hidden Author. Trans. E. Fantham. Berkeley, Los Angeles and London
Conte, G. B. and Barchiesi, A. (1989) “Imitazione e arte allusiva. Modi e funzioni dell'intertestualità,” in Lo spazio letterario di Roma antica, 1. Rome: 81–114
Cova, P. V. (1966) La critica letteraria di Plinio il Giovane. Brescia
Cova, P. V. (1972) “Arte allusiva e stilizzazione retorica nelle lettere di Plinio.” Aevum 46: 16–36
Cugusi, P. (1983) Evoluzione e forme dell'epistolografia latina. Rome
Cugusi, P. (2003) “Qualche riflessione sulle idee retoriche di Plinio il Giovane,” in L. Castagna and E. Lefèvre eds.: 95–122
Agostino, D’ V. (1931) “I diminutivi in Plinio Il Giovane.” Atti, Accademia delle Scienze di Torino 66: 93–130
Damon, C. (1990) “Poem Division, Paired Poems, and Amores 2.9 and 3.11.” Transactions of the American Philological Association 120: 269–90
Deane, S. N. (1918) “Greek in Pliny's Letters.” Classical World 12: 41–54
Corte, Della F. (1989) Catullo: Le Poesie. Milan
De Pretis, A. (2004) “‘Epistolarity’ in the First Book of Horace's Epistles.” Piscataway, NJ
Dettmer, H. (1983) Horace: A Study in Structure. Hildesheim
Dettmer, H. (1997) Love by the Numbers: Form and Meaning in the Poetry of Catullus. New York
Diggle, J., Hall, J. B., and Jocelyn, H. D. eds. (1989) Studies in Latin Literature and its Tradition in Honour of C. O. Brink. Cambridge
Dover, K. (1993) Aristophanes: Frogs. Oxford
Dupont, F. (1999) The Invention of Literature: From Greek Intoxication to the Latin Book. Baltimore and London
Durry, M. (1959) Letters 10 and Panegyricus. Paris
Dyck, A. R. (1996) A Commentary on Cicero, De Officiis. Ann Arbor
Ebbeler, J. (1998) Review of Hutchinson 1998. Bryn Mawr Classical Review 1998.11.43
Eco, U. (1979) The Role of the Reader: Explorations in the Semiotics of the Text. Bloomington
Eco, U. (1990) The Limits of Interpretation. Bloomington
Edmunds, L. (2001) Intertextuality and the Reading of Roman Poetry. Baltimore
Edwards, C. (1997) “Self-Scrutiny and Self-Transformation in Seneca's Letters.” Greece and Rome 44.1: 23–38
Ellis, R. (1889) A Commentary on Catullus. Oxford
Fairweather, J. (1981) Seneca the Elder. Cambridge
Fantham, E. (1978a) “Imitation and Evolution: The Discussion of Rhetorical Imitation in Cicero De oratore 2.87–97 and Some Related Problems of Ciceronian Theory.” Classical Philology 73.1: 1–16
Fantham, E. (1978b) “Imitation and Decline: Rhetorical Theory and Practice in the First Century after Christ.” Classical Philology 73.2: 102–16
Fantham, E. (1996) Roman Literary Culture from Cicero to Apuleius. Baltimore
Farrell, J. (2002) “Greek Lives and Roman Careers in the Classical uita Tradition,” in European Literary Careers: The Author from Antiquity to the Renaissance. Cheney, P. and Armas, F. A. eds. Toronto: 24–46
Fedeli, P. (1991) “Bucolica, lirica, elegia,” in La poesia latina, Montanari, F. ed. Florence: 77–131
Fedeli, P. (2004) “Le Lettere a Lucilio. Introduzione,” in Seneca: Una vicenda testuale. Robertis, T. and Resta, G. eds. Florence: 203–9
Feeney, D. (2002) “Una cum scriptore meo: Poetry, Principate and the Tradition of Literary History in the Epistle to Augustus,” in D. Feeney and A. J. Woodman eds.: 172–86
Feeney, D. and Woodman, A. J. eds. (2002) Traditions and Contexts in the Poetry of Horace. Cambridge
Finkelpearl, E. D. (1990) “Psyche, Aeneas, and an Ass: Apuleius Metamorphoses 6.10–6.21.” Transactions of the American Philological Association 120: 333–47
Finkelpearl, E. D. (1998) Metamorphosis of Language in Apuleius: A Study of Allusion in the Novel. Ann Arbor
Finley, J. H. (1963) Thucydides. Ann Arbor
Fitzgerald, W. (1995) Catullan Provocations: Lyric Poetry and the Drama of Positions. Berkeley
Finkelpearl, E. D. (2007) Martial: The World of the Epigram. Chicago
Fouchier, A. (2000) Historia proxima poetis: L'influence de la poésie épique sur le style des historiens latins de Sallust à Ammien Marcellin. Brussels
Fowler, D. (1995) “Martial and the Book.” Ramus 24: 31–58
Fowler, D. (1997) “On the Shoulders of Giants: Intertextuality and Classical Studies.” Materiali e Discussioni 39: 13–34 [= Roman Constructions, 115–37]
Fowler, D. (2000) Roman Constructions. Oxford
Fraenkel, E. (1961) “Two Poems of Catullus.” Journal of Roman Studies 51: 46–53
Fredericksmeyer, E. (1968) “On the Unity of Catullus 51.” Transactions of the American Philological Association 96: 153–68
Freudenburg, K. (1992) The Walking Muse: Horace on the Theory of Satire. Princeton
Freudenburg, K. (2002) “Writing to/through Florus: Criticism and the Addressee in Horace Epistles 2.2.” Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome 47: 33–55
Fuhrmann, M. (1992) Cicero and the Roman Republic. Trans. W. E. Yuill. Oxford, UK and Cambridge, MA.
