Bibliography Archive 2003

 

| Greek And Latin Novels | Greek Novels | Latin Novels | Christian Novels | Jewish Novels | Nachleben |

Greek and Latin Novels

Anderson, G., Fairy Tale in the Ancient World (London, New York: Routledge, 2000); rev: T. Whitmarsh, CR S2 (2002) 34-36.

Beck, R., “History into Fiction: the Metamorphoses of the Mithras Myth,” AN 1 (2000-01) 283-300.

Bowden, K., rev. of L. Callebat, “Langages du roman latin,” (Hildesheim, Zurich, New York: G.O. Verlag, 1998) in CR 52 (2002) 80-82.

Branham, R., “Representing Time in Ancient Fiction,” AN l (2000-01) 1-31.

Giangrande, G., “La Stoa e l’amore nel romanzo greco,” Orpheus 21 (2000) 54-59.

Goldhill, S., The Invention of Prose New Surveys in the Classics, no. 32, (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002).

Konstan, D., “Narrative Spaces,” in Space in the Ancient Novel. Ancient Narrative, Supplementum 1, eds., M. Paschalis, S. Frangoulidis (Groningen: Barkhuis Publishing and The University Library Groningen, 2002) 1-11.

Paschalis, M., Frangoulidis, S., eds., Space in the Ancient Novel. Ancient Narrative, Supplementum 1 (Groningen: Barkhuis Publishing and the University Library Groningen, 2002): D. Konstan, “Narrative Spaces,” 1-11; C. Connors, “Chariton’s Syracuse and its Histories of Empire,” 12-26; M. Winkler, “Chronotope and locus amoenus in Daphnis and Chloe and Pleasantville,” 27-39; S.J. Harrison, “Literary Topography in Apuleius’ Metamorphoses,” 40-57; L. Graverini, “Corinth, Rome and Africa: a Cultural Background for the Tale of the Ass,” 58-77; M. Zimmerman, “On the Road in Apuleius’ Metamorphoses,” 78-97; S. Panayotakis, “The Temple and the Brothel: Mothers and Daughters in Apollonius of Tyre” 98-117; J. Perkins, “Social Geography in the Apocryphal Acts of the Apostles,” 118-131; M. Paschalis, “Reading Space: a Re-examination of Apuleian ekphrasis,” 132-142; R. Martin, “A Good Place to Talk: Discourse and Topos in Achilles Tatius and Philostratus,” 143-160; N. Slater, “Space and Displacement in Apuleius,” 161-176; S. Frangoulidis, “The Laughter Festival as a Community Integration Rite in Apuleius’ Metamorphoses,” 177-188.

Schmeling, G., ed., The Novel in the Ancient World (Leiden: E.J. Brill, 20032). Second edition with new Introduction and corrections, in paperback.

de Souza, P., Piracy in the Graeco-Roman World (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999). See section entitled “Pirates in Fiction,” pp. 214-218.

Zimmerman, M., Schmeling, G., Hofmann, H., Harrison, S.J., C. Panayotakis, C., Ancient Narrative 1 (2000-2001), (Groningen: Barkhuis Publishing and the University Library Groningen, 2002): B. Branham, “Representing Time in Ancient Fiction,” 1-31; J. Flinterman, “‘… largely fictions …’: Aelius Aristides on Plato’s Dialogues,” 32-54; K. Doulamis, “Rhetoric and Irony in Chariton: a Case-study from Callirhoe,” 55-72; K. Haynes, “Power of the Prude: Configurations of the Feminine in the Greek Novel,” 73-92; S. Schwartz, “Chitophon the moichos: Achilles Tatius and the Trial Scene in the Greek Novel,” 93-113; M. Edsall, “Religious Narratives and Religious Themes in the Novels of Achilles Tatius and Heliodoros,” 114-133; P. Liviabella Furiani, “Il corpo nel romanzo di Achille Tazio,” 134-151; E. Cueva, “Longus in the Mir Istkusstva: Léon Bakst, Maurice Ravel and Marc Chagall,” 152-160; M. Winkler, “The Cinematic Nature of the Opening Scene in Heliodoros’ Aithiopika,” 161-184; P. James, “Keeping Apuleius in the Picture. A Dialogue between Buñuel’s Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie and the Metamorphoses of Apuleius,” 185-207; A.P. Bitel, “Quis ille Asinus aureus? The Metamorphoses of Apuleius’ Title,” 208-244; S.J. Harrison, “Apuleius, Aelius Aristides and Religious Autobiography,” 245-259; W. Riess, “Between Fiction and Reality: Robbers in Apuleius’ Golden Ass,” 260-282; R. Beck, “History into Fiction: the Metamorphoses of the Mithras Myth,” 283-300; C. Jonanno, “La réception du Roman d’Alexandre à Byzance,” 301-321; R. Carver, “‘True Histories’ and ‘Old Wives’ Tales’: Renaissance Humanism and the ‘Rise of the Novel’,” 322-349; H. McElroy, “The Reception and Use of Petronius: Petronian Pseudepigraphy and Imitation,” 350-378; W. van Beckkum, “A Short Note on Ancient Jewish Narrative,” 379-381; R. May, review of S. Frangoulidis, Roles and Performances in Apuleius’ Metamorphoses (Stuttgart: Metzler, 2001), 382-388.

