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Books, monographs, commentaries, and articles.
Note: all abbreviations follow the conventions
of L’Annee Philologique (Paris 1924-).
Ahl, F. (1985) Metaformations: Soundplay
and Wordplay in Ovid and Other Classical Poets.
Anderson, W. S. (1963) "Multiple
Change in the Metamorphoses," TAPA 94:1-27.
Anderson,
W. S. (1972) "The Heroides" in Binns
(1973) 49-83.
Anderson,
W. S. (1982) Ovid’s Metamorphoses, Books
6-10. Oklahoma.
Anderson,
W. S. (1997) Ovid’s Metamorphoses, Books
1-5. Oklahoma.
Austin, R. G. (1955) P. Vergilius
Maro Aeneidos Liber Quartus. Oxford.
Barchiesi, A. (1993) "Future
Reflexive: Two Modes of Allusion and Ovid’s Heroides,"
HSPh 95:334-65.
Barrett, W. S. (1964) Euripides:
Hippolytus. Oxford.
Bass, R. C. (1977) "Some Aspects
of the Structure of the Phaethon Episode in Ovid's Metamorphoses,"
CQ 27:402-8.
Beacham, R. C. (1991) The Roman
Theatre and Its Audience. London.
Binns, J. W. (ed.) (1973) Ovid.
London.
Bömer, F. (1969-86) P. Ovidius
Naso: Metamorphosen. Heidelberg.
Burian, P. "Myth into Muthos:
The Shaping of Tragic Plot" in Easterling
(1997) 178-208.
Burkert, W. (1966) "Greek Tragedy
and Sacrifical Ritual," GRBS 7:87-121.
Calder, W. M. (1966) "A Reconstruction
of Sophocles’ Polyxena," GRBS 7:31-56.
Casali, S. (1995a) "Strategies
of Tension (Ovid, Heroides 4)," PCPhS
41:1-15.
Casali,
S. (1995b) "Tragic Irony in Ovid, Heroides
9 and 11," CQ 45:505-11.
Clauss, J. J. (1997) "Conquest
of the Mephistophelian Nausicaa" in Clauss
and Johnston (1997) 149-77.
Clauss, J. J. and S. I. Johnston
(edd.) (1997) Medea. Princeton.
Collard, C. (1991) Euripides:
Hecuba. Warminster.J
Collard, C., Cropp, M. J.,
and Lee, K. H. (1995) Euripides: Select Fragmentary Plays,
vol. 1. Warminster.J
Conacher, D. J. (1967) Euripidean
Drama. Toronto.J
Conte, G. B. (1994) Latin Literature:
A History. Johns Hopkins.
Curley, D. (1997) "Ovid,
Met. 6.640: A Dialogue between Mother and Son,"
CQ 47:320-2.
Curley,
D. (1999) Metatheater: Heroines and Ephebes in
Ovid's Metamorphoses. Diss. University of Washington.
Currie, H. MacL. (1981) "Ovid
and the Roman Stage," ANRW 2.31.4:2701-42.
Davis, P. J. (1995) "Rewriting
Euripides: Ovid, Heroides 4," Scholia
n.s. 4:41-55.
Desmond, M. (1993) "When Dido
Reads Vergil: Gender and Intertextuality in Heroides
7," Helios 20:56-68.
De Vito, A. (1994) "The Essential
Seriousness of Heroides 4," RhM 137:312-30.
Dobrov, G. (1993) "The Tragic
and the Comic Tereus," AJP 114:189-234.
Duke, T. T. (1970-71) "Ovid's Pyramus
and Thisbe," CJ 66:320-7.
Due, O. S. (1974) Changing Forms.
Copenhagen.J
Easterling, P. E. (ed.) (1997)
The Cambridge Companion to Greek Tragedy. Cambridge.
Erdélyi, G. (1966) "A
Hippolytus Relief from Szöny," Acta Antiqua
14:211-23.
Feeney, D. C. (1991) The Gods in
Epic. Oxford.
Ferguson, J. (1960) "Catullus
and Ovid," TAPA 81:337-57.
Forbes Irving, P. M. C. (1990)
Metamorphosis in Greek Myths. Oxford.
Fowler, R. L. (1987) "The Rhetoric
of Desperation," HSPh 91:5-38.
Galinsky, G. K. (1972) "Hercules
Ovidianus (Metamorphoses 9,1-272)," WS
n.s. 6:92-116.
Galinsky,
G. K. (1975) Ovid’s Metamorphoses. California.
Gibert,
J. C. (1997) "Euripides’ Hippolytus Plays: Which
Came First?" CQ 47:85-97.
Glenn, E. (1986) The Metamorphoses:
Ovid's Roman Games.
Halleran, M. R. (1985) Stagecraft
in Euripides. London.
Halleran,
M. R. (1988) "Repetition and Irony at Sophocles,
Trachiniae 574-81," CP 83:129-31.
Halleran,
M. R. (1995) Euripides: Hippolytus. Warminster.
Halleran,
M. R. (1997) "It’s Not What You Say: Unspoken
Allusions in Greek Tragedy?" MD 39:151-63.
Hardie, P. (1990) "Ovid’s
Theban History: The First ‘Anti-Aeneid’?" CQ
40:224-35.
Hardie,
P. (1998) "Virgil and Tragedy" in C. Martindale
(ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Virgil. Cambridge.
Hinds,
S. E. (1993) "Medea in Ovid: Scenes from the Life of
an Intertextual Heroine," MD 30:9-47.