Fulkerson, L. (2005) The Ovidian Heroine as Author: Reading, Writing, and Community in the Heroides. Cambridge
Gaertner, J. F. (2005) Ovid Epistulae ex Ponto, Book Ⅰ. Oxford
Gaisser, J. H. (1993) Catullus and his Renaissance Readers. Oxford
Galasso, L. (1995) P. Ovidii Nasonis Epistularum Ex Ponto Liber Ⅱ. Florence
Gamberini, F. (1983) Stylistic Theory and Practice in the Younger Pliny. New York
Gazich, R. (2003) “Retorica dell'esemplarità nelle Lettere di Plinio,” in L. Castagna and E. Lefèvre eds.: 123–41
Giangrande, G. (1975) “Catullus’ Lyrics on the Passer.” Museum Philologum Londiniense 1: 137–46
Gibson, R. (2003) “Pliny and the art of (in)offensive self-praise,” in R. Gibson and R. Morello eds.: 235–54
Gibson, R. (2009) “Elder and Better: The Natural History and the Letters of the Younger Pliny,” in R. Gibson and R. Morello eds., Pliny The Elder: Themes and Contexts. Brill
Gibson, R. and Morello, R. eds. (2003) Re-Imagining Pliny the Younger. Baltimore (=Arethusa 36.2, special issue)
Gibson, R. and Steel, C. (forthcoming) “The Indistinct Literary Careers of Cicero and Pliny the Younger.”
Gigante, M. (1979) “Il racconto Pliniano dell'eruzione del Vesuvio dell'a. 79.” La Parola del Passato 188/9: 321–76
Gilbert, C. D. (1976) “Ovid, Met. 1.4.” Classical Quarterly n.s. 26: 111–12
Giua, M. A. (2003) “Tacito e i suoi destinatari: storia per i contemporanei, storia per i posteri,” in Evento, racconto, scrittura nell'antichità classica. Casanova, A. and Desideri, P., eds. Florence: 247–68
Goffman, E. (1959) The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life. Garden City, NY.
Goldberg, S. M. (1999) “Appreciating Aper: The Defence of Modernity in Tacitus’ Dialogus de oratoribus.” Classical Quarterly 49.1: 224–37
Goold, G. P. (1983) Catullus, Edited with Introduction, Translation and Notes. London
Görler, W. (1979) “Kaltblütiges Schnarchen: Zum literarischen Hintergrund der Vesuvbriefe des jüngeren Plinius,” in Arktouros: Hellenic Studies presented to Bernard M. W. Knox on the occasion of his 65th birthday, Bowersock, G. W., Burkert, W. and Putnam, M. J. eds. Berlin and New York: 427–33
Gramsci, A. (1971) Selections from the Prison Notebooks. Ed. and Trans. Hoare, Q. and Smith, G. Nowell. New York
Green, C. M. C. (1996) “Did the Romans Hunt?.” Classical Antiquity 15: 222–60
Greenblatt, S. (1980) Renaissance Self-Fashioning: From More to Shakespeare. Chicago
Greene, E. (1998) The Erotics of Domination: Male Desire and the Mistress in Latin Love Poetry. Baltimore
Griffin, M. (1976) Seneca: A Philosopher in Politics. Oxford
Griffin, M. (1999) “Pliny and Tacitus.” Scripta Classica Israelica 18: 139–58
Grilli, A. (1997) Gaio Valerio Catullo. Le poesie. Turin
Gudeman, A. (1894) Dialogus De Oratoribus. Boston
Guerrini, C. (1997) “I diminutivi nell'epistolario di Plinio il Giovane. Una nota stilistica,” in Discentibus obvius. Omaggio degli allievi a Domenico Magnino. Como: 53–71
Guillemin, A.-M. (1929) Pline et la vie littéraire de son temps. Paris
Guillemin, A.-M. (1946) “La culture de Pline le Jeune,” in Mélanges dédiés à la mémoire de Felix Grat. Paris: 77–88
Gunderson, E. (1997) “Catullus, Pliny, and Love-Letters.” Transactions of the American Philological Association 127: 201–31
Halliday, M. A. K. (1976) System and Function in Language: Selected Papers. London
Harrison, S. J. (1991) Vergil, Aeneid 10. Oxford
Harrison, S. J. (2001a) “Fatal Attraction: Paris, Helen and the Unity of Catullus 51.” Classical Bulletin 77.2: 161–7