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Greek Novels

Baier, T., “Die Function der Götter bei Chariton,” WJA 23 (1999) 101-113.

Bargheer, R., Die Gottesvorstellung Heliodors in den Aithiopika, (Frankfurt: P. Lang, 1999); rev: T. Whitmarsh, CR 50 (2000) 291-292.

Berry, J.D., “Narrative and Identity in Heliodorus’ Aithiopika,” Thesis of the University of Chicago, 2000. Summary in DAI-A 2000-2001 61(7): 2696. Microfilm, Ann Arbor, no. AAT 9978010.

Billault, A., La médecine et la maladie dans les discours de Dion Chrysostome,” in Hommages à Carl Deroux, II Prose et linguistique (Brussels: Latomus, 2002) 453-465.

Bychkov, O., “A Note on Achilles Tatius 1.9.4-5, 5.13.4.” CQ 49 (1999) 339-341.

Christenson, D. “Callinus and militia amoris in Achilles Tatius’ Leucippe and Cleitophon,” CQ 50 (2000) 631-632.

Connors, C., “Chariton’s Syracuse and its Histories of Empire,” in Space in the Ancient Novel. Ancient Narrative, Supplementum 1, eds., M. Paschalis, S. Frangoulidis (Groningen: Barkhuis Publishing and The University Library Groningen, 2002) 12-26.

Dawe, R.D., “Some erotic suggestions – notes on Achilles Tatius, Eustathius, Macrembolites, Xenophon of Ephesus and Chariton,” Philologus 145 (2001) 291-311.

Degradi, S., “Sessualità e Matrimonio in alcuni scritti di Senofonte” NRS 84 (2000) 97-106.

De Temmerman, K., “Historiciteit en geografische realia in Charitoons Kallirhoe,” Tetradio 10 (2001) 137-158.

De Temmerman, K., “Abortion in Chariton’s Callirhoe: an Historical Approach,” Boletim de Estudos Clássicos 36 (2002) 69-79.

De Temmerman, K., “A Note on Chariton’s Callirhoe 1, 4, 9: the Narrator’s Opinion,” AC 71 (2002) 137-139.

De Temmerman, K., “Op zoek naar het publiek van de antieke Griekse roman: een omstreden punt,” Hermeneus 74 (2002) 354-364.

De Temmerman, K., “Institutional realia in Chariton’s Callirhoe. Historical and Contemporary Elements,” Humanitas 54 (2002) 165-187.

Döpp, S., “Kambyses’ Feldzug gegen Ägypten: der sogenannte Kambyses-Roman und sein Verhältnis zu griechischer Literatur,” Göttinger Forum für Altertumswissenschaft 6 (2003) 1-17.

Doulamis, K., “Rhetoric and Irony in Chariton: a Case-study from Callirhoe,” AN 1 (2000-01) 55-72.

Dworacki, S., trans., “Heliodorus’ Ethiopian Tale (Poznan, Wydawnictwo Naukowe UAM, 2000); rev: in English, B.D. MacQueen, Eos 88 (2001) 178-181.

Edsall, M., “Religious Narratives and Religious Themes in the Novels of Achilles Tatius and Heliodorus,” AN 1 (2000-01) 114-133.

Flinterman, J., “‘ … largely fictions …’: Aelius Aristides on Plato’s Dialogues,” AN 1 (2000-01) 32-54.

Georgiadou, A., Larmour, D., Lucian’s Science Fiction Novel True Histories. Interpretation and Commentary (Lieden: Brill, 1998).

Gorman, J., “Thinking with and about ‘Same-Sex Desire’: Producing and Policing Female Sexuality in the Acts of Xanthippe and Polyxena,” Journal of the History of Sexuality 10 (2001) 416-441. Chariton, Apocryphal Acts, women.

Hägg, T., “Epiphany in the Greek Novels: the Emplotment of a Metaphor,” Eranos 100 (2002) 51-61. For the most part about Chariton and then Longus.

Hägg, T., “Il romanzo greco: modello unico o pluralità di forme?,” Il romanzo, vol. 3, ed., F. Moretti (Turin: Einaudi, 2002) 5-32.

Haynes, K., “Power of the Prude: Configurations of the Feminine in the Greek Novel,” AN 1 (2000-01) 73-92.

