Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
  • Cited by 8
    • Show more authors
    • You may already have access via personal or institutional login
    • Select format
    • Publisher:
      Cambridge University Press
      Publication date:
      29 June 2009
      15 January 2009
      ISBN:
      9780511575860
      9780521828222
      Dimensions:
      (228 x 152 mm)
      Weight & Pages:
      0.52kg, 240 Pages
      Dimensions:
      Weight & Pages:
    You may already have access via personal or institutional login
  • Selected: Digital
    Add to cart View cart Buy from Cambridge.org

    Book description

    This provocative book is a major contribution to our understanding of Martial's poetics, his vision of the relationship between art and reality, and his role in formulating modern perceptions of Rome. The study shows how on every scale from the microscopic to the cosmic, Martial displays epigram's ambition to enact the sociality of urban life, but also to make Rome rise out of epigram's architecture and gestures. Martial's distinctive aesthetic, grounded in paradox and inconsistency, ensures that the humblest, most throwaway poetic form is best poised to capture first century empire in all its dazzling complexity. As well as investigating many of Martial's central themes - monumentality, economics, death, carnival, exile - this books also questions what kind of a mascot Martial is for classics today in our own advanced, multicultural world, and will be an invaluable guide for scholars and students of classical literature and Roman history.

    Reviews

    Rimell's study is sophisticated...good poetry--and especially a large collection of poems that interacts with a long established poetic canon--invites the reader to identify and investigate intra- and extra-textual dynamics..." --BMCR

    Refine List

    Actions for selected content:

    Select all | Deselect all
    • View selected items
    • Export citations
    • Download PDF (zip)
    • Save to Kindle
    • Save to Dropbox
    • Save to Google Drive

    Save Search

    You can save your searches here and later view and run them again in "My saved searches".