Harrison, S. J. ed. (2001b) Texts, Ideas, and the Classics: Scholarship, Theory, and Classical Literature. Oxford
Häussler, R. (1986) “Aktuelle Probleme der Dialogus-Rezeption: Echtheitserweise und Lückenumfang.” Philologus 130: 63–95
Häussler, R. (1987) “Abermals: Plinius’ Eberjagden.” Philologus 131: 82–5
Hedrick, C. W. (2000) History and Silence: Purge and Rehabilitation of Memory in Late Antiquity. Toronto
Helzle, M. (2003) Ovids Epistulae ex Ponto: Buch Ⅰ–Ⅱ. Kommentar. Heidelberg
Henderson, J. (2001) “Pliny on Martial on Pliny on anon and on … (Epistles 3.21 / Epigrams 10.19).” Ramus 30: 56–87
Henderson, J. (2002a) Pliny's Statue: The Letters, Self-Portraiture, and Classical Arts. Exeter
Henderson, J. (2002b) “Knowing Someone Through Their Books: Pliny on Uncle Pliny (Epistles 3.5).” Classical Philology 97.3: 256–84
Henderson, J. (2003) “Portrait of the Artist as a Figure of Style: P. L. I.N.Y's LETTERS,” in R. Gibson and R. Morello eds.: 115–25
Henderson, J. (2004) Morals and Villas in Seneca's Letters. Cambridge
Henderson, J. (2006) “Journey of a Lifetime: Seneca, Epistle 57 in Book Ⅵ of EM,” in K. Volk and G. Williams eds.: 123–46
Hennig, D. (1978) “Zu Plinius Ep. 7,33.” Historia 27: 246–9
Herkommer, E. (1968) Die Topoi in den Proömien der römischen Geschichtswerke. Tübingen dissertation
Hermann, L. (1965) “Quintilien et le Dialogue des Orateurs.” Latomus 14: 349–69
Hershkowitz, D. (1995) “Pliny the Poet.” Greece and Rome 42: 168–81
Heubner, H. (1984) Kommentar zum Agricola des Tacitus. Göttingen
Hinds, S. (1998) Allusion and Intertext: Dynamics of Appropriation in Roman Poetry. Cambridge
Hine, H. M. (2005) “Poetic Influence on Prose: The Case of the Younger Seneca.” Proceedings of the British Academy 129: 211–37
Hoffer, S. (1999) The Anxieties of Pliny the Younger. Atlanta
Hofmann, H. (1985) “Ovid's Metamorphoses: Carmen Perpetuum, Carmen Deductum.” Paper of the Liverpool Latin Seminar 5: 223–41
Holzberg, N. (2004–5) “Martial, the Book and Ovid.” Hermathena 177/78: 209–24
Horsfall, N. (1989) Cornelius Nepos: A Selection, Including the Lives of Cato and Atticus. Oxford
Howe, N. P. (1985) “In Defence of the Encyclopaedic Mode: on Pliny's Preface to the Natural History.” Latomus 44: 561–76
Hubbard, T. K. (2000) “Horace and Catullus: The Case of the Suppressed Precursor in Odes 1.22 and 1.32.” Classical World 94.1: 25–37
Hutchinson, G. O. (1993) Latin Literature from Seneca to Juvenal: A Critical Study. Oxford
Hutchinson, G. O. (1998) Cicero's Correspondence: A Literary Study. Oxford
Irigoin, J. (1980) “Les Pontiques d'Ovide: la composition des trois premiers livres.” Revue de philologie, de littérature et d'histoire anciennes 54: 19–26
Itzkowitz, J. B. (1983) “On the last stanza of Catullus 51.” Latomus 42: 129–34
Jacobson, H. (1974) Ovid's Heroides. Princeton
Jakobson, R. (1971) “Two Aspects of Language and Two Types of Aphasic Disturbances,” in Jakobson, R. and Halle, M., Fundamentals of Language. The Hague: 69–96
Janson, T. (1964) Latin Prose Prefaces: Studies in Literary Conventions. Stockholm
Jolivet, J.-C. (2001) Allusion et Fiction Épistolaire dans les Héroides. Rome
Jones, F. (1991) “Naming in Pliny's Letters.” Symbolae Osloenses 66: 147–70
Kaster, R. A. (1978) “Servius and idonei auctores.” American Journal of Philology 99: 181–209
Kaster, R. A. (1995) C. Suetonius Tranquillus: De Grammaticis et Rhetoribus. Oxford