Haynes, K., Fashioning the Feminine in the Greek Novel (London: Routledge, 2003).

Jouanno, C., “La réception du Roman d’Alexandre à Byzance,” AN 1 (2000-01) 301-321.

Jouanno, C., Naissance et métamorphoses du Roman d’Alexandre (Paris: CNRS, 2002) 509 pp.

Kapparis, K., Abortion in the Ancient World (London: Duckworth, 2002) 121-124 on Chariton 2.8.6-2.9.6.

Karla, Grammatiki A., Vita Aesopi. Überlieferung, Sprache und Edition einer frühbyzantinischen Fassung des Äsopromans. Serta Graeca 13 (Wiesbaden: Dr. Ludwig Reichert Verlag, 2001) xiv, 269 pp.

Latinas, N., “Achilles Tatius, Leucippe and Cleitophon” 5.1.3. Mnemosyne 53 (2000) 347-349.

Lausberg, M., “Longos: ‘Daphnis und Chloe’”, Grobe Werke der Literatur. Bd. VI. Eine Ringvorlesung an der Universität Augsberg 1998/1999. Hrsg. von H. Vilmar Geppert. (Tübingen: Franke Verlag, Sonderdruck ohne Erscheinungsjahr) 25-44.

Lausberg, M., “Entwick lungsstufen der Kultur im Roman des Longus”. Fest. Für Gunther Gottlieb, eds. P. Barceló and V. Rosenberger (Schriften der Phil. Fak der Uni. Augsburg, 65). (München: Vögel, 2001) 192-218.

Leplace, M., “Théâtre et romanesque dans les Éthiopiques d’Héliodore,” RhM 144 (2001) 373-396.

Liviabella Furiani, P., “Le rire comme element de communication nonverbale dans les romans grecs d’amour,” in Le rire des Grecs. Anthropologie du rire en Grèce ancienne, ed. M.-L. Desclos (Grenoble: Millon, 2000) 77-94.

Liviabella Furiani, P., “Il corpo nel romanzo de Achille Tazio,” AN 1 (2000-01) 134-151.

Luginbill, R., “Chariton’s Use of Thucydides History in Introducing the Egyptian Revolt,” Mnemosyne 53 (2000) 1-11.

Manuwald, G., “Zitate als Mittel des Erzählens,” WJA 24 (2000) 97-122.

Martin, R., “A Good Place to Talk: Discourse and Topos in Achilles Tatius and Philostratus,” in Space in the Ancient Novel. Ancient Narrative, Supplementum 1, eds., M. Paschalis, S. Frangoulidis (Groningen: Barkhuis Publishing and The University Library Groningen, 2002) 143-160.

Martinelli Tempesta, S., “Nota a Longo 2,2,1,” Acme 53 (2000) 219-221.

Morales, H., “Sense and Sententiousness in the Greek Novels,” in Intratextuality. Greek and Roman Textual Relations eds. A. Sharrock and H. Morales (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000) 67-88.

Nickau, K., “Zur Epiphanie des Eros im Hirtenroman des Longos,” Hermes 130 (2002) 176-191.

Nilsson, T., Erotic Pathos, Rhetorical Pleasures, Narrative Technique and Mimesis in Eumathios Makrembolites’ Hysmime & Hysminias’ (Uppsala: Uppsala University Library, 2001); rev: E. Jeffreys, CR 52 (2002) 380-381. Detailed comparisons with Tatius’ Leukippe and Kleitophon.

Nimis, St. A., “Cycles and Sequence in Longus’ Daphnis and Chloe,” in J. Watson (ed.) “Speaking Volumes: Orality and Literacy in the Greek and Roman World (Leiden, Boston, Köln: Brill, 2001) 187-198.

Paglialunga, E., “Amor y celos en los Personajes Masculinos de Caritón de Afrodisia”, Florllib 11 (2000), 181-194.

Plastira-Valkanou, M., “Dreams in Xenophon of Ephesus,” SO 76 (2001) 137-149.

Rife, J., “Officials of the Roman Provinces in Xenophon’s Ephesiaca,” ZPE 138 (2002) 93-108. A major review of the question of the eirenarch in Xenophon of Ephesus, the office of the eirenarchy in Roman Asia Minor, and partially a critique of J. O’Sullivan on Xenophon of Ephesus.

Roncali, R., “Su due varianti, del papiro Fayûm 1 di Caritone,” BollClass 20 (1999) 37-44.

Sanz Morales, M., “A Textual Corruption in Chariton 1.7.1 and the Operational Base of the Pirate Theron,” Mnemosyne 55 (2002) 731-735.

Sanz Morales, M., “Textkritische Bemerkungen zum Chariton-Text auf Papyrus,” ZPE 141 (2002) 111-115.