    Please provide a title, maximum of 40 characters.
    ×

    Contents

    Bibliography
    Adams, J. N. (1982) The Roman Sexual Vocabulary. London.
    Ahl, F. (1984) ‘The rider and the horse: politics and power in Roman poetry from Horace to StatiusANRW II.32.1: 40–124.
    Akbar Khan, H. (1967) ‘Catullus 99 and the other kiss-poemsLatomus 26: 609–18.
    Anderson, W. S. (1986) ‘The theory and practice of poetic arrangement from Vergil to Ovid’ in Fraistat, (ed.) 44–65.
    Austin, C. and Bastianini, G. (2002) Posidippi Pellaei Quae Supersunt Omnia. Milan.
    Bakhtin, M. (1968) Rabelais and his World. Trans. Iswolsky, H.. Cambridge, MA.
    Barchiesi, A. (1997) The Poet and the Prince. Ovid and Augustan Discourse. Berkeley, Los Angeles and London.
    Barchiesi, A. (2005a) ‘The search for the perfect book: a PS to the New Posidippus’ in Gutzwiller, (ed.) 320–42.
    Barchiesi, A. (2005b) ‘Centre and periphery’ in Harrison, S. J. (ed.) A Companion to Latin Literature. Oxford. 394–405.
    Bardon, J. (1791) The Epitaph Writer. Chester.
    Barker, C. (2000) Cultural Studies. Theory and Practice. London.
    Bartsch, S. (1994) Actors in the Audience. Theatricality and Doublespeak from Nero to Hadrian. Cambridge, MA.
    Barwick, K. (1958) ‘Zyklen bei Martial und in der kleinen Gedichten des CatullPhilologus 102: 284–318.
    Batstone, W. (1998) ‘Review of Swann's Martial's Catullus. The Reception of an Epigrammatic RivalCPh 93: 286–9.
    Beard, M. and Henderson, J. (2001) Classical Art. From Greece to Rome. Oxford.
    Bernstein, M. (1992) Bitter Carnival. Princeton.
    Best, E. E. jr. (1969) ‘Martial's readers in the Roman worldCJ 64: 208–12.
    Bing, P. (1988a) ‘Theocritus’ epigrams on the statues of ancient poetsA&A 34: 117–23.
    Bing, P. (1988b) The Well-read Muse. Present and Past in Callimachus and the Hellenistic Poets. Hypomnemata 90, Göttingen.
    Bing, P. (1998) ‘Between literature and the monuments’ in Harder, et al. (eds.) 21–43.
    Blümner, H. (1869) Die gewerbliche Thätigkeit der Völker des klassischen Altertums. Leipzig.
    Bowra, M. (1938) Early Greek Elegists. Oxford.
    Boyle, A. J. (ed.) (1988) The Imperial Muse. To Juvenal through Ovid. Berwick.
    Boyle, A. J. (1995a) ‘Martialis redivivus. Evaluating the unexpected classicRamus 24: 82–101.
    Boyle, A. J. (ed.) (1995b) Roman Literature and Ideology. Ramus Essays for J. P. Sullivan. Bendigo.
    Boyle, A. J. (2003) ‘Introduction’ in Boyle, and Dominik, (eds.) 1–67.
    Boyle, A. J. and Dominik, W. J. (eds.) (2003) Flavian Rome. Culture, Image, Text. Leiden and Boston.
    Boyle, A. J. and Sullivan, J. P. (eds.) (1996) Martial in English. Harmondsworth.
    Boym, S. (1991) Death in Quotation Marks. Cultural Myths of the Modern Poet. Cambridge, MA.
    Bramble, J. C. (1982) ‘Martial and Juvenal’ in Kenney, E. J. and Clausen, W. (eds.) The Cambridge History of Classical Literature, vol. 2. Cambridge. 597–632.
    Braund, S. M. (1996) ‘The solitary feast – a contradiction in terms?’ BICS 41: 37–52.
    Bridge, R. T. and Lake, E. D. C. (1908) Select Epigrams of Martial. Oxford.
    Brown, N. O. (1985) Life against Death. The Psychoanalytic Reading of History. Middletown, CT.
    Bulloch, A. W. (1985) ‘Hellenistic Poetry’ in Easterling, P. E. and Knox, B. M. W. (eds.) The Cambridge History of Classical Literature, vol 1. Cambridge. 541–621.
    Burnikel, W. (1980) Untersuchungen zur Struktur des Witzepigramms bei Lukillius und Martial. Wiesbaden.
    Busch, S. (1999) Versus balnearum. Die antike Dichtung über Büder und Baden im römisches Reich. Stuttgart and Leipzig.
    Butrica, J. L. (1983) ‘Martial's little Livy (14.190)CB 59: 9–11.
    Byrne, S. N. (2001) ‘Martial and three imitators: Luxorius, Godfrey of Winchester and Henry of HuntingdonCB 77: 61–73.
    Cairns, F. (1973) ‘Catullus’ basia poems (5, 7, 48)Mnemosyne 26: 15–22.
    Cameron, A. (1993) The Greek Anthology from Meleager to Planudes. Oxford.
    Cameron, A. (1995) Callimachus and his Critics. Princeton.
    Campbell, B. (1969) ‘Martial's slain sow poems: an esthetic analysisC&M 30: 347–62.