Kaster, R. A. (1998) “Becoming Cicero,” in Style and Tradition: Studies in Honor of Wendell Clausen. Knox, P. and Foss, C. eds. Stuttgart and Leipzig: 248–63
Kennedy, G. A. (1972) The Art of Rhetoric in the Roman World: 300 BC–AD 300. Princeton
Kenney, E. J. (1976) “Ovid Prooemians,” Proceedings of the Cambridge Philological Society n.s. 22: 46–53
Ker, J. (2006) “Seneca, Man of Many Genres,” in K. Volk and G. Williams eds.: 19–42
Kilpatrick, R. (1990). The Poetry of Criticism. Alberta
Kinsey, T. E. (1966) “Catullus 16.” Latomus 25: 217–26
Kinsey, T. E. (1974) “Catullus 51.” Latomus 33: 372–8
Korfmacher, W. Ch. (1946) “Pliny and the Gentlemen of Cicero's Offices.” Classical World 40: 50–3
Krasser, H. (1993a) “Laszives Vergnügen oder philosophisches Gespräch? Zum Text von Plinius Epist. 5, 3, 2.” Hermes 121: 254–8
Krasser, H. (1993b) “Extremos pudeat rediisse – Plinius im Wettstreit mit der Vergangenheit: Zu Vergilzitaten beim jüngeren Plinius.” Antike und Abendland 39: 144–54
Krasser, H. (1993c) “Claros colere viros oder über engagierte Bewunderung.” Philologus 137: 62–71
Kraus, C. S. and Woodman, A. J. (1997) Latin Historians. Oxford
Lana, I. (1991) “Le ‘Lettere a Lucilio’ nella letteratura epistolare,” in Sénèque et la prose latine. Grimal, P. ed. Geneva: 253–91
Penna, La A. (1963) Orazio e l'ideologia del principato. Turin
Penna, La A. (1968) Sallustio e la rivoluzione romana. Milan
Penna, La A. (1977) L'integrazione difficile: un profilo di Properzio. Turin
Leach, E. Winsor (1990) “The Politics of Self-Presentation: Pliny's Letters and Roman Portrait Sculpture.” Classical Antiquity 9: 14–39
Leach, E. Winsor (2003) “Otium as Luxuria: Economy of Status in the Younger Pliny's Letters,” in R. Gibson and R. Morello eds.: 147–66
Leeman, A. D. (1963) Orationis ratio. 2 vols. Amsterdam
Lefèvre, E. (1977) “Plinius-Studien Ⅰ.” Gymnasium 84: 519–41 (Ep. 2.17, 5.6)
Lefèvre, E. (1978) “Plinius-Studien Ⅱ.” Gymnasium 85: 37–47 (Ep. 1.6, 9.10)
Lefèvre, E. (1987) “Plinius-Studien Ⅲ.” Gymnasium 94: 247–62 (Ep. 1.3, 1.24, 2.8, 6.31, 9.36)
Lefèvre, E. (1988) “Plinius-Studien Ⅳ.” Gymnasium 95: 236–69 (Ep. 4.30, 8.8, 8.20)
Lefèvre, E. (1989) “Plinius-Studien Ⅴ.” Gymnasium 96: 113–28 (Ep. 3.5, 3.7, 3.21)
Lefèvre, E. (1996a) “Plinius-Studien Ⅵ.” Gymnasium 103/3: 193–215 (Ep. 6.16, 6.20)
Lefèvre, E. (1996b) “Plinius-Studien Ⅶ.” Gymnasium 103/4: 333–53 (Ep. 1.2, 3.14, 4.8, 7.4, 9.2)
Lehnerdt, M. (1913) “Ein verschollenes Werk des älteren Plinius.” Hermes 48: 274–82
Lenaz, L. (1994) [1961] Plinio il Giovane: Lettere ai Familiari. Milan
Levene, D. (2000) “Sallust's Catiline and Cato the Censor.” Classical Quarterly 50.1: 170–91
Lilja, S. (1970) “On the Nature of Pliny's Letters.” Arctos 6: 61–79
Lillge, F. (1918) “Die literarische Form der Briefe Plinius’ des jungeren über den Ausbruch des Vesuvius.” Sokrates 6: 209–34 and 273–97
Long, A. A. (2001) Stoic Studies. Berkeley–Los Angeles–London
Luce, T. J. (1986) “Tacitus’ Conception of Historical Change: The Problem of Discovering the Historian's Opinions,” in Past Perspectives: Studies in Greek and Roman Historical Writings. Moxon, I. S., Smart, J. D. and Woodman, A. J. eds. Cambridge: 143–58
Luce, T. J. (1993) “Reading and Response in the Dialogus,” in Tacitus and the Tacitean Tradition. Luce, T. J. and Woodman, A. J. eds. Princeton: 11–38
Ludolph, M. (1997) Epistolographie und Selbstdarstellung. Untersuchungen zu den “Paradebriefen” Plinius des Jüngeren. Tübingen
