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Philip Harland deposited Associations and the Economics of Group Life: A Preliminary Case Study of Asia Minor and the Aegean Islands in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 6 years, 10 months agoArticle surveying economic conditions within associations in Asia Minor and on Greek islands.
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Philip Harland deposited Dynamics of Identity in the World of the Early Christians: Associations, Judeans, and Cultural Minorities in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 6 years, 10 months agoBook that explores processes of identification within various small group situations in the Greco-Roman world.
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Philip Harland deposited “‘Do Not Deny Me This Noble Death’: Depictions of Violence in the Greek Novels and Apocryphal Acts.” in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 6 years, 10 months agoArticle comparing representations of domestic, civic, and imperial violence in novels and in apocryphal acts.
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Philip Harland deposited Greco-Roman Associations: Texts, Translations, and Commentary. II. North Coast of the Black Sea, Asia Minor. BZNW, 204. Berlin: de Gruyter, 2014. in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 6 years, 10 months agoPDF of Bosporan section of work only in keeping with the publisher’s policy.
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Philip Harland deposited ‘These people are . . . Men Eaters’: Banquets of the Anti-Associations and Perceptions of Minority Cultural Groups in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 6 years, 10 months agoArticle that explores stories of wild banquets within the context of ethnographic discourses.
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Philip Harland deposited Pausing at the Intersection of Religion and Travel in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 6 years, 10 months agoChapter introducing and surveying the intersection of the gods and travel in the Greco-Roman world.
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Philip Harland deposited The Declining Polis? Religious Rivalries in Ancient Civic Context in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 6 years, 10 months agoArticle exploring and challenging the notion of the decline of the city as a preliminary to the study of rivalries among associations.
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Daniel Barber deposited PRESENCE AND THE FUTURE TENSE IN HORACE’S ODES in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 6 years, 10 months agoHorace is sometimes said to profess in the Odes a “poetics of presence”, a philosophical or aesthetic orientation that privileges the here and now. This paper examines how such an orientation toward the present might interact with the poet’s use of the future tense and especially with those future verbs that seem to postpone focal events. It is co…[Read more]
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Daniel Barber deposited Tui plenum: Horace in the Presence of the Gods in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 6 years, 10 months agoIn Books 1-3 of the Odes, Horace makes clear a hierarchy of divinity through the structures of lyric address and distinguishes the gods and goddesses of his poetic preference from the preeminent deities of Augustan state cult. Specifically, he equivocates masterfully as he approaches Apollo and Jupiter while elevating Mercury, a minor figure in…[Read more]
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Rachel Rafael Neis deposited Eyeing Idols: Rabbinic Viewing Practices in Late Antiquity in the group
Late Antiquity on Humanities Commons 6 years, 10 months agoThis article introduces a new perspective, the history of vision, into the study of rabbinic literature. Specifically it examines how rabbinic visual regimes dealt with those objects and images that it designated as idols. It argues that rabbis took seeing seriously and that they developed a set of strategies to shape the viewing of problematic…[Read more]
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Henry Colburn deposited Roman collecting and the biographies of Egyptian Late Period statues in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 6 years, 10 months agoStudies of Egyptian Late Period statuary often assume that the extant corpus is a representative sample of the artistic output of the Twenty-Sixth to Thirty-First Dynasties (c. 664–332 BCE). This assumption ignores the various human processes that affect the survival of statues after their initial dedication. In particular, the Roman practice of c…[Read more]
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Carl R. Rice deposited “Whatever the Master Orders is Not Shameful”: Objectifying the Boy-Slave in the Roman Domestic Sphere in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 6 years, 10 months agoExploration of the ways boy-slaves’ bodies were objectified in first century CE Roman art and literature.
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Sarah Bond deposited “Curial Communiqué: Memory, Propaganda, and the Roman Senate House” in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 6 years, 10 months ago“Curial Communiqué: Memory, Propaganda, and the Roman Senate House,” in Aspects of Ancient Institutions and Geography: Studies in Honor of Richard J.A. Talbert, Impact of Empire Series, edited by Lee L. Brice and Daniëlle Slootjes (Leiden: Brill, 2014), 84-102.
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Henry Colburn deposited A Perfunctory and Highly Subjective Guide to the Classical Archaeology Job Market in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 6 years, 11 months agoAs the 2017-18 academic job cycle came to an end I found myself, for the first time in five years, in the enviable position of not having to resume my search for employment again in the fall, thanks to a two-year position at a very eminent institution. This good fortune has prompted me to compile my reflections on the classical archaeology job…[Read more]
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James M. Harland deposited Memories of Migration? So-called “Anglo-Saxon” Burial Costume of the 5th Century AD in the group
Late Antiquity on Humanities Commons 6 years, 11 months agoThis is an Accepted Manuscript, for an article forthcoming in Antiquity (2019), and remains subject to pre-publication type-editing and proofing. Please cite as James M. Harland, ‘Memories of Migration? So-called “Anglo-Saxon” Burial Costume of the 5th Century AD,’ Antiquity 93 (2019). A link to the final publication at Cambridge University Press…[Read more]
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Stephe Harrop deposited Unfixing Epic: Homeric Orality and Contemporary Performance in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 6 years, 12 months agoThis chapter examines the impact of a putative oral Homer upon the work of recent performance-makers. The influence of oral-poetic theories is (as yet) an under-explored area of study, neglected by scholars whose literary expertise leads them to focus on dramatic texts and production histories, with each revisionary text or production regarded as…[Read more]
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Eric Orlin deposited Augustan Religion and the Reshaping of Roman Memory in the group
Ancient Greece & Rome on Humanities Commons 7 years agoThis paper argues that the Augustan period witnessed a dramatic reconception of Roman religion—a reconception that played a vital role in the emperor’s efforts to create a unified sense of identity that included both Romans and Italians. Instead of a religion of place tied to specific historical developments, both Virgil in the Aeneid and A…[Read more]
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Nathan Gibson deposited Inquiring of ‘Beelzebub’: Timothy and al-Jāḥiẓ on Christians in the ʿAbbāsid Legal System in the group
Late Antiquity on Humanities Commons 7 years agoThis study juxtaposes the concerns of Catholicos Timothy I (r. 780–823), leader of the Church of the East, with those of al-Jāḥiẓ (about 776–868/9), a popular Muslim writer, regarding the dangers for each community when Christians appear as plaintiffs or defendants in Islamic courts. Timothy’s Canons attempt to obviate some of the reasons…[Read more]
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Alexandre Roberts deposited Al-Mansur and the Critical Ambassador in the group
Late Antiquity on Humanities Commons 7 years, 2 months agoThe Arabic narrative sources record a host of tales related to the founding of Baghdad and to its founder, the caliph al-Manṣūr. In one account, reported in several versions by al-Ṭabarī and al-Ḫaṭīb al-Bagdādī, a Byzantine ambassador arrives at al-Manṣūr’s court and criticizes the caliph’s new capital. The present paper suggests that the tale m…[Read more]
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Jesse Arlen deposited “‘Let us Mourn Continuously:’ John Chrysostom and the Early Christian Transformation of Mourning,” in Studia Patristica Vol LXXXIII, Papers presented at the Seventeenth International Conference on Patristic Studies held in Oxford 2015, Vol 9: Emotions, eds. M. Vinzent and Y. Papadogiannakis (Leuven: Peeters, 2017): 289–312. in the group
Late Antiquity on Humanities Commons 7 years, 2 months agoAn examination of Mourning and Tears in the works of John Chrysostom, with comparison to his classical and hellenistic predecessors (Aristotle, Seneca, Plutarch).
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