Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Institution
-
- Selected Works (15)
- Seton Hall University (13)
- SelectedWorks (10)
- Binghamton University (9)
- Bryn Mawr College (7)
-
- Trinity University (7)
- Brigham Young University (5)
- Indiana State University (3)
- University of Massachusetts Boston (3)
- University of Nebraska - Lincoln (3)
- Augustana College (2)
- Santa Clara University (2)
- University of Arkansas, Fayetteville (2)
- William & Mary (2)
- Antioch University (1)
- Bridgewater College (1)
- Butler University (1)
- California State University, San Bernardino (1)
- Claremont Colleges (1)
- Concordia University St. Paul (1)
- Connecticut College (1)
- DePaul University (1)
- East Tennessee State University (1)
- Eastern Illinois University (1)
- Marshall University (1)
- Skidmore College (1)
- Smith College (1)
- Swarthmore College (1)
- University of Kentucky (1)
- University of New Hampshire (1)
- Keyword
-
- Book Chapters (3)
- Film (3)
- Literature (3)
- Pottery (3)
- Women (3)
-
- Archaeology (2)
- Autobiography (2)
- Bacchae (2)
- Cinema (2)
- Classical antiquity (2)
- Classical receptions (2)
- Classical tradition (2)
- Cypriot (2)
- Dionysus (2)
- Drag (2)
- Education (2)
- Euripides (2)
- Excavations (2)
- Fear (2)
- Gay (2)
- Gender (2)
- Greek epic (2)
- Late Bronze Age (2)
- Masculinity (2)
- Mediterranean (2)
- Misogyny (2)
- Nationalism (2)
- Nietzsche (2)
- Odyssey (2)
- Pentheus (2)
- Publication
-
- The Society for Ancient Greek Philosophy Newsletter (9)
- Classical Studies Faculty Research (7)
- Chenyang Li (5)
- Department of Religion Publications (5)
- Greek, Latin, and Classical Studies Faculty Research and Scholarship (5)
-
- Richard M Liddy (5)
- Theses and Dissertations (5)
- All-Inclusive List of Electronic Theses and Dissertations (3)
- Department of Classics and Religious Studies: Faculty Publications (3)
- Katerina Zacharia (3)
- Seton Hall University Dissertations and Theses (ETDs) (3)
- Art and Art History (2)
- Arts & Sciences Articles (2)
- Classical and Near Eastern Archaeology Faculty Research and Scholarship (2)
- Classics Faculty Publication Series (2)
- Classics: Faculty Scholarship & Creative Works (2)
- Emily A. McDermott (2)
- Inquiry: The University of Arkansas Undergraduate Research Journal (2)
- Adam Serfass (1)
- Antioch University Dissertations & Theses (1)
- C. Heike Schotten (1)
- CGU Faculty Publications and Research (1)
- Christopher Bungard (1)
- Classical Studies Faculty Publications (1)
- Classics Faculty Publications (1)
- Classics Faculty Works (1)
- Communication (1)
- Creating Knowledge (1)
- Damian Stocking (1)
- Dr Anastasia Tsaliki, PhD (1)
- Publication Type
- File Type
Articles 1 - 30 of 101
Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Sagp Newsletter 2008/9.1 East Philol, Anthony Preus
Sagp Newsletter 2008/9.1 East Philol, Anthony Preus
The Society for Ancient Greek Philosophy Newsletter
Announcement of SAGP programs with the American Philological Association and with the American Philosophical Association 2008/2009 academic year.