Lyne, R. O. A. M. (1987) Further Voices in Vergil's Aeneid. Oxford
Machacek, G. (2007) “Allusion,” Publications of the Modern Language Association of America 12.2: 522–36
Mansuelli, G. (1978) “La villa nelle Epistulae di C. Plinio Cecilio Secondo.” Studi Romagnoli 29: 59–76
Marchesi, I. (2001) Review of Ludolph 1997. Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2001.3.28
Marincola, J. (1997) Authority and Tradition in Ancient Historiography. Cambridge
Mayer, R. (1994) Horace: Epistles, Book Ⅰ. Cambridge
Mayer, R. (2001) Tacitus: Dialogus De Oratoribus. Cambridge
Mayer, R. (2003) “Pliny and Gloria Dicendi,” in R. Gibson and R. Morello eds.: 227–34
Mazzoli, G. (1991) “La prosa filosofica, scientifica, epistolare,” in La prosa latina. Montanari, F. ed. Rome: 145–227
McEwen, I. K. (1995) “Housing Fame: In the Tuscan Villa of Pliny the Younger.” Res 27: 11–24
McKeown, J. C. (1987) Ovid, Amores: Text, Prolegomena, and Commentary in Four Volumes. Liverpool-Wolfeboro
Méthy, N. (2007) Les letters de Pline le Jeune: Une représentation de l'homme. Paris
Meyers, K. S. (2005) “Docta Otia: Garden Ownership and Configurations of Leisure in Statius and Pliny the Younger,” Arethusa 38: 103–29
Michelfeit, J. (1969) “Das augusteische Gedichtbuch.” Rheinisches Museum für Philologie 112: 347–70
Minyard, J. D. (1986) Lucretius and the Late Republic. Leiden
Mommsen, T. (1869) “Zur Lebensgeschichte des jüngeren Plinius.” Hermes 3: 31–136 [= (1906) Gesammelte Schriften 4. Berlin: 366–468]
Morello, R. (2003) “Pliny and the Art of Saying Nothing,” in R. Gibson and R. Morello eds.: 187–209
Morello, R. and Morrison, A. D. (2007) Ancient Letters: Classical and Late Antique Epistolography. Oxford
Moretti, G. (1990) Acutum dicendi genus: brevità, oscurità, sottigliezze e paradossi nelle tradizioni retoriche degli stoici. Trento
Motto, A. (2001) Seneca's Moral Epistles. Wauconda, IL
Murgia, C. E. (1980) “The Date of Tacitus’ Dialogus.” Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 84: 99–125
Murgia, C. E. (1985) “Pliny's Letters and the Dialogus.” Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 89: 171–206
Mynors, R. A. B. (1963) C. Plini Caecili Secundi Epistularum Libri Decem. Oxford
Neuhausen, K. A. (1968) “Plinius Proximo Tacito: Bemerkungen zu einem Topos der römischen Literaturkritik.” Rheinisches Museum für Philologie 3.4: 333–57
Nicholson, J. (1998) “The Survival of Cicero's Letters,” in Studies in Latin Literature and Roman History 9. Brussels: 63–105
Nicholson, J. (2000) Review of Hutchinson 1998. American Journal of Philology 121.1: 159–62
Nissen, H. (1871) “Die Historien des Plinius.” Rheinisches Museum für Philologie 26: 497–548
Noguerol, E. (2003) “Le traitement des figures du père et de la mère dans le livre Ⅵ de la Correspondence de Pline le Jeune: preuves et épreuves.” Vita Latina 168: 82–93
Nutting, H. C. (1926) “Cicero and the Younger Pliny.” Classical Journal 21, n.s. 6: 420–30
Oliensis, E. (1998) Horace and the Rhetoric of Authority. Cambridge
Oliva, A. (1993) “Plinio Ep. Ⅴ,8 e Tucidide 1.22.4.” Athenaeum 81: 279–83
Orlando, F. (1987) [1973] Per una teoria freudiana della letteratura. Turin
Otto, A. (1890) Die Sprichwörter und sprichwörtlichen Redensarten der Römer. Leipzig
Pernot, L. (1993) La rhétorique de l’éloge dans le monde gréco-romain. 2 vols. Paris
Peter, H. (1901) Der Brief in der römischen Literatur. Leipzig