    Carrington, A. G. (1960) Aspects of Martial's Epigrams. Windsor.
    Carrington, A. G. (1972) ‘Martial’ in Dudley, D. R. (ed.) Neronians and Flavians. Silver Latin I. London and Boston. 236–70.
    Carson, A. (1999) Economy of the Unlost. Reading Simonides of Keos with Paul Celan. Princeton.
    Casali, S. (2005) ‘Il popolo dotto, il popolo corrotto. Ricezioni dell'Ars (Marziale, Giovenale, la seconda Sulpicia)’ in Landolfi, L. and Monella, P. (eds.) Arte Perennat Amor. Riflessioni sull'intertestualità ovidiana. L'Ars Amatoria. Bologna. 13–55.
    Cavallo, G., Fedeli, P. and Giordina, A. (eds.) (1991) Lo spazio letterario di Roma antica, vol. 3: La ricezione del testo. Rome.
    Citroni, M. (1968) ‘Motivi di polemica letteraria negli epigrammi di MarzialeDArch 2: 259–301.
    Citroni, M. (1969) ‘La teoria lessinghiana dell'epigramma e le interpretazioni moderne di MarzialeMaia 21: 215–43.
    Citroni, M. (1975) M. Valerii Martialis Epigrammaton Liber Primus. Florence.
    Citroni, M. (1988) ‘Publicazione e dediche dei libri in MarzialeMaia 40: 3–39.
    Citroni, M. (1989) ‘Marziale e la letteratura per i Saturnali (poetica dell' intrattenimento e cronologia della publicazione dei libri)ICS 14: 201–26.
    Claassen, J. (1999) Displaced Persons. The Literature of Exile from Cicero to Boethius. London.
    Clairmont, C. W. (1970) Gravestone and Epigram. Greek Memorials from the Archaic and Classical Periods. Mainz.
    Coiro, A. B. (1988) Robert Herrick's Hesperides and the Epigram Book Tradition. Baltimore.
    Coleman, K. (1996) ‘The emperor Domitian and literatureANRW 2.32.5, 3087–115.
    Coleman, K (1998) ‘Martial Book 8 and the politics of ad 93Proceedings of the Leeds International Seminar 10: 337–57.
    Coleman, K (2006) M. Valerii Martialis Liber Spectaculorum. Oxford.
    Coleman, R. (1977) Virgil, Eclogues. Cambridge.
    Colton, R. E. (1991) Juvenal's Use of Martial's Epigrams. Amsterdam.
    Connors, C. (1994) ‘Famous last words: authorship and death in the Satyricon and Neronian Rome’ in Elsner, J. and Masters, J. (eds.) Reflections of Nero. London. 225–36.
    Connors, C. (1998) Petronius the Poet. Verse and Literary Tradition in the Satyricon. Cambridge.
    Connors, C. (2000) ‘Imperial space and time: the literature of leisure’ in Taplin, O. (ed.) Literature in the Roman World. A New Perspective. Oxford. 208–34.
    Crowther, N. B. (1979) ‘Water and wine as symbols of inspirationMnemosyne 32: 1–11.
    Cuomo, S. (2001) Ancient Mathematics. London.
    Damon, C. (1992) ‘Statius Silvae 4.9: libertas Decembris?’ ICS 17: 301–8.
    Darwall-Smith, K. (1996) Emperors and Architecture. A Study of Flavian Rome. Brussels.
    Davies, P. J. E. (2000) Death and the Emperor. Roman Funerary Monuments from Augustus to Marcus Aurelius. Austin, TX.
    Day, J. W. (1989) ‘Rituals in stone: early Greek epigrams and monumentsJHS 109: 16–28.
    Man, P. (1979) ‘Autobiography as de-facementModern Language Notes 95(5): 919–30.
    Man, P. (1985) ‘Lyrical voice in contemporary theory: Riffaterre and Jauss’ in Hošek, C. and Parker, P. (eds.) Lyric Poetry. Beyond New Criticism. New York. 55–72.
    Derrida, J. (1978) Writing and Difference. Trans. Bass, A.. London.
    Devlin, D. D. (1980) Wordsworth and the Poetry of Epitaphs. London.
    Dilke, O. A. W. (1987) Mathematics and Measurement. London.
    Dinter, M. (2005) ‘Epic and epigram: minor heroes in Virgil's AeneidCQ 55(1): 153–69.
    Duff, J. W. (1929) Martial, Realism and Sentiment in the Epigram. Cambridge.
    Dupont, F. (1999) The Invention of Literature. From Greek Intoxication to the Latin Book. Trans. Lloyd, J.. Baltimore and London.
    Duret, L. (1977) ‘Martial et la deuxième Épode d'Horace: quelque reflection sur l'imitationREL 55: 173ff.
    Dyson, S. L. and Prior, R. E. (1995) ‘Horace, Martial and Rome: two poetic outsiders read the ancient cityArethusa 28: 245–63.
    Edwards, C. (1996) Writing Rome. Textual Approaches to the City. Cambridge.
