We need to talk about Byzantium: or, Byzantium, its reception of the classical world as discussed in current scholarship, and should classicists pay attention?Published in:2014By:Jeffreys, ElizabethPublication type:Essay
‘The Painful Memory of Woe’: Greek tragedy and the Greek Civil War in the work of George Seferis1.Published in:2014By:Liapis, VayosPublication type:Poetry Review
Reading Plutarch in nineteenth-century Greece: classical paideia, political emancipation, and national awareness — the case of Adamantios Koraes.Published in:Classical Receptions Journal, 2014, v. 6, n. 1, p. 131, doi. 10.1093/crj/cls011By:Xenophontos, Sophia A.Publication type:Article
In Memoriam: Professor Ahmed Etman (1945–2013).Published in:2014By:Hardwick, LornaPublication type:Obituary
English Juvenal translations in Bodleian library manuscripts.Published in:Classical Receptions Journal, 2014, v. 6, n. 1, p. 22, doi. 10.1093/crj/clt007By:Gillespie, StuartPublication type:Article
Theodor Mommsen and the Liberal Opposition to British Imperialism at the time of the Second South African War of Independence (1899–1902).Published in:Classical Receptions Journal, 2014, v. 6, n. 1, p. 48, doi. 10.1093/crj/clt014By:Hilton, J. L.Publication type:Article
Fictional archaeologies of text and homeric reception in Zachary Mason’s The Lost Books of the Odyssey.Published in:2014By:Giannopoulou, ZinaPublication type:Literary Criticism
Freedom and censorship: Petronius’ Satyricon in seventeenth-century Italy.Published in:Classical Receptions Journal, 2014, v. 6, n. 1, p. 104, doi. 10.1093/crj/cls010By:Onelli, CorinnaPublication type:Article