Schmeling, G., “Humano capiti: Body-parts and Beautiful Women in Petronius and Lucian,” in Hommages à Carl Deroux, II – Prose et linquistique, ed., P. Defosse (Brussels: Latomus, 2002) 404-408.

Schwartz, S., “Clitophon the moichos: Achilles Tatius and the Trial Scene in the Greek Novel,” AN 1 (2000-01) 93-113.

Versnel, H.S., “What Did Ancient Man See When He Saw a God? Some Reflexions on Greco-Roman Epiphany,” in D. van der Plas, ed., Effigies Dei (Leiden: Brill, 1987) 42-55. Epiphanies of gods for those working on the ancient novel.

Zimmermann, B., “Poetische Bilder. Zur Funktion der Bildbeschreibung im griechischen Roman,” Poetica 31 (1999) 61-79.

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Latin Novels

Babo, M., “Mythologische Exempla als teleologische Elemente in den Metamorphosen des Apuleius,” Maia 52 (2000) 485-496.

Beck, R., “The Religious Dreamworld of Apuleius’ Metamorphoses: Recovering a forgotten hermeneutic,” University of Toronto Quarterly 70 (2000) 334-335.

Bitel, A.P., “Quis ille Asinus aureus? The Metamorphoses of Apuleius’ Tale,” AN 1 (2000-01) 208-244.

Blandford, D., “Paul and Petronius, Part Two – Paul in Rome,” CA News 27 (December 2002) 6. See “Part One” in CA News 26 (June 2002) 16. Blandford writes an entertaining few pages about a speculative/chance meeting of Petronius and St. Paul at Puteoli in AD 66. I would imagine a modern parallel to be a chance meeting of Gore Vidal and Jerry Falwell in an all-night establishment flanking the Reeperbahn in Hamburg.

Bradley, K.R., “Animalizing the Slave. The truth of fiction,” JRS (2000) 90, 100-125.

Bradley, K.R., “Fictive Families: Family and household in the Metamorphoses of Apuleius,” Phoenix 54 (2000) 282-308.

Bronzini, G., “La dimensione carnevalesca del Satyricon,” SMSR 20 (1996) 65-74.

Cavalca, M., I grecismi nel Satyricon di Petronio (Bologna: Pàtron, 2001). H. Jocelyn, “A Greek Indecency and its Students: laikazein,” PCPhS 206 (1980) 12-66, is not cited.

Christesen, P., Torlone, Z., “ex omnibus in unum, nec hoc nec illud: Genre and Generic Juxtaposition in Petronius’ Satyricon,” MD 49 (2002) to appear.

Cucchiarelli, A., “La nave e l’esilio (allegorie dell’ ultimo Ovidio),” MD 38 (1997) 214-224. Storms in the exile poetry of Ovid are echoed in Eumolpus.

Cucchiarelli, A., “Apuleius: A Latin Sophist,” JRS 91 (2001) 255-257.

Cugusi, P., “Modelli epici ‘rovesciati’ in Petronio. Osservazioni sul riuso di Odissea e Eneide nei Satyrica,” Aufidus 44 (2001) 123-135.

Damiani, G., “Il duello: dal serio al parodico (Petronio Sat. 82),” Aufidus 39 (1999) 39-59.

Daviault, A., “Est-il encore possible de remettre en question la datation néronienne du Satyricon de Pétrone?,” Phoenix 55 (2001) 327-342.

Deroux, C., “L’autre remède contre la fièvre de Quartilla (Pétrone, Sat. 18.3),” Latomus 60 (2001) 186-187.

Deroux, C., “Le professeur interrompu pendant sa suasoire (Pétrone, Sat. 6.1),” Latomus 60 (2001) 183-185.

Di Leo, P., “La poesia di Petr. Sat. 82.5: precedenti poetici e diatribici,” Prometheus 27 (2001) 145-148.

Dubuisson, M., “Art de la voltige et ‘code-switching’ (Apulée Métamorphoses 1, 1, 5-6).

Egelhaaf-Gaiser, U., Kulträume im römischen Alltag. Das Isisbuch des Apuleius und der Ort von Religion im Kaiserzeitlichen Rom (Stuttgart: Steiner, 2000).

Éloi, T., “Amoreux des fragments de discours,” in Paroles romaines, ed., F. Dupont (Nancy: Presses Universitaires de Nancy, 1995) 101-107.

Francis, C., “Telling Tales in the Metamorphoses of Apuleius,” AC 44 (2001) 53-76.

Frangoulidis, S.A., “Role of changing in Apuleius’ tale of the miller’s wife (Met. 9.14-31),” Scholia 9 (2000) 66-77.