    Evans, R. (2003) ‘Containment and corruption: the discourse of Flavian empire’ in Boyle, and Dominik, (eds.) 255–76.
    Fagan, G. G. (1999) Bathing in Public in the Roman World. Michigan.
    Fantuzzi, M. and Hunter, R. (eds.) (2004) Tradition and Innovation in Hellenistic Poetry. Cambridge.
    Farrell, J. (1999) ‘The Ovidian corpus: poetic body and poetic text’ in Hardie, P., Barchiesi, A. and Hinds, S. (eds.) Ovidian Transformations. Essays on the Metamorphoses and its Reception. Cambridge Philological Society Supplement no. 23, Cambridge. 127–41.
    Fearnley, H. (1998) ‘Reading Martial's Rome’. Dissertation, University of Southern California.
    Fearnley, H. (2003) ‘Reading the imperial revolution: Martial Epigrams 10’ in Boyle, and Dominik, (eds.) 613–36.
    Feeney, D. (1986) ‘History and revelation in Vergil's underworldPCPS 32: 1–24.
    Feeney, D. (1999) ‘Mea tempora: patterning of time in the Metamorphoses’ in Hardie, P., Barchiesi, A. and Hinds, S. (eds.) Ovidian Transformations. Essays on the Metamorphoses and its Reception. Cambridge Philological Society Supplement no. 23, Cambridge. 13–30.
    Ferguson, J. (1963) ‘Catullus and MartialProceedings of the African Classical Association 6: 3–15.
    Ferguson, J. (1970) ‘The epigrams of CallimachusG&R 17: 64–80.
    Fitts, D. (1956) Sixty Poems of Martial in Translation. New York.
    Fitzgerald, W. (1995) Catullan Provocations. Lyric Poetry and the Drama of Position. Berkeley and Los Angeles.
    Fitzgerald, W. (2007) Martial and the World of Epigram. Chicago.
    Fletcher, G. B. A. (1983) ‘On MartialLatomus 42, 404–11.
    Foucault, M. (1987) Death and the Labyrinth. The World of Raymond Roussel. London.
    Foulou, A. (1996) ‘La Mort et l'au-delà chez ProperceREL 74: 155–67.
    Fowler, D. P. (1995) ‘Martial and the BookRamus 24: 31–58.
    Fowler, D. P. (2000) Roman Constructions. Readings in Post-Modern Latin. Oxford.
    Fraistat, N. (ed.) (1986) Poems in their Place. The Intertextuality and Order of Poetic Collections. Chapel Hill, NC, and London.
    France, P. and Kidd, W. (2000) Death and Memory. Stirling.
    Freudenberg, K. (2001) Satires of Rome. Threatening Poses from Lucilius to Juvenal. Cambridge.
    Freudenberg, K. (ed.) (2005) The Cambridge Companion to Roman Satire. Cambridge.
    Friedländer, L. (1886) M. Valerii Martialis epigrammaton libri. Leipzig.
    Friedländer, P. and Hoffleit, H. B. (1948) Epigrammata. Greek Inscriptions in Verse from the Beginnings to the Persian Wars. Berkeley.
    Fusi, A. (2006) M. Valerii Martialis Epigrammaton Liber Tertius. Hildesheim.
    Galán Vioque, G. (2002) Martial, Book VII. A Commentary. trans. Zoltowski, J. J.. Leiden, Boston and Cologne.
    Garber, F. (1988) ‘Pastoral spacesTexan Studies in Literature and Language 30: 431–60.
    Garrison, D. H. (1978) Mild Frenzy. A Reading of the Hellenistic Love Epigram. Wiesbaden.
    Garthwaite, J. (1990) ‘Martial, Book 6, on Domitian's moral censorshipPrudentia 22: 13–22.
    Garthwaite, J. (1993) ‘The panegyrics of Domitian in Martial Book 9Ramus 22: 78–101.
    Garthwaite, J. (1998a) ‘Patronage and poetic immortality in Martial, Book 9Mnemosyne 51: 161–75.
    Garthwaite, J. (1998b) ‘Putting a price on praise: Martial's debate with Domitian in Book 5’ in Grewing (ed.) (1998a) 157–72.
    Garthwaite, J. (2001) ‘Reevaluating epigrammatic cycles in Martial Book 2Ramus 30(1): 46–55.
    Geysson, J. W. (1999) ‘Sending a book to the Palatine: Martial 1.70 and OvidMnemosyne 52: 718–38.
    Gifford, T. (1999) Pastoral. London.
    Girard, R. (1977) Violence and the Sacred. Trans. Gregory, P.. Baltimore, MD.
    Gold, B. K. (ed.) (1982) Literary and Artistic Patronage in Ancient Rome. Austin, TX.
    Gold, B. K. (2003) ‘Accipe divitias et vatum maximus esto: money, poetry, mendicancy and patronage in Martial’ in Boyle, and Dominik, (eds.) 591–612.
    Goldhill, S. (1994) ‘The naïve and knowing eye’ in Goldhill, S. and Osborne, R. (eds.) Art and Text in Ancient Greek Culture. Cambridge. 197–223.
    Gow, A. S. F. and Page, D. L. (eds.) (1965) The Greek Anthology. Hellenistic Epigram, 2 vols. Cambridge.