An Investigation Of The Reliability And Validity Of The Caperton Forgiveness Styles Inventory, Duane Caperton
An Investigation Of The Reliability And Validity Of The Caperton Forgiveness Styles Inventory, Duane Caperton
All-Inclusive List of Electronic Theses and Dissertations
This research was an investigation into the process of forgiveness. The analysis of qualitative interviews with nearly 100 participants suggested four different approaches, or styles, of forgiving and non-forgiving. The Intrapersonal style describes people who forgive other people by focusing on their own thoughts, feelings, and actions. The Interpersonal style describes people who forgive other people by focusing on the thoughts, feelings, and actions of the offending persons. The Easy Going style describes the people who never forgive anyone because they rarely or never feel offended and consequently rarely or never feel the need to forgive others. The Grudge Holder …
International Terrorism:Role ,Responsibility And Operation Of Media Channles, Ratnesh Dwivedi Mr
International Terrorism:Role ,Responsibility And Operation Of Media Channles, Ratnesh Dwivedi Mr
Ratnesh Dwivedi
"Terrorism" is a term that cannot be given a stable defintion. Or rather, it can, but to do so forstalls any attempt to examine the major feature of its relation to television in the contemporary world. As the central public arena for organising ways of picturing and talking about social and political life, TV plays a pivotal role in the contest between competing defintions, accounts and explanations of terrorism. Which term is used in any particular context is inextricably tied to judgemements about the legitimacy of the action in question and of the political system against which it is directed. …
Blurring The Lines: The Intermingling Of Garden And Theater In Seventeenth Century France, Abbie Elizabeth Rufener
Blurring The Lines: The Intermingling Of Garden And Theater In Seventeenth Century France, Abbie Elizabeth Rufener
Theses and Dissertations
Seventeenth century French society was a time in which the arts flourished and were used to create an eminence of power and absolutism. The gardens of Vaux-le-Vicomte were commissioned by Nicolas Fouquet and designed by André Le Nôtre. The gardens created a political and social space through the characteristics of design and standards of order which together conveyed power and absolutism. Louis XIV, newly crowned king, recognized at Vaux the perfect vehicle for the portrayal of power. French theater at the same time was gaining popularity and establishing itself as a great art form. Similar to the gardens at Vaux …
"Should The "Elgin Marbles" Be Returned To Greece?", Nancy Sultan
"Should The "Elgin Marbles" Be Returned To Greece?", Nancy Sultan
Nancy Sultan
No abstract provided.
You Can't Get There From Here: The Story Of The Third Conjugation, Thomas Nelson Winter
You Can't Get There From Here: The Story Of The Third Conjugation, Thomas Nelson Winter
Department of Classics and Religious Studies: Faculty Publications
How does a student go from tetigit in the text to tango in the dictionary? Verbs in the third conjugation often prove difficult even for intermediate and advanced Latin students. The other conjugations all form the perfect stem with a v infix, with or without the thematic vowel. Third conjugation verbs form their perfect stem in five ways. Three of these ways correspond to Greek; the fourth way is with the standard u/v infix; and the fifth way is with no stem-change at all. A complete overview of these five types may preemptively spare your students time and grief.
Vincent John Bruno, 1926-2008, Russell Scott
Vincent John Bruno, 1926-2008, Russell Scott
Greek, Latin, and Classical Studies Faculty Research and Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Review Of In The Shadow Of The Ancestors: The Prehistoric Foundations Of The Early Arabian Civilization In Oman, By Serge Cleuziou And Maurizio Tosi, Peter Magee
Classical and Near Eastern Archaeology Faculty Research and Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Nemea Valley Archaeological Project, Excavations At Barnavos: Final Report, James C. Wright, Evangelia Pappi, Sevasti Triantaphyllou, Mary K. Dabney, Panagiotis Karkanas, Georgia Kotzamani, Alexandra Livarda
Nemea Valley Archaeological Project, Excavations At Barnavos: Final Report, James C. Wright, Evangelia Pappi, Sevasti Triantaphyllou, Mary K. Dabney, Panagiotis Karkanas, Georgia Kotzamani, Alexandra Livarda
Classical and Near Eastern Archaeology Faculty Research and Scholarship
