A WOMAN OF CONSEQUENCE: PANDORA IN HESIOD’S “WORKS AND DAYS”
By Lilah-Grace Fraser Published in The Cambridge Classical Journal 57 (2011): 9-28 View on JSTOR
By Lilah-Grace Fraser Published in The Cambridge Classical Journal 57 (2011): 9-28 View on JSTOR
By Lilah Grace Canevaro Abstract: This book argues that the structure of Hesiod’s Works and Days and the modes of reading the poem which it encourages reflect the interplay between self-sufficiency – Hesiod2019s Iron…
By Suzanne Lye Abstract: In this paper, I argue that Styx defines the relationship between the gods through her power as the oath and separates the major geographical structures of the Olympian cosmos through her…
by Emma Gee Abstract: This book is a study of a Hellenistic didactic poem, the Phaenomena, written by Aratus in c.276 BC, and of its reception, primarily in the Roman period up to the fourth century AD. Aratus’ poem…