Classical Receptions Journal: Editor’s Choice articles
The editor of Classical Receptions Journal has selected choice papers from recent issues, and we’ve made them freely available for you to read. This page will be updated with an article from each issue as it publishes.
From 8:4 The classicist in the cave: Bolaño’s theory of reading in By Night in Chile
Jacobo Myerston
From 8:3 Aryan, German, or Greek? Nietzsche’s Prometheus between antiquity and modernity
By Adam Lecznar
From 8.2
Postcolonial Sparagmos: Toni Morrison’s Sula and Wole Soyinka’s The Bacchae of Euripides: A Communion Rite
Justine McConell
From 8.1 Introduction: The Legacy of Greek Political Thought
Barbara Goff and Miriam Leonard
This special issue of the journal is currently free to read online.
Browse the Table of Contents
From 7.3 Editorial
Constanze Güthenke
The Method behind the madness: Katie Mitchell, Stanislavski, and the classics
Emma Cole
From 7.2 A pioneer of classical studies in Japan, Shigeichi Kure: a focus on his translations
Ichiro Taida
From 7.1 Introduction: The Legacy of the Republican Roman Senate
Catherine Steel
From 6.3 Indigeneity and classical reception in The Voyage of Governor Phillip to Botany Bay
Marguerite Johnson
From 6.2 Early Modern Antigones: Receptions, Refractions, Replays
Robert S. Miola
From 6.1 ‘The Painful Memory of Woe’: Greek tragedy and the Greek Civil War in the work of George Seferis
Vayos Liapis
In Memoriam: Professor Ahmed Etman (1945–2013)
Lorna Hardwick
From 5.3 Antiquity after antiquity: a (post) modern reading of antiquity in Bulgarian poetry
Yoana Sirakova
Afterword: Omni-Local Classical Receptions
Emily Greenwood
From 5.2 Reception — a new humanism? Receptivity, pedagogy, the transhistorical
Charles Martindale
Redeeming Xenophon: historiographical reception and the transhistorical
Tim Rood
From 5.1 ‘Aryan, German, or Greek? Nietzsche’s Prometheus between antiquity and modernity
Adam Lecznar
From 4.2 ‘We’re here too, the ones without names.’ A study of female voices as imagined by Margaret Atwood, Carol Ann Duffy, and Marguerite Yourcenar
Susanna Braund
From 4.1 Sisyphus and Caesar: the opposition of Greece and Rome in Albert Camus' absurd cycle
Luke Richardson
From 3.2 Proems, codas, and formalism in Homeric reception
Simon Perris
From 3.1 The myth of return: restoration as reception in eighteenth-century Rome
Jessica Hughes
From 2:2 Editorial
Jas Elsner
Pausanias as historian in Winckelmann’s History
Katherine Harloe
From 2:1 Editorial
Lorna Hardwick
Hyperion’s symposium: an erotics of reception
Joshua Billings
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