In 2002 and 2003 the 4th Ephorate of Prehistoric and Classical Antiquities and the Nemea Valley Archaeological Project (NVAP) excavated a robbed Late Helladic (LH) IIIA2 chamber tomb at Barnavos, west of the village of Ancient Nemea. Through application of a novel method of stratigraphic analysis and careful documentation of the scattered remains, it was ascertained that the tomb was opened as many as six times for four or five interments, including a child and probably both male and female adults. No other tomb was found in the vicinity. This is the first Mycenaean tomb discovered in the valley, and …
Sagp/Ssips 2008 Program, Anthony Preus
Sagp/Ssips 2008 Program, Anthony Preus
The Society for Ancient Greek Philosophy Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Sagp/Ssips 2008 Abstract Collection, Anthony Preus
Sagp/Ssips 2008 Abstract Collection, Anthony Preus
The Society for Ancient Greek Philosophy Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Tacitus, Stoic "Exempla", And The "Praecipuum Munus Annalium", William Turpin
Tacitus, Stoic "Exempla", And The "Praecipuum Munus Annalium", William Turpin
Classics Faculty Works
Tacitus' claim that history should inspire good deeds and deter bad ones (Annals 3.65) should be taken seriously: his exempla are supposed to help his readers think through their own moral difficulties. This approach to history is found in historians with clear connections to Stoicism, and in Stoic philosophers like Seneca. It is no coincidence that Tacitus is particularly interested in the behavior of Stoics like Thrasea Paetus, Barea Soranus, and Seneca himself. They, and even non-Stoic characters like Epicharis and Petronius, exemplify the behavior necessary if Roman freedom was to survive the monarchy.
Playing For His Side: Kipling’S ‘Regulus,’ Corporal Punishment, And Classical Education, Emily A. Mcdermott
Playing For His Side: Kipling’S ‘Regulus,’ Corporal Punishment, And Classical Education, Emily A. Mcdermott
Classics Faculty Publication Series
Rudyard Kipling’s short story, “Regulus,” revolves around the flogging of a student who has let loose a mouse in the drawing classroom of a turn-of-the-century British public school. The first part of the story is devoted to a fifth-form Latin class’s line-by-line explication of Horace’s fifth Roman ode, in which the story’s title character is presented as a paradigm of manly virtue; the remainder is given over to narration of the mouse-miscreant’s progress toward punishment, in thematic counterpoint to the Regulus exemplum. Within that idiosyncratic framework, the story tackles as ambitious a topic as the purposes of education, with particular …
Eighteenth Century 'Prize Negroes': From Britain To America, Charles R. Foy
Eighteenth Century 'Prize Negroes': From Britain To America, Charles R. Foy
Faculty Research & Creative Activity
Eighteenth-century Anglo-American prize systems were highly organized enterprises for the provision of coerced labour. Offering whites opportunities to participate in a lucrative market, they extended the reach of American slavery beyond the shores of the Americas, reinforced slavery in North America and greatly limited opportunities for freedom for black seamen. Although Americans desired that their new nation provide greater individual liberty, the American prize system applied the same presumption – that captured black mariners were slaves – as had its British predecessor, resulting in the sale of hundreds of black seamen into slavery.
Hellenisms (Iii), "Reel" Hellenisms: Perceptions Of Greece In Greek Cinema (Ch. 12), Katerina Zacharia
Hellenisms (Iii), "Reel" Hellenisms: Perceptions Of Greece In Greek Cinema (Ch. 12), Katerina Zacharia
Katerina Zacharia
No abstract provided.
Playing For His Side: Kipling’S ‘Regulus,’ Corporal Punishment, And Classical Education, Emily A. Mcdermott
Playing For His Side: Kipling’S ‘Regulus,’ Corporal Punishment, And Classical Education, Emily A. Mcdermott
Emily A. McDermott
Rudyard Kipling’s short story, “Regulus,” revolves around the flogging of a student who has let loose a mouse in the drawing classroom of a turn-of-the-century British public school. The first part of the story is devoted to a fifth-form Latin class’s line-by-line explication of Horace’s fifth Roman ode, in which the story’s title character is presented as a paradigm of manly virtue; the remainder is given over to narration of the mouse-miscreant’s progress toward punishment, in thematic counterpoint to the Regulus exemplum. Within that idiosyncratic framework, the story tackles as ambitious a topic as the purposes of education, with particular …
Hellenisms (Ii), Herodotus' Four Markers Of Greek Identity (Ch. 1), Katerina Zacharia
Hellenisms (Ii), Herodotus' Four Markers Of Greek Identity (Ch. 1), Katerina Zacharia
Katerina Zacharia
No abstract provided.