Picone, G. (1978) L'eloquenza di Plinio: teoria e prassi. Palermo
Pighi, G. B. (1945) “Vestricio Spurinna.” Aevum 19: 114–42
Pitcher, R. A. (1999) “The Hole in the Hypothesis: Pliny and Martial Reconsidered.” Mnemosyne 52.5: 554–61
Pomeroy, A. (1991) The Appropriate Comment: Death Notices in the Ancient Historians. Frankfurt am Main and New York
Posch, S. (1983) “Eine Eberjagd mit Gänsefusschen (zu Plinius, Ep. Ⅰ,6),” in Festschrift für R. Muth. Händel, P. and Meid, W. eds. Innsbruck: 375–83
Putnam, M. C. J. (1989) “Virgil and Tacitus, Ann.1.10.” Classical Quarterly 39: 563–4
Radice, B. (1968) “Pliny and the Panegyricus.” Greece and Rome 15: 166–72
Radicke, J. (2003) “Der öffentliche Privatbrief als ‘kommunizierte Kommunikation’ (Plin. Epist. 4, 28),” in L. Castagna and E. Lefèvre eds.: 24–33
Rankin, H. D. (1970) “A Note on Some Implications of Catullus, 16, 11–13.” Latomus 29: 119–21
Reynolds, L. D. (1983) Texts and Transmission. Oxford
Riggsby, A. M. (1995) “Pliny on Cicero and Oratory: Self-Fashioning in the Public Eye.” The American Journal of Philology 116.1: 123–35
Riggsby, A. M. (1998) “Self and Community in the Younger Pliny.” Arethusa 31.1: 75–98
Riggsby, A. M. (2003) “Pliny in Space (and Time),” in R. Gibson and R. Morello eds.: 167–86
Robbins, F. E. (1910) “Tables of Contents in the MSS of Pliny's Letters.” Classical Philology 5: 476–87
Roland, R. L. (1966) “Miser Catulle: An Interpretation of the Eighth Poem of Catullus.” Greece and Rome 13: 15–21
Roller, M. (1998) “Pliny's Catullus: The Politics of Literary Appropriation.” Transactions of the American Philological Association 128: 265–304
Ronconi, A. (1953) Studi Catulliani. Bari
Ronconi, A. (1996) “Exitus Illustrium Virorum.” Rivista di archeologia cristiana 6: 1258–68
Rosati, G. (1989) Lettere di eroine: Publio Ovidio Nasone. Milan
Ross, D. (1969) Style and Tradition in Catullus. Cambridge
Rossi, A. (2004) Contexts of War: Manipulation of Genre in Virgilian Battle Narratives. Michigan
Rostagni, A. (1944) Svetonio De Poetis e Biografi Minori. Turin
Rudd, N. (1982) The Satires of Horace. Berkeley
Rudd, N. (1989) Horace Epistles Book Ⅱ and Epistle to the Pisones. Cambridge
Rudd, N. (1992) “Stratagems of Vanity: Cicero ad Familiares 5.12 and Pliny's Letters,” in A. J. Woodman and J. Powell eds. Author and Audience in Latin Literature. Cambridge: 18–32
Sailor, D. (2004) “Becoming Tacitus: Significance and Inconsequentiality in the Prologue of Agricola.” Classical Antiquity 23.1: 139–77
Santirocco, M. (1980) “Horace's Odes and the Ancient Poetry Book.” Arethusa 13: 43–57
Saylor, C. (1972) “The Emperor as Insula: Pliny Epist. 6.31.” Classical Philology 67: 47–51
Saylor, C. (1982) “Overlooking Lake Vadimon: Pliny on Tourism (Epist. 8.20).” Classical Philology 77: 139–44
Schenk, P. (1999) “Formen von Intertextualität im Briefkorpus des jüngeren Plinius.” Philologus 143.1: 114–34
Schlegel, C. (2000) “Horace and His Fathers: Satires 1.4 and 1.6.” The American Journal of Philology 121.1: 93–119
Schuster, M. (1952) Plini Caecili Secundi Epistularum libri novem, Epistularum ad Traianum liber, Panegyricus. Leipzig
Schuster, M. (1958) C. Plini Caecili Secundi Epistularum libri novem, Epistularum ad Traianum liber, Panegyricus. Rev. R. Hanslik. Leipzig
Scott, W. C. (1969) “Catullus and Cato (c. 56).” Classical Philology 64: 24–9
Selden, D. (1992) “Caveat Lector: Catullus and the Rhetoric of Performance,” in Innovations of Antiquity, Hexter, R. and Selden, D. eds. New York and London
