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  1.  15
    (1 other version)1. Cover Cover (pp. C1-C4).Eleanor Cowan, Renaud Gagné, Patrick Glauthier, Julia Hejduk, Josiah Osgood & Christopher Welser - 2009 - Classical Antiquity 28 (2):279-327.
    The conflict between Jupiter and Juno in the Aeneid is commonly read as a battle between the forces of order and chaos. The present article argues that this schematization, though morally and aesthetically satisfying, fails to account for most of the data. Virgil's Jupiter is in fact concerned solely with power and adulation, despite persistent attempts by readers——and characters in the poem——to see him as benign. By systematically discussing every appearance of Jupiter in the poem, the article seeks to correct (...)
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  2.  16
    Bugonia and the Aetiology of Didactic Poetry in Virgil, Georgics 4.Patrick Glauthier - 2019 - Classical Quarterly 69 (2):745-763.
    Roughly half way through the fourthGeorgic, Virgil confronts a sad reality: on occasion the entire population of a hive can perish without warning and leave the bee-keeping farmer bee-less. In response to such a devastating loss, the poet describes an Egyptian procedure, to which modern critics have given the namebugonia, whereby the farmer acquires a new swarm of bees from the putrefying carcass of a dead ox (4.281–314). After the account ofbugonia, the poem takes a notoriously unexpected turn. Virgil asks (...)
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  3.  27
    Phaedrus, Callimachus and the recusatio to Success.Patrick Glauthier - 2009 - Classical Antiquity 28 (2):248-278.
    The following article investigates how Phaedrus' Latin verse fables engage standard Callimachean topoi. When Phaedrus imitates the Hymn to Apollo he fails to banish Envy and when he adopts Callimachus' own polemical allusions to Aesop he turns them upside down. Such texts are essentially Callimachean in spirit and technique and constitute a recusatio: by “mishandling” or “abusing” and thus “rejecting” various Callimachean topoi and the role of the “successful” Callimachean poet, the fabulist demonstrates his skill and versatility within the Callimachean (...)
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  4.  11
    Grattius as an Augustan poet - (s.J.) Green (ed., Trans.) Grattius. Hunting an Augustan poet. Pp. X + 286. Oxford: Oxford university press, 2018. Cased, £60, us$80. Isbn: 978-0-19-878901-7. [REVIEW]Patrick Glauthier - 2019 - The Classical Review 69 (2):459-462.
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  5.  29
    Selected papers of A.J. Woodman. A.J. Woodman from poetry to history. Selected papers. Pp. XIV + 446. Oxford: Oxford university press, 2012. Cased, £90, us$170. Isbn: 978-0-19-960865-2. [REVIEW]Patrick Glauthier - 2015 - The Classical Review 65 (1):116-118.
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