Hellenisms (I), Introduction, Katerina Zacharia
Hellenisms (I), Introduction, Katerina Zacharia
Katerina Zacharia
No abstract provided.
Mistakes And Fatal Miscalculations In Cicero's Political Career, Alicia S. Silver
Mistakes And Fatal Miscalculations In Cicero's Political Career, Alicia S. Silver
MALS Final Projects, 1995-2019
Marcus Tullius Cicero was a pivotal character in the transitional period from the end of the Roman Republic to the beginning of what was to become the Roman Empire . His contribution to our modern knowledge of Roman history, mores, judicial practices, the daily lives of the patrician class and more is invaluable. More than any other Roman, he left us with a breathing account of life in his times, through his correspondence with friends, family and associates, his many political and philosophical doctrines and, of course, his speeches in the Senate and trial courts of Rome. Cicero was brilliant, …
Roman Slavery: A Study Of Roman Society And Its Dependence On Slaves., Andrew Mason Burks
Roman Slavery: A Study Of Roman Society And Its Dependence On Slaves., Andrew Mason Burks
Electronic Theses and Dissertations
Rome's dependence upon slaves has been well established in terms of economics and general society. This paper, however, seeks to demonstrate this dependence, during the end of the Republic and the beginning of the Empire, through detailed examples of slave use in various areas of Roman life. The areas covered include agriculture, industry, domestic life, the state, entertainment, intellectual life, military, religion, and the use of female slaves. A look at manumission demonstrates Rome's growing awareness of this dependence. Through this discussion, it becomes apparent that Roman society existed during this time as it did due to slavery. Rome depended …
Nietzsche/Pentheus: The Last Disciple Of Dionysus And Queer Fear Of The Feminine, C. Heike Schotten
Nietzsche/Pentheus: The Last Disciple Of Dionysus And Queer Fear Of The Feminine, C. Heike Schotten
Political Science Faculty Publication Series
This article examines the scholarly preoccupation with the hypothesis that Nietzsche was gay by offering a reading of Nietzsche's texts as autobiographical that puts them in conversation with Euripides's drama The Bacchae. Drawing a number of parallels between Nietzsche, self-avowed disciple of Dionysus, and Pentheus, the main character of The Bacchae and demonstrated antidisciple of Dionysus, I argue that both men experience their sexual attraction to women as somehow intolerable, and they negotiate this discomfort—which is simultaneously an unjustified paranoia and fear of the feminine—through the appropriation of feminine capacities and qualities for themselves. This appropriation ultimately expresses these men's …
Nietzsche/Pentheus: The Last Disciple Of Dionysus And Queer Fear Of The Feminine, C. Heike Schotten
Nietzsche/Pentheus: The Last Disciple Of Dionysus And Queer Fear Of The Feminine, C. Heike Schotten
C. Heike Schotten
No abstract provided.