Shelton, J- A. (1990) “Pliny the Younger and the Ideal Wife.” Classica et Mediaevalia 41: 163–86
Sherwin-White, A. N. (1966) The Letters of Pliny. A Historical and Social Commentary. Oxford
Skutsch, O. (1985) The Annales of Ennius. Oxford
Statder, P. (2006) “Pliny and the Ideology of Empire: The Correspondence with Trajan.” Prometheus 32: 61–76
Steiner, G. (1958) “Ovid's Carmen Perpetuum.” Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 89: 218–36
Strzelecki, W. (1963) “Naevius and the Roman Annalists.” Rivista di filologia e istruzione classica 91: 440–58
Suster, G. (1890) “De Plinio Ciceronis imitatore.” RFC 13: 74–86
Syme, R. (1958) Tacitus. 2 vols. Oxford
Syme, R. (1960) “Pliny's Less Successful Friends.” Historia 9: 362–79
Syme, R. (1964) Sallust. Berkeley and Los Angeles
Syme, R. (1968) “People in Pliny.” Journal of Roman Studies 58: 135–51 [= RP 2.694–723]
Syme, R. (1978) History in Ovid. Oxford
Syme, R. (1978–1991) Roman Papers. Badian, E. ed. 7 vols. Oxford and New York
Syme, R. (1985a) “Correspondents of Pliny.” Historia 34: 324–59 [= RP 5.440–77]
Syme, R. (1985b) “The Dating of Pliny's Latest Letters.” Classical Quarterly 35: 176–85 [= RP 5.478–89]
Tarrant, R. J. (1998) “Parenthetically Speaking (in Virgil and Other Poets),” in Style and Tradition: Studies in Honor of Wendell Clausen, Knox, P. and Foss, C. eds. Stuttgart and Leipzig: 141–57
Taylor, L. R. (1951–2) “Review of J. Carcopino, Cicero: The Secrets of His Correspondence.” The American Historical Review 57: 414–16
Thomas, R. (1986) “Virgil's Georgics and the Art of Reference.” Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 90: 171–98
Thomas, R. (1988) Virgil: Georgics, 2 vols. Cambridge
Thomas, R. (1993) “Sparrow, Hares, and Doves: A Catullan Metaphor and Its Tradition.” Helios 20.2: 131–42
Thompson, G. H.Pliny's Want of Humor.” The Classical Journal 37.4: 201–9
Traina, A. (1969) Comoedia. Padua
Trapp, M. (2003) Greek and Roman Letters. Cambridge
Traub, H. W. (1955) “Pliny's Treatment of History in Epistolary Form.” Transactions of the American Philological Association 86: 213–32
Trisoglio, F. (1972) La personalità di Plinio il Giovane nei suoi rapporti con la politica, la società e la letteratura. Memorie dell'Accademia delle Scienze di Torino, Classe delle Scienze Morali, Storiche e Filologiche, 4/25. Turin
Trisoglio, F. (1973) Opere di Plinio Cecilio Secondo, 2 vols. Turin
Ussani, V. (1970) “Leggendo Plinio il giovane, I (Historia – nomen inertiae).” Rivista di cultura classica e medioevale 12: 271–348
Ussani, V. (1971) “Leggendo Plinio il giovane, Ⅱ (Oratio – historia).” Rivista di cultura classica e medioevale 13: 70–135
Ussani, V. (1974–5) Plinio il Giovane: Documenti critici e testi raccolti da Vincenzo Ussani jr. Rome
Vahlen, J. (1928) Enniange Poesis Reliquiae. 2nd edn. Leipzig
Sickle, Van J. (1980) “The Book-Roll and Some Conventions of the Poetic Book.” Arethusa 13: 5–42
Versnel, H. S. (1993) Transition and Reversal in Myth and Ritual. Inconsistencies in Greek and Roman Religion 2. Leiden
Vielberg, M. (2003) “Sentenzen im Werk des jüngeren Plinius,” in L. Castagna and E. Lefèvre eds.: 35–50
Vogt-Spira, G. (2003) “Die Selbstinszenierung des jüngeren Plinius im Diskurs der literarischen imitatio,” in L. Castagna and E. Lefèvre eds.: 51–65
Volk, K. and Williams, G. eds. (2006) Seeing Seneca Whole. Leiden-Boston