Frangoulidis, F., “Emasculation in Apuleius’ Tale of Thelyphron,” in Hommages à Carl Deroux, II Prose et linguistique (Brussels: Latomus, 2002) 164-172.

Frangoulidis, S., “The Laughter Festival as a Community Integration Rite in Apuleius’ Metamorphoses,” in Space in the Ancient Novel. Ancient Narrative, Supplementum 1, eds., M. Paschalis, S. Frangoulidis (Groningen: Barkhuis Publishing and The University Library Groningen, 2002) 177-188.

Gagliardi, D., “La velocitas narrandi in Petronio,” in SIFC 17 (1999) 116-122.

Giardina, G., “Petroniana,” MCr 32-35 (1997-2000) 187-189. Reply to K. Müller’s review in Gnomon 70 (1998) 494-497 of G. Giardina and R. Cuccioli Melloni, eds., Satyricon. Petronius Arbiter (Turin: Paravia, 1995).

Granados de Arena, D., and López de Vega, L., “Apuleyo, Metamorfosis IX: Una seguidilla de adúlteros descubiertos,” REC 30 (2001) 71-85.

Graverini, L., “L’inconro di Lucio e Fotide. Stratificazioni intertestuali in Apul. Met II 6-7.” Athenaeum 89 (2001) 425-446.

Graverini, L., “Corinth, Rome, and Africa: a Cultural Background for the Tale of the Ass,” in Space in the Ancient Novel. Ancient Narrative, Supplementum 1, eds., M. Paschalis, S. Frangoulidis (Groningen: Barkhuis Publishing and The University Library Groningen, 2002) 58-77.

Grilli, A., “Titolo e struttura interna del romanzo d’Apuleio.” A&R 45 (2000) 121-134.

Harrison, S.J., Apuleius, A Latin Sophist (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 2000); rev: A. Cucchiarelli, JRS 91 (2001) 255-257.

Harrison, S.J., “Apuleius, Aelius Aristides and Religious Autobiography,” AN 1 (2000-01) 245-259.

Harrison, S.J., “Literary Topography in Apuleius’ Metamorphoses,” in Space in the Ancient Novel. Ancient Narrative, Supplementum 1, eds., M. Paschalis, S. Frangoulidis (Groningen: Barkhuis Publishing and The University Library Groningen, 2002) 40-57.

Heredia Correa, R., De Petronio, el Satyricon y algunas digresiones (Mexico City: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Mexico, 1996).

Hunink, V., “Was Apuleius’ speech stenographed?” (‘Florida’ 9.13) CQ 51 (2001) 321-324.

Hunt, J., “A locus desperatus in Apollonius of Tyre (Textual Crux),” Athenaeum 90 (2002) 229-230.

Ihm, S., “Quantum milvi volant: der Milan als Landvermesser,” GFA 3 (2000) 47-53. On the adage (see Petronius 37.8, Persius 4.26, Juvenal 9.54): the size of an estate can be illustrated by the time it takes a kite to fly over it.

Jacobson, H., “Petronius Sat. 111.9,” MH 59 (2002) 63. For ignota read igno<ra>ta and read with the Loeb “she took no notice of his sympathy, struck and tore her breast more violently than ever.”

James, P., “Keep Apuleius in the Picture,” AN 1 (2000-01) 185-207.

Kleijwegt, M., “cum vicensimariis magnam mantissam habet (Petronius Satyricon 65.10),” AJP 123 (2002) 275-286.

Knobloch, J., “Un mot énigmatique chez Pétrone et la solution du problème,” AION (ling) 19 (1997) 211-212. For matavitatau (62.9) see Isidore Etym 1.24.1-2.

Kuhlmann, P., “Die Historia Apollonii Regis Tyri und ihre Vorlagen,” Hermes 130 (2002) 109-120.

Lalanne, S., “Hellenism and Romanization: a Comparison between the Greek Novel and the Tale of Psyche in Apuleius Metamorphoses,” in Greek Romans and Roman Greeks: Studies in Cultural Interaction (Aarhus: Aarhus University Press, 2002) 225-232.

Lateiner, D., “Humiliation and Immobility in Apuleius MetamorphosesTAPA 131 (2001) 217-255.

Lateiner, D., “Marriage and the return of spouses in Apuleius’ Metamorphoses,” CJ 95 (2002) 313-332.

Leão, Delfim Ferreira, “Trimalquião à luz dos Caracteres de Teofrasto,” Humanitas (Coimbra) 49 (1997) 147-167.

López de Vega, L., and Granados de Arena, D., “Apuleyo, Metamorfosis IX: Una seguidilla de adúlteros descubiertos,” REC 30 (2001) 71-85.

Longobardi, M., “La traduzione non ‘deperita’: il lessico famigliare della ‘Cena de Trimalchione’ (parte seconda)” Aufidus 37 (1999) 101-148.