About The Gospel Of John: Considering P66: A Literary History, Or A Categorical Hermeneutic, Christopher Ryan Haney
About The Gospel Of John: Considering P66: A Literary History, Or A Categorical Hermeneutic, Christopher Ryan Haney
Theses and Dissertations
New Testament text critics are fueled by a search for origins. But in the absence of an autograph, questions of origins are complicated at best. The fruit of that search for origins has resulted in the creation of hypothetical, eclectic texts—texts which have left us translating and interpreting the Bible in a form that no community in human history has before. Far from being failed projects, however, these eclectic versions aptly represent the problem of the One and the many, a problem not easily solved: When faced with hermeneutic duties, can we effectively speak of New Testament texts without speaking …
Nineteenth-Century Theatrical Adaptations Of Nineteenth-Century Literature, Kathryn Hartvigsen
Nineteenth-Century Theatrical Adaptations Of Nineteenth-Century Literature, Kathryn Hartvigsen
Theses and Dissertations
The theatre in the nineteenth century was a source of entertainment similar in popularity to today's film culture, but critics, of both that age and today, often look down on nineteenth-century theatre as lacking in aesthetic merit. Just as many of the films now being produced in Hollywood are adapted from popular or classic literature, many theatrical productions in the early 1800s were based on popular literary works, and it is in that practice of adaptation that value in nineteenth-century theatre can be discerned. The abundance of theatrical adaptations during the nineteenth century expanded the arena in which the public …
Review Of The Reception Of Plutarch's 'Lives' In Fifteenth-Century Italy, By Marianne Pade, Julia H. Gaisser
Review Of The Reception Of Plutarch's 'Lives' In Fifteenth-Century Italy, By Marianne Pade, Julia H. Gaisser
Greek, Latin, and Classical Studies Faculty Research and Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Review: Marianne Pade. The Reception Of Plutarch’S Lives In Fifteenth-Century Italy., Julia H. Gaisser
Review: Marianne Pade. The Reception Of Plutarch’S Lives In Fifteenth-Century Italy., Julia H. Gaisser
Greek, Latin, and Classical Studies Faculty Research and Scholarship
No abstract provided.
The Platonic Legend [In Greek], Kyriakos N. Demetriou
The Platonic Legend [In Greek], Kyriakos N. Demetriou
Kyriakos N. Demetriou
This is the first study ever on the history of modern Platonic exegesis in Greek, and would hopefully introduce the “Rezeptionsgechichte” discipline into Greek academia. What I am trying to prove is a simple, albeit controversial thesis, namely that the existence of so many conflicting accounts about Plato’s philosophy proves that George Grote’s argument put forward in the 1860s (in a nutshell, that Plato had no distinct philosophical system to establish apart from a consistent aim running through the dialogues, that of expounding a philosophical method -- not a doctrine), is still compellingly legitimate. The existence of many “Platonisms” (in …
Negotiating Identity In The Transnational Imaginary Of Julia Alvarez's And Edwidge Danticat's Literature, Erik R. Kerby
Negotiating Identity In The Transnational Imaginary Of Julia Alvarez's And Edwidge Danticat's Literature, Erik R. Kerby
Theses and Dissertations
The increased contact between nations and cultures in the globalization of the twenty-first century requires an increased accountability for the ways in which individuals and countries negotiate these points of contact. New World and Caribbean Studies envision the cross-cultural and transnational encounters between indigenous, European, and African peoples as important contributors to a paradigm within which identity in relation offers an alternative to identities rooted in national and filial frameworks. Such frameworks limit the ability to construct identity without relying upon static representations of history, culture, and ethnicity that tend to privilege one group over another. In the literature of …
The Philosophy Of Harmony In Classical Confucianism, Chenyang Li
The Philosophy Of Harmony In Classical Confucianism, Chenyang Li
Chenyang Li
No abstract provided.
Learning Styles Of Myers-Briggs Type Indicators, Juanita Jane Cohen
Learning Styles Of Myers-Briggs Type Indicators, Juanita Jane Cohen
All-Inclusive List of Electronic Theses and Dissertations
This research study illustrated that personality type influences learning style. The study compared the personalities expressed in Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) to Felder and Silverman's (1988) Index ofLearning Styles (ILS). Phase one was a combined MBTI and ILS assessment that was administered to 105 participants. To further define learning style, phase two was a follow-up questionnaire administered to 3 7 participants and was based on Goley's (1982) Learning Pattern (LP) assessment. The research did indicate a correlation between specific dichotomies ofMBTI, ILS, and LP. The Extravert and Introvert dichotomy in MBTI appeared to correlate with the Active and Reflective dichotomy …