Weische, A. (1989) “Plinius d. J. und Cicero. Untersuchungen zur römischen Epistolographie in Republik und Kaiserzeit.” in Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt 2.33.1: 375–86
West, D. (1967) Reading Horace. Edinburgh
West, D. and Woodman, A. J. eds. (1979) Creative Imitation and Latin Literature. Cambridge
Wheeler, A. L. (1934) Catullus and the Tradition of Roman Poetry. Berkeley
White, P. (1975) “The Friends of Martial, Statius, and Pliny, and the Dispersal of Patronage.” Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 79: 265–300
White, P. (1993) Promised Verse: Poets in the Society of Augustan Rome. Cambridge, MA
Wilamowitz, U. (1926) “Lesefrüchte 209,”’ Hermes 61: 289–91 [= (1962) Kleine Schriften Ⅳ. Berlin: 416–8. (Euphorion fr. 453)]
Williams, G. (2006) “States of Exile, States of Mind: Paradox and Reversal in Seneca's Consolatio ad Helviam Matrem,” in Volk, K. and Williams, G. eds. 147–73
Wills, J. (1996) Repetition in Latin Poetry: Figures of Allusion. Oxford
Wills, J. (1998) “Divided Allusion: Vergil and the Coma Berenices.” Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 98: 277–306
Wilson, M. (2001) “Seneca's Epistles Reclassified,” in S. J. Harrison ed.: 164–87
Winkler, J. (1985) Auctor & Actor: A Narratological Reading of Apuleius's The Golden Ass. Berkeley
Winniczuk, L. (1975) “The Ending-phrases in Pliny's ‘Letters’.” Eos 63: 319–28
Winterbottom, M. (1964) “Quintilian and the Vir Bonus.” Journal of Roman Studies 54: 90–7
Winterbottom, M. (1974) The Elder Seneca: Controversiae. Cambridge, MA
Wiseman, T. P. (1987) “Catullus 16,” in Roman Studies: Literary and Historical. Liverpool: 222–4
Woodman, A. J. (1966) “Some implications of otium in Catullus 51.13–16.” Latomus 25: 217–26
Woodman, A. J. (1973) “A note on Sallust, Catilina 1.1.” Classical Quarterly 23: 310
Woodman, A. J. (1974) “Sleepless Poets: Catullus and Keats.” Greece & Rome n.s. 21.1: 51–3
Woodman, A. J. (1977) Velleius Paterculus: The Tiberian Narrative (2.94–131). Cambridge
Woodman, A. J. (1988) Rhetoric in Classical Historiography. Portland, OR
Woodman, A. J. (1989) “Virgil the Historian,” in J. Diggle, J. B. Hall and H. D. Jocelyn eds.: 132–45
Woodman, A. J. (1998) Tacitus Reviewed. Oxford
Woodman, A. J. (2003) “Poems to Historians: Catullus 1 and Horace Odes 2.1,” in Myth, History and Culture in Republican Rome. Braund, D. and Gill, C. eds. Exeter, UK: 191–216
Woodman, A. J. (2006) “Catullus 51: A Suitable case for Treatment.” Classical Quarterly 56: 610–11
Woodman, A. J. and Martin, R. H. (1996) The Annals of Tacitus, Book 3. Cambridge
Woolf, G. (2003) “The City of Letters,” in Rome the Cosmopolis. Edwards, C. and Woolf, G. eds. Cambridge: 203–21
Woolf, G. (2006) “Pliny's Province,” in Rome and the Black Sea Region: Domination, Romanisation, Resistance. Bekker-Nielsen, Tonnes ed. Aarhus
Zetzel, J. E. G. (1980) “Horace's Liber Sermonum: The Structure of Ambiguity.” Arethusa 13: 59–77
Zetzel, J. E. G. (2002) “Dreaming about Quirinus: Horace's Satires and the development of Augustan Poetry,” in D. Feeney and A. J. Woodman eds.: 172–86
Zucker, F. (1929) “Plinius epist. Ⅷ 24–ein Denkmal antiker Humanität.” Philologus 84: 209–32

Metrics

Full text views

Total number of HTML views: 0
Total number of PDF views: 0 *
Loading metrics...

Book summary page views

Total views: 0 *
Loading metrics...

* Views captured on Cambridge Core between #date#. This data will be updated every 24 hours.

Usage data cannot currently be displayed.