McDonough, C.M., “‘Capillos Liberos Habere: Petronius, Satyricon 38’” CQ 52 (2002) 399-400.

McDonough, C., “capillos liberos habere: Petronius Satyricon 38,” CQ 52 (2002) 399-400. Suggests that the expression could indicate that the poor will sell even their hair (for wigs) to make a little money and cites the modern Italian proverb (which might survive from a common source), “Egli ha dissipato fino a’ capelli.”

Magnaldi, G., La forza dei segni. Parole-spia nella tradizione manoscritta dei prosatori latini (Amsterdam: Hakkert, 2000) pp. 176. Examination of the MSS tradition of Cicero, Varro, Livy, Seneca the Elder, Seneca the Younger, Petronius, Tacitus.

Magnaldi, G. and Gianotti, G., eds. Apuleio. Storia de testo e interpretazione (Turin: Edizioni dell’Orso, 2000); rev: A. Cucchiarelli, JRS 91 (2001) 255-257 and rev: R. May, CR 52 (2002) 79-80.

Magnelli, E., “Petr. Sat. 119 (Bell. Civ. 9),” Eikasmos 12 (2001) 259-262.

Magnusson, E., “Did Trimalchio Have a Cuckoo-clock?: a Comment on Petron. Sat. 26.9,” Eranos 98 (2000) 115-122.

Markus, D., “Performing the Book: the Recital of Epic in First Century C.E. Rome,” ClAnt 19 (2000) 138-179. Section entitled “Petronius on Epic Performance,” pp. 162-163.

Martin, R., “Qui a (peut-être) écrit le Satyricon?,” REL 78 (2000) 139-163. The arbiter elegantiae of Tacitus is not the person who wrote the Satyrica.

Martos, J., “Three critical notes on the Metamorpses of Apuleius,” CQ 50 (2000) 625-627.

Mazzilli, C., “Petronio 101, 7-103, 2: lusus allusivo e caratterizzazione dei personaggi,” Aufidus 41 (2000) 49-72.

Mazzilli, C., “Petronio 101, 7-103, 2 e 107: il discorso diretto e il discorso giudiziario tra intertestualitá e teorie retoriche,” Aufidus 44 (2001) 137-164.

Medeiros, W. de, “Do desencanto à alegria: o Satyricon de Petrónio e o Satyricon de Fellini,” Humanitas (Coimbra) 49 (1997) 169-175.

Merlier-Espenel, V., “Dum haec identidem rimabundus eximie delector: remarques sur le plaisir esthétique de Lucius dans l’atrium de Byrchène (Apulée Mét. II. 4-100.5.1)” Latomus 60 (2001) 135-148.

Müller-Reineke, H., Liebesbeziehungen in Ovids Metamorphosen und ihr Einfluss auf den Roman des Apuleius 2., verbesserte Auflage (Göttingen: Heinholz, London, 2000); rev: M. Lobe, Gymnasium 109 (2002) 170-172.

Murgatroyd, P., “Embedded Narrative in Apuleius’ Metamorphoses 1.9 – 10,” MH 58 (2001) 40-53.

Nelson, M., “A note on Apuleius’s magical fish,” Mnemosyne 54 (2001) 85-86.

Oniga, R., “La création lexicale chez Pétrone,” in La création lexicale en latin. Actes de la table ronde du IXème Coll. intern. de linguist. latine à Madrid, le 16 avril 1997 (Paris: Université de Paris-Sorbonne, 2000) 155-166.

Panayotakis, S., “The Temple and the Brothel: Mothers and Daughters in Apollonius of Tyre,” in Space in the Ancient Novel. Ancient Narrative, Supplementum 1, eds., M. Paschalis, S. Frangoulidis (Groningen: Barkuis Publishing and The University Library Groningen, 2002) 98-117.

Parker, S., Murgatroyd, P., “Love Poetry and Apuleius’ Cupid and Psyche,” CQ 52 (2002) 400-404.

Paschalis, M., “Reading Space: a Re-examination of Apuleian ekphrasis,” in Space in the Ancient Novel. Ancient Narrative, Supplementum 1, eds., M. Paschalis, S. Frangoulidis (Groningen: Barkhuis Publishing and The University Library Groningen, 2002) 132-142.

Patimo, V.M., “Petronio 12-15: lessico giuridico e travestimento parodico nella contessa del mantello,” Aufidus 44 (2001) 165-193.

Petersmann, H., “La latinizzazione dell’Italia meridionale e il Satyricon di Petronio,” in La preistoria dell’italiano. Atti della tavola rotondo di linguistica storica, Università Ca’ Foscari di Venezia, 11-13 giugno 1998, ed., J. Herman (Tübingen: Niemeyer, 2000) 81-92.

