WOUNDS OF LOVE: DANTEAN PAZÏENZA AND THE POETICS OF MOURNING DIDO IN THE LATE MIDDLE AGES.Published in:2008By:Bowen, Kern A.Publication type:Literary Criticism
‘Live false Aeneas!’ Marlowe’s Dido, Queen of Carthage and the limits of translation.Published in:2011By:Buckley, EmmaPublication type:Literary Criticism
Boccaccio's Dido and the Rhetorical Criticism of Virgil's Aeneid.Published in:1985By:Kallendorf, CraigPublication type:Literary Criticism
Repeated Cues and a Textual Crux in Marlowe's Dido, Queene of Carthage.Published in:2019By:Roudabush, WilliamPublication type:Literary Criticism
WIDOW DIDO.Published in:Notes & Queries, 1985, v. 32, n. 1, p. 56, doi. 10.1093/nq/32-1-56bBy:Hooker, J. M.Publication type:Article
"The Dido Episode in Ercilla's "La Araucana" and the Critique of Empire" by Karina Galperin.Published in:2009By:Wright, Elizabeth R.Publication type:Opinion
DIDO, THE PHOENIX, AND MILTON'S SONNET XVIII.Published in:1970By:Stroup, Thomas B.Publication type:Literary Criticism
`Her eyes became two spouts': Classical antecedents of Renaissance laments.Published in:Early Music, 1999, v. 27, n. 3, p. 379, doi. 10.1093/earlyj/XXVII.3.379By:Holford-Strevens, LeofrancPublication type:Article