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  1. Colloquium 2.David K. O'connor - 1998 - Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium of Ancient Philosophy 14 (1):31-52.
  • Colloquium 1: On Plato’s ПOΛITEIA.Stephen Menn - 2006 - Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium of Ancient Philosophy 21 (1):1-55.
  • ‘Marcellinus'’ Life of Thucydides: criticism and criteria in the biographical tradition.Judith Maitland - 1996 - Classical Quarterly 46 (02):538-.
    The focus of this paper will be the critical material in the particular Life of Thucydides which is attributed to ‘Marcellinus’.1 After some preliminary remarks about the extant Lives, I shall identify the critical material to be discussed, and proceed to examine its composition and possible origin. I shall suggest that, like the biographical material, the critical passages are a compilation of material from different sources and show a variety of approaches. In discussing these approaches, I shall show that the (...)
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  • ‘Marcellinus'’ Life of Thucydides: criticism and criteria in the biographical tradition.Judith Maitland - 1996 - Classical Quarterly 46 (2):538-558.
    The focus of this paper will be the critical material in the particular Life of Thucydides which is attributed to ‘Marcellinus’.1 After some preliminary remarks about the extant Lives, I shall identify the critical material to be discussed, and proceed to examine its composition and possible origin. I shall suggest that, like the biographical material, the critical passages are a compilation of material from different sources and show a variety of approaches. In discussing these approaches, I shall show that the (...)
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  • A Civic Alternative to Stoicism: The Ethics of Hellenistic Honorary Decrees.Benjamin Gray - 2018 - Classical Antiquity 37 (2):187-235.
    This article shows how the public inscriptions of Hellenistic poleis, especially decrees in honor of leading citizens, illuminate Greek ethical thinking, including wider debates about questions of central importance for Greek ethical philosophers. It does so by comparing decrees' rhetoric with the ethical language and doctrines of different ancient philosophical schools. Whereas some scholars identify ethical views comparable to Stoic ideas in Hellenistic decrees, this article argues that there are more significant overlaps, especially in decrees from Asia Minor dating to (...)
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  • The Question of Character-Development: Plutarch and Tacitus.Christopher Gill - 1983 - Classical Quarterly 33 (02):469-.
    It is often claimed that in the ancient world character was believed to be something fixed, given at birth and immutable during life. This belief is said to underlie the portrayal of individuals in ancient historiography and biography, particularly in the early Roman Empire; and tc constitute the chief point of difference in psychological assumptions between ancient and modern biography. In this article, I wish to examine the truth of these claims, with particular reference to Plutarch and Tacitus.
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  • The Question of Character-Development: Plutarch and Tacitus.Christopher Gill - 1983 - Classical Quarterly 33 (2):469-487.
    It is often claimed that in the ancient world character was believed to be something fixed, given at birth and immutable during life. This belief is said to underlie the portrayal of individuals in ancient historiography and biography, particularly in the early Roman Empire; and tc constitute the chief point of difference in psychological assumptions between ancient and modern biography. In this article, I wish to examine the truth of these claims, with particular reference to Plutarch and Tacitus.
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  • The Structure of the Plutarchan Book.Timothy E. Duff - 2011 - Classical Antiquity 30 (2):213-278.
    This study focuses not on individual Lives or pairs of Lives, but on the book as a whole and its articulation across the full corpus. It argues that the Plutarchan book consists of up to four distinct sections: prologue, first Life, second Life, synkrisis. Each of these sections has a fairly consistent internal structure, and each has a distinct set of strategies for opening, for closure, and for managing the transition from one section to the next. Prologues provide an introduction (...)
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  • Individuality and biography in the renaissance.Peter Burke - 1997 - The European Legacy 2 (8):1372-1382.
  • Los dos polos de la biografía antigua y la hagiografía.Tomás Fernández - 2020 - Circe de Clásicos y Modernos 24 (2):69-90.
    La biografía griega puede asociarse a dos polos principales: en uno predomina el eje sintagmático, con sucesión, y en el otro el paradigmático, sin sucesión. El primero se relaciona con la historiografía, tiene un método cercano a la investigación o ἱστορία y tiene su tipo ideal más difundido en la biografía energética o peripatética ; el segundo se liga a la retórica demostrativa, su método es próximo al del anticuarianismo y aparece en la biografía alejandrina. Esta contribución sugiere que en (...)
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