Thursday, September 12, 2024

Open Access Journal: Römisches Österreich

 [First posted in AWOL 16 January 2024, updates 12 September 2024]
 
ISSN: 1012-5833

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Das Römische Österreich berichtet seit 1974 zur römerzeitlichen Geschichte und Archäologie des österreichischen Raumes und seiner Nachbargebiete.

Ab Band 43 (2020) erscheint die Zeitschrift auch online unter der Creative Commons Lizenz 4.0 Attribution. Erscheinungstermin der Online-Ausgabe ist der 01.11.2021. Ältere Jahrgänge werden im Moment für die digitale Veröffentlichung vorbereitet und werden demnächst hier zur Verfügung gestellt werden.

Vol. 46 (2023)

 


See AWOL's full List of Open Access Journals in Ancient Studies

Open Access Journal: Cuadernos de Filología Clásica. Estudios Latinos

First posted in AWOL 21 October 2016, updated 12 September 2024]

 
Cuadernos de Filología Clásica. Estudios Latinos
ISSN:1131-9062
ISSN-e: 1988-2343

Portada de Cuadernos de Filología Clásica. Estudios Latinos
Cuadernos de Filología Clásica. Estudios Latinos (ISSN 1131-9062, ISSN-e 1988-2343), que realiza el Departamento de Filología Latina de la Universidad Complutense de Madrid y continúa desde 1991 la antigua revista Cuadernos de Filología Clásica, consta de dos secciones: artículos y reseñas. Tiene una periodicidad semestral y acepta trabajos en todos los idiomas admitidos por la FIEC. Las contribuciones se enmarcan en el área de conocimiento de Filología Latina, referida esta no solo a la Lengua, la Literatura y los textos latinos de la época clásica, sino también a su pervivencia y toda la producción en lengua latina de épocas posteriores.
Vol. 44 Núm. 1 (2024)
Publicado: 2024-09-05

Revista de libros


 

Open Access Journal: Argos: Revista de la Asociación Argentina de Estudios Clásicos

[First posted in AWOL 18 August 2014, updated 12  September 2024]

Argos: Revista de la Asociación Argentina de Estudios Clásicos
versión On-line ISSN 1853-6379
ISSN: 0325-4194
Misión Publicar artículos, notas breves y reseñas sobre temas de filología, filosofía, historia y arte grecorromanos, producidos por investigadores argentinos y extranjeros.


Núm. 50 (2023): Argos

 

Argos 

Revista de la Asociación Argentina de Estudios Clásicos (AADEC)

Publicado: 10.09.2024

Open Access Journal: Plato Journal

 [First posted in AWOL 29 October 2021, updated 12 Septe,ber 2024]
 
ISSN: 2079-7567   
e-ISSN: 2183-4105
View Vol. 22 (2021): Plato Journal #22
The aim of this journal is to promote international dialogue on Plato across different languages and scholarly approaches. The journal has been established by the International Plato Society, founded in 1989. The Society also holds triennial symposia and occasional additional activities and supports regional Plato Societies. It also sponsors the publication of scholarly books on Plato, in collaboration with Academia Verlag, Sankt Augustin. It is open to all Plato scholars world-wide to read this journal, to make responses to the papers (which should be sent to the Editor and are subject to editorial moderation), and, in due course, to submit papers for inclusion in the journal. The languages of the journal are those of the International Plato Society, namely English, French, German, Italian and Spanish.

Thanks to a great effort from our Publisher House, Coimbra University Press, the old volumes of our journal from the very first 2001 issue, are now available in the new format, with proper metadata and properly indexed.

The first 12 volumes of Plato Journal are gathered on line in the new website here.

https://impactum-journals.uc.pt/platojournal/index

Vol. 25 (2024)

Full Issue

 

Vol. 24 (2023): Plato Journal #24
View All Issues

 

 

Wednesday, September 11, 2024

Open Access Journal: Pylon. Editions and Studies of Ancient Texts

[First posted in AWOL 18 March 2021, updates 11 Septembe 2024]
 

Pylon. Editions and Studies of Ancient Texts aims to publish high quality research on Greek, Latin and Coptic papyri in a timely manner. New text editions of documentary, literary and subliterary papyri or corrections to previously published texts are especially sought. General studies based on papyrological evidence that relate to any aspect of Greco-Roman society in Egypt are also welcome. Articles can be in English, French, German and Italian.