Platt, V., “Viewing, Desiring, Believing: Confronting the Divine in a Pompeian House,” Art History 25 (2002) 87-112. The gaze, Lacan, illusion, sacred/profane, voyeurism, Apuleius, and a little Petronius.

Radif, L., “Il Sigillo di Petronio Infianto: Un Amletico Racconto di Nerone a Nerone (Tac., ann., 16, 18 sgg.),” A&R 47 (2002) 107-109.

Redpath, I.D., “The naming of Thrasyllus in Apuleius’ MetamorphosesCQ 50 (2000) 627-630.

Richardson, L., “Trimalchio and the Sibyl at Cumae,” CW 96 (2002) 77-78.

Riess, W., “Between Fiction and Reality: Robbers in Apuleius’ Golden Ass,” AN (2000-01) 260-282.

Rimmel, V., Petronius and the Anatomy of Fiction (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002).

Ripoll, F., “Le Bellum Civile de Pétrone: une épopée flavienne,” REA 104 (2002) 163-184. S. is written in 83-85 by Petronius Arbiter, a character different from Petronius Niger, courtier of Nero.

Romeo, A., “Gli studi sui Florida di Apuleio. Rassegna dei principali contributi critici,” BSL 30 (2000) 641-662.

Ruiz Sánchez, M., “Lucio en el campo. Observaciones sabre los libro VII y VIII del Asno de Oro de Apuleyo,” Emérita 68 (2000) 115-139.

Salanitro, M., “Ultime (ma non supreme) su Capua, città di Trimalchione,” A&R 47 (2002) 9-17.

Schindel, U., “Apuleius – Africanus Socrates?” Hermes 128 (2000) 443-456.

Schubert, W., “Trimalchio ad symphoniam allatus,” A&A 47 (2001) 176-190.

Schlam, G. and Finkelpearl, E., “A Review of Scholarship on Apuleius Met. 1970-1998” Lustrum 42 (2000) 225 pps.

Slater, N.W., “Handouts at Dinner,” Phoenix 54 (2000) 107-122. On sophos; triclinia at Satyrica 71.9-11.

Slater, N.W., “Metamorphosis of language in Apuleius: A study of allusion in the novel,” CPh 95 (2001) 371-374.

Slater, N.W., “Space and Displacement in Apuleius,” in Space in the Ancient Novel. Ancient Narrative, Supplementum 1, eds., M. Paschalis, S. Frangoulidis (Groningen: Barkhuis Publishing and The University Library Groningen, 2002) 161-176.

Strati, R., “Tra Petronio Satyricon e Fellini Satyricon (riflessioni intersemiotiche sull’ attualizzazioni dell’ antico,” AUFL 1 (2000) 87-97.

Strunz, F., “Wie untreu war die Witwe von Ephesus?,” Gymnasium 108 (2001) 439-449.

Ventre, D., “Dinamiche linguistiche e narrative nel principium Cenae (Petronio 26, 7 - 27, 6,” in Mnemosynon. Studi in memoria di D. Gagliardi (Naples: Dipartimento di Filologia Classica, Università Federico II, 2001) 485-497.

Vielberg, M., “Warum wir Petron ernst nehmen sollten,” in Antike Literatur: Mensch, Sprache, Welt, ed., P. Neukam (Munich: Bayerischer Schulbuch Verlag, 2000) 173-196.

Vielberg, M., “Der Dichter und Erzähler Eumolp – ein unzeitgemässer Held Petrons?,” in Der unzeitgemässe Held in der Weltliteratur, ed. G. Kaiser (Heidelberg 2002) 29-45. Dates the Satyrica to A.D. 65.

Wolff, E., “The Function of the Riddle in the Historia Apollonii Regis Tyri,” Revue de Philologie de Littèature et d’Histoire Anciennes 73 (1999) 279-288.

Zimmerman, M. et al., Aspects of Apuleius’ ‘Golden Ass, II: Cupid and Psyche,’ (Groningen: Forsten, 1998); revs: Kenney, E.J., CR 50 (2000) 462-464, Fick, N., Latomus 60 (2001) 1055-1056, Panayotakis, C., JHS 121 (2001) 191-192.

Zimmerman, M., “On the Road in Apuleius’ Metamorphoses,” in Space in the Ancient Novel. Ancient Narrative, Supplementum 1, eds., M. Paschalis, S. Frangoulidis, (Groningen: Barkhuis Publishing and The University Library Groningen, 2002) 78-97.

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Christian Novel

Perkins, J., “Social Geography in the Apocryphal Acts of the Apostles,” in Space in the Ancient Novel. Ancient Narrative, Supplementum 1, eds., M. Paschalis, S. Frangoulidis (Groningen: Barkhuis Publishing and The University Library Groningen, 2002) 118-131.