Hinds,
S. E. (1998) Allusion and Intertext. Cambridge.
Hollis, A. (1983) Ovid, Metamorphoses
Book VIII. Oxford. 2nd edition.
Horsfall, N. (1979) "Epic and
burlesque in Ovid, Met. VIII.260 ff.," CJ
74:319-32.
Hunter, R. (1993) The Argonautica
of Apollonius: Literary Studies. Cambridge.
Jacobson, H. (1974) Ovid’s
Heroides. Princeton.
Kennedy, D. (1984) "The Epistolary
Mode and the First of Ovid’s Heroides," CQ
34:413-22.
Kenney, E. J. (1973) "The Style
of the Metamorphoses" in Binns (1973) 116-53.
Kiso, A. (1984) The Lost Sophocles.
Vantage Press.
Knox, P. E. (1986) Ovid’s Metamorphoses
and the Traditions of Augustan Poetry. Cambridge.
Knox, P. E.
(1988) "Phaethon in Ovid and Nonnus," CQ
38:536-51.
Knox,
P. E. (1995) Ovid: Heroides, Select Epistles.
Cambridge.
Larmour, D. H. J. (1990) "Tragic
Contaminatio in Ovid’s Metamorphoses: Procne and
Medea; Philomela and Iphigeneia (6.424-674); Scylla and
Phaedra (8.19.151)," ICS 15:131-41.
Lloyd-Jones, H. (1996) Sophocles:
Fragments. Harvard.
Loraux, N. (1987) Tragic Ways of
Killing a Woman. Harvard.
Lowrie, M. (1993) "Myrrha's Second
Taboo, Ovid Metamorphoses 10.467-68," CPh
88:50ff.
March, J. R. (1987) The Creative
Poet. London.J
Mack, S. (1988) Ovid. Yale
Meridor, R. (1978) "Hecuba’s
Revenge: Some Observations on Euripides’ Hecuba,"
AJP 99:28-35.
Michelini, A. N. (1987) Euripides
and the Tragic Tradition. Wisconsin.
Nagle, B. R. (1983) "Byblis and
Myrrha: Two Incest Narratives in the Metamorphoses,"
CJ 78:301-15.
Newlands, C. (1986) "The
Simile of the Fractured Pipe in Ovid’s Metamorphoses,"
Ramus 15:143-53.
Newlands,
C. (1997) "The Metamorphosis of Ovid’s Medea"
in Clauss and Johnston (1997) 178-208.
Nikolaidis, A. G. (1985) "Some
Observations on Ovid’s Lost Medea," Latomus
44:383-7.
O’Connor-Visser, E. A. M. E.
(1987) Aspects of Human Sacrifice in the Tragedies of
Euripides. Amsterdam.
Otis, B. (1970) Ovid As an Epic Poet
. Cambridge. Second Edition
Page, D. L. (1938) Euripides:
Medea. Oxford.
Palmer, A. (1967) Heroides.
Hildesheim.
Paula, J. (1986) "Crises of Identity
in Ovid's Metamorphoses," BICS 33:17-25.
Perraud, L. A. (1983) "Amatores
Exclusi. Apostrophe and Separation in the Pyramus and
Thisbe Episode," CJ 79:135-9.
Rhorer, C. C. (1980) "Red and
White in Ovid's Metamorphoses: The Mulberry tree
in the Tale of Pyramus and Thisbe," Ramus 9:79-88.
Rudd, N. (1979) "Pyramus and Thisbe
in Shakespeare and Ovid. A Midsummer Night's Dream
and Metamorphoses 4.1-166" in D. West and T.
Woodman, Creative Imitation and Latin Literature.
Cambridge.
Seaford, R. (1989) "Homeric
and Tragic Sacrifice," TAPA 119:87-95.
Seaford,
R. (1996) Euripides: Bacchae. Warminster.
Segal, C. (1992) "Philomela's
Web and the Pleasures of the Text" in R. M. Wilhelm
and H. Jones (edd.), The Two Worlds of the Poet.
Wayne State.
Sifakis,
G. M. (1979) "Children in Greek Tragedy," BICS
26:67-80.
Smith, R. A. (1994) "Fantasy,
Myth, and Love Letters: Text and Tale in Ovid’s Heroides,"
Arethusa 27:247-73
Smith, R.
A. (1997) Poetic Allusion and Poetic Embrace in
Ovid and Virgil. Michigan.
Solodow, J. B. (1988) The World
of Ovid’s Metamorphoses. North Carolina.
Sutton, D. F. (1984) The Lost Sophocles.
University Press of America.
Taplin, O. (1977) The Stagecraft
of Aeschylus. Oxford.J
Thalmann, W. G. (1993) "Euripides
and Aeschylus: The Case of the Hekabe," ClAnt
12:126-59.
Tissol, G. (1997) The Face of Nature.
Princeton
Venini, P. (1952) "L’Ecuba
di Euripide e Ovidio," RIL 85:362-77.
Verducci, F. (1985) Ovid’s Toyshop
of the Heart. Princeton.
Vidal-Naquet, P. (1981) "The
Black Hunter and the Origins of the Athenian Ephebeia"
in Gordon (ed.) Myth, Religion and Society. Cambridge.
Webster, T. B. L. (1967) The Tragedies
of Euripides. London.J
Wilkinson, L. P. (1955) Ovid
Recalled. Cambridge.
Wise, V. M. (1977)
"Flight Myths in Ovid's Metamorphoses,"
Ramus 6:44-59.
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