View All Book Series

BOOK SERIES


Routledge Monographs in Classical Studies


115 Series Titles

Per Page
Sort

Display
The Etruscans and the History of Dentistry The Golden Smile through the Ages

The Etruscans and the History of Dentistry: The Golden Smile through the Ages

1st Edition

By Marshall J. Becker, Jean MacIntosh Turfa
March 06, 2017

The Etruscans and the History of Dentistry offers a study of the construction and use of gold dental appliances in ancient Etruscan culture, and their place within the framework of a general history of dentistry, with special emphasis on appliances, from Bronze Age Mesopotamia and Egypt to modern ...

Aeschylus and War Comparative Perspectives on Seven Against Thebes

Aeschylus and War: Comparative Perspectives on Seven Against Thebes

1st Edition

Edited By Isabelle Torrance
February 16, 2017

This volume brings together a group of interdisciplinary experts who demonstrate that Aeschylus’ Seven Against Thebes is a text of continuing relevance and value for exploring ancient, contemporary and comparative issues of war and its attendant trauma. The volume features contributions from an ...

Displaying the Ideals of Antiquity The Petrified Gaze

Displaying the Ideals of Antiquity: The Petrified Gaze

1st Edition

By Johannes Siapkas, Lena Sjögren
February 07, 2017

Displaying the Ideals of Antiquity investigates the study and display of ancient sculpture from archaeological, art historical, and museum studies perspectives. Ancient sculptures not only give us knowledge about ancient Greek and Roman pasts, but they also mediate ideals that inform modern ...

Plato's Dialectic on Woman Equal, Therefore Inferior

Plato's Dialectic on Woman: Equal, Therefore Inferior

1st Edition

By Elena Blair
February 07, 2017

With the birth of the feminist movement classicists, philosophers, educational experts, and psychologists, all challenged by the question of whether or not Plato was a feminist, began to examine Plato’s dialogues in search of his conception of woman. The possibility arose of a new focus affecting ...

Roman Literature, Gender and Reception Domina Illustris

Roman Literature, Gender and Reception: Domina Illustris

1st Edition

Edited By Donald Lateiner, Barbara K. Gold, Judith Perkins
February 07, 2017

This cutting-edge collection of essays offers provocative studies of ancient history, literature, gender identifications and roles, and subsequent interpretations of the republican and imperial Roman past. The prose and poetry of Cicero and Petronius, Lucretius, Virgil, and Ovid receive fresh ...

Roman Theories of Translation Surpassing the Source

Roman Theories of Translation: Surpassing the Source

1st Edition

By Siobhán McElduff
February 07, 2017

For all that Cicero is often seen as the father of translation theory, his and other Roman comments on translation are often divorced from the complicated environments that produced them. The first book-length study in English of its kind, Roman Theories of Translation: Surpassing the Source ...

The Roman Garden Space, Sense, and Society

The Roman Garden: Space, Sense, and Society

1st Edition

By Katharine T. von Stackelberg
February 07, 2017

This innovative book is the first comprehensive study of ancient Roman gardens to combine literary and archaeological evidence with contemporary space theory. It applies a variety of interdisciplinary methods including access analysis, literary and gender theory to offer a critical framework for ...

Childhood in Ancient Athens Iconography and Social History

Childhood in Ancient Athens: Iconography and Social History

1st Edition

By Lesley A. Beaumont
March 25, 2015

Childhood in Ancient Athens offers an in-depth study of children during the heyday of the Athenian city state, thereby illuminating a significant social group largely ignored by most ancient and modern authors alike. It concentrates not only on the child's own experience, but also examines the ...

Virgil's Homeric Lens

Virgil's Homeric Lens

1st Edition

By Edan Dekel
May 30, 2014

Virgil’s Homeric Lens reevaluates the traditional view of the Aeneid’s relationship to Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey. Almost since the death of Virgil, there has been an assumption that the Aeneid breaks into two discrete halves: Virgil’s Odyssey, and Virgil’s Iliad. Although modified in various ways ...

Greek Magic Ancient, Medieval and Modern

Greek Magic: Ancient, Medieval and Modern

1st Edition

Edited By John Petropoulos
January 16, 2014

Magic has always been a widespread phenomenon in Greek Society, starting from Homer’s Circe (the first ‘evil witch’ in western history) and extending to the pervasive belief in the ‘evil eye’ in the twenty-first century Greece. Indeed, magic is probably the most ancient and durable among social and...

Utopia Antiqua Readings of the Golden Age and Decline at Rome

Utopia Antiqua: Readings of the Golden Age and Decline at Rome

1st Edition

By Rhiannon Evans
December 14, 2012

Utopia Antiqua is a fresh look at narratives of the Golden Age and decline in ancient Roman literature of the late Republic and imperial period. Through the lens of utopian theory, Rhiannon Evans looks at the ways that Roman authors, such as Virgil, Ovid and Tacitus, use and reinvent Greek myths ...

Life and Letters in the Ancient Greek World

Life and Letters in the Ancient Greek World

1st Edition

By John Muir
May 08, 2012

From the first ‘deadly signs’ scratched on a wooden tablet instructing the recipient to kill the one who delivered it, to the letters of St Paul to the early Church, this book examines the range of letter writing in the Ancient Greek world. Containing extensive translated examples from both life ...

97-108 of 115
AJAX loader