Pylon (ancient Greek πυλών or "gateway") is the OJS journal of the Papyrological Publishing Platform (P3), a collaborative project funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft and led by Heidelberg University's Institute for Papyrology and University Library and Duke University's Collaborative for Classics Computing in the United States. The goal of P3 is to facilitate data transfer between scholarly journals and the papyrological data repository papyri.info, as it converts transcriptions of ancient texts to EpiDoc for easy transfer to papyri.info. The journal is perceived as a central gateway for this, hence its name.

Although Pylon is primarily an online journal that publishes XML, it also provides PDFs of all articles for download. These are generated automatically from the XML, and are not subject to traditional formatting.

More information about the journal is available here. Details concerning the submission process can be found under submissions; questions can also be directed to any of the editors.

Notes and Corrections

 

Vol. 1 (2022)

 

See AWOL's full List of Open Access Journals in Ancient Studies

 

Open Access Journal: Classics@

 [First posted in AWOL 1/11/2009, most recently updated 11 September 2024]

Classics@
ISSN: 2327-2996  

Classics@ (ISSN: 2327-2996) is designed to bring contemporary classical scholarship to a wide audience online. Each issue will be dedicated to its own topic, often with guest editors, for an in-depth exploration of important current problems in the field of Classics. We hope that Classics@ will appeal not only to professional classicists, but also to the intellectually curious who are willing to enter the conversation in our discipline. We hope that they find that classical scholarship engages issues of great significance to a wide range of cultural and scholarly concerns and does so in a rigorous and challenging way.

Each issue of Classics@ is meant to be not static but dynamic, continuing to evolve with interaction from its readers as participants. New issues will appear when the editors think there is good material to offer. Often it will emphasize work done in and through the Center for Hellenic Studies, but it will also call attention to fresh and interesting work presented elsewhere on the web. It stresses the importance of research-in-progress, encouraging collegial debate (while discouraging polemics for the sake of polemics) as well as the timely sharing of important new information.

The CHS welcomes proposals for future issues of Classics@. Proposal forms should be completed and sent via e-mail to Classics@ Managing Editor Keith DeStone (kdestone(at)chs.harvard.edu). Please see the CHS Prospective Authors page for style guidelines and templates. Download the proposal form here.

For information about an effort to disseminate drafts prior to publication, visit FirstDrafts.

Classics@25: Γέρα: Studies in honor of Professor Menelaos Christopoulos

Reflecting on a distinguished academic career marked by scholarly rigor, intellectual passion, and unwavering dedication to the field of Classical Studies, the editors and the contributors of this volume pay tribute to our distinguished colleague and dear friend Menelaos Christopoulos upon his retirement, following the International Conference that was… Read More

Violence against women urbi et orbi

 

Classics@ 23

This collection derives from a conference panel organized by the Working Group on Athenian Hegemony.… Our call for papers for the Montreal panel adumbrates some of the themes that are covered in the selection of papers that appear in the present collection:

The goal of this panel is to […] continue to flesh out our understanding of life in the poleis of the Athenian arkhē in its specific manifestations. How did the increased availability of resources collected from the allies affect Athenian constitution and society? What actions could, and did, Athenians or allies as individuals and groups take to steer alliance policy, especially outside of simple appeal to the ekklēsia? Did Athenian propaganda, often conducted on a religious plane, have lasting effects on local cult practice? What internal changes are detectable in the poleis opposed to the arkhē, as they adjusted to the new political and economic landscape of the Mediterranean? How did life in arkhē manifest in an individual or popular experience? We hope that by moving away from simplistic moral evaluations of Athenian ‘imperialism’ we shall be able to enrich our understanding of the fifth century and the monumental changes in Greek civilization that it witnessed.

– From the Introduction

Table of Contents

Title Page and Dedication

Thomas Figueira, Introduction

1. David A. Teegarden, “The Athenian Empire and Resistance to Tyranny.”

2. Hilary J. C. Lehmann, “Lessons from Home: Remembering the Arkhē in Fourth Century Oratory.”

3. Danielle Smotherman Bennett, “My Fair Lady: Exploring Social Change through Athenian Vase-Painting in the Fifth Century BCE.”

4. Brian Rutishauser, “Trade Routes, Location, and Naval Power: Corcyra’s Potential as an Athenian Ally in 431 BCE and Beyond.”

5. Michael McGlin, “Loans from Attic Temples to the State.”

6. Aaron Hershkowitz, “Kleon and Tribute: Re-Examining the Import of Financial Expertise in Athenian Statesmanship.”

7. Thomas Figueira, “The Membership of the Early Delian League” [with accompanying Table].