Ramelli, I., “Possibili allusioni al cristianesimo nel romanzo classico del tardo 1 sec.d.C.: i casi di Petronio e di Caritone,” Stylos 10, (2001) 67-81.

Robins, W., “Romance and renunciation at the turn of the Fifth century.” Journal of Early Christian Studies 8 (2000) 531-557. On the viability of ascendant asceticism as a model for Christian biographical narratives. Comparisons with Historia Apollonii Regis Tyri exposing structural and lexical resemblances with Christian hagiographic literature.

Thomas, C., The Acts of Peter, Gospel Literature, and the Ancient Novel (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003) 208 pp.

Vielberg, M., “Farbausdrücke im heidnischen und christlichen Roman: die Metamorphosen des Apuleius und die pseudoklementinischen Rekognitionen im Vergleich.” Latomus 61 (2002) 108-121.

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Jewish Novel

Bekkum, W. van, “A Short Note on Ancient Jewish Narrative,” AN 1 (2000-01) 379-381.

Wills, L., ed. and trans., Ancient Jewish Novels: an Anthology (New York: Oxford University Press, 2002) x + 298 pp.

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Nachleben

Carver, R., “‘True Histories’ and ‘Old Wives’ Tales’: Renaissance Humanism and the ‘Rise of the Novel’,” AN 1 (2000-01) 322-349.

Chevallier, R., “La bibliothèque de Des Esseintes ou le latin ‘decadent’: une question toujours d’actualité,” Latomus 61 (2002) 163-177. Huysman’s À Rebours, Des Esseintes has a 1585 Leiden edition of Petronius in which Trimalchio appears – but the Cena is not re-discovered until 1650. Marmorale pointed this out in GIF 12 (1959) 1-3.

Cooksey, T., “Jonson’s Volpone: a Double Source in Petronius’ Satyricon,” Notes and Queries 47 (2000) 103-104.

Cueva, E., “Longus in the Mir Istkusstva: Léon Bakst, Maurice Ravel and Marc Chagall,” AN 1 (2000-01) 152-160.

The Golden Ass of Apuleius has been adapted by Peter Osward for the stage and played (August-September 2002) at the Globe Theatre in London.

Harris, M., “Not Black and/or White: Reading racial differences in Heliodorus’ Ethiopica and Pauline Hopkins’ Of One Blood,” African American Review 35 (2001) 375-390.

Holberg, L., Journal of Niels Klim to the World Underground, trans. J.I. McNelis (Lincoln, 1960). [Original published in Latin (1741) as Nicolai Klimii Iter Subterraneum.] Quotation of a poem from Petronius’ Satyrica 134 on p. 5. Thanks to Jennifer Rea.

Leuker, T., “Cervantes between Apuleius, Lucian and the ‘Spanish Amyot’ – The finale and prologue of the ‘Novelas ejemplares’,” Romanistische Zeitschrift für Literaturgeschichte – Cahiers d’Histoire des Literatures Romanes 25 (2001) 409-427.

McElroy, H., “The Reception and Use of Petronius: Petronian Pseudepigraphy and Imitation,” AN 1 (2000-01) 350-378.

Piermort, Claudia Roth, “For Love and Money,” The New Yorker 76 (3 July 2000) 77-83. Comments on Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby (1925) and J. West, Trimalchio (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000).

Schubert, W., “Trimalchio ad symphoniam allatus. Petrons Satyrica und Bruno Madernas Oper Satyricon,” A&A 47 (2001) 176-190.

Strati, R., “Tra Petronio Satyricon e Fellini Satyricon. Rifessioni intersemeiotiche nell’ attualizzazione dell’antico,” Annali dell’ Università di Ferrara, Sez. Lettere 1 (2000) 87-97.

Töchterle, K., “Greenaways Trimalchio,” WS 114 (2001) 373-386.

Winkler, M., “The Cinematic Nature of the Opening Scene of Heliodoros’ Aithiopica,” AN 1 (2000-01) 161-184.

Winkler, M., “Chronotope and locus amoenus in Daphnis and Chloe and Pleasantville,” in Space in the Ancient World. Ancient Narrative, Supplementum 1, eds., M. Paschalis, S. Frangoulidis (Groningen: Barkhuis Publishing and The University Library Groningen, 2002) 27-39.

Citations on an oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico named “Petronius:”

“Petronius Production Begins,” The Oil Daily 50 (24 July 2000) 140.

“Replacement Module Set on Petronius,” The Oil and Gas Journal 98 (26 June 2000) 26, 55.

“A Deck for the Petronius Platform,” The Oil and Gas Journal 96 (14 December 1998) 50, 40.

“Deck Module for Texaco’s Petronius Field Sinks in Gulf Accident,” The Oil Daily 48 (7 December 1998) 232.

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