    Gowers, E. (1993) The Loaded Table. Representations of Food in Latin Literature. Oxford.
    Gowers, E. (2005) ‘The restless companion: Horace, Satires 1 and 2’ in Freudenberg, (ed.) (2005) 48–61.
    Gowing, A. M. (2005) Empire and Memory. The Representation of the Roman Republic in Imperial Literature. Cambridge.
    Greenwood, M. A. P (1998a) ‘Martial, gossip and the language of rumour’ in Grewing (ed.) (1998a) 278–314.
    Greenwood, M. A. P (1998b) ‘Talking to water: an epigram cycle in Martial Book 4 (4.18, 4.22, 4.63)RhM 141: 367–72.
    Grewing, F. (1996) ‘Möglichkeiten und Grenzen des Vergleichs: Martials Diadumenos und Catulls LesbiaHermes 124: 333–54.
    Grewing, F. (1997) Martial Buch VI. Ein Kommentar. Göttingen.
    Grewing, F. (ed.) (1998a) Toto notus in orbe. Perspektiven der Martial-Interpretation. Stuttgart.
    Grewing, F. (1998b) ‘Etymologie und etymologische Wortspiele in den Epigrammen Martials’ in Grewing (ed.) (1998a) 315–56.
    Grewing, F. (1999) ‘Mundus inversus: Fiction und Wirklichkeit in Martials Büchern XIII und XIVPrometheus 25: 259–81.
    Griffin, J. (1985) Latin Poets and Roman Life. London.
    Griffin, M. (1976) Seneca. A Philosopher in Politics. Oxford.
    Griffith, J. G. (1969) ‘Juvenal, Statius, and the Flavian EstablishmentG&R 16: 134–50.
    Gunderson, E. (1996) ‘The ideology of the arenaClAnt. 15: 113–51.
    Gunderson, E. (2003) ‘The Flavian amphitheatre: all the world as stage’ in Boyle, and Dominik, (eds.) 637–58.
    Gutzwiller, K. J. (ed.) (1998) Poetic Garlands. Hellenistic Epigram in Context. Berkeley.
    Gutzwiller, K. J. (ed.) (2005) The New Posidippus. A Hellenistic Poetry Book. Oxford.
    Habinek, T. (1998) The Politics of Latin Literature. Princeton.
    Hadley, P. (1991) Epic to Epigram. An Anthology of Classical Verse. London.
    Hallett, J. P. (1996) ‘Nec castrare velis meos libellos: sexual and poetic lusus in Catullus, Martial and the Carmina Priapea’ in Klodt, C. (ed.) Satura Lanx. Festschrift für W. A. Frenkel zum 70. Geburtstag. Hildesheim. 321–44.
    Hammond, M. (1972) The City in the Ancient World. Cambridge, MA.
    Harcum, C. G. (1914) Roman Cooks. Baltimore.
    Harder, M. A., Regtuit, R. F. and Wakker, G. C. (eds.) (1998) Genre in Hellenistic Poetry. Groningen.
    Hardie, A. (1983) Statius and the Silvae. Poets, Patrons and Epideixis in the Greco-Roman World. London.
    Hardie, A. (2003) ‘Poetry and politics at the games of Domitian’ in Boyle, and Dominik, (eds.) 125–47.
    Hardie, P. (1993) The Epic Successors of Virgil. A Study in the Dynamics of a Tradition. Cambridge.
    Hardie, P. (1999) ‘Metamorphosis, metaphor and allegory in Latin epic’ in Beissinger, M., Tylus, J. and Wofford, S. (eds.) Epic Traditions in a Contemporary World. The Poetics of Community. Berkeley, CA. 89–107.
    Hardie, P. (2002) Ovid's Poetics of Illusion. Cambridge.
    Hellems, F. B. R. (1906) The Epigram and its Greatest Master, Martial. Colorado.
    Helm, O. (1928) Studien zu Martial. Stuttgart.
    Henderson, J. G. W. (1997) Figuring out Roman Nobility. Juvenal's Eighth Satire. Exeter.
    Henderson, J. G. W. (1998) A Roman Life. Rutilius Gallicus on Paper and in Stone. Exeter.
    Henderson, J. G. W. (1999a) Writing Down Rome. Satire, Comedy, and Other Offences in Latin Poetry. Oxford.
    Henderson, J. G. W. (1999b) ‘Who's counting? Catullus by numbers’ in Henderson (1999a) 69–92.
    Henderson, J. G. W. (2001) ‘On Pliny on Martial on Pliny on Anon (Epistles 3.21 / Epigrams 10.19). Ramus 30: 56–87.
    Henderson, J. G. W. (2002) Pliny's Statue. The Letters, Self-Portraiture, and Classical Art. Exeter.
    Hennig, J.-L. (2003) Martial. Paris.
    Henriksén, C. (1998–9) Martial Book IX. A Commentary, vols. 1 and 2. Uppsala.
    Henriksén, C. (1998) ‘Martial und Statius’ in Grewing (ed.) (1998a) 77–118.
    Henriksén, C. (2006) ‘Martial's modes of mourning. Sepulchral epitaphs in the Epigrams’ in Nauta et al. (eds.) (2006) 249–367.
    Herrman, L. (1962) ‘Le “Livre des spectacles” de MartialLatomus 21: 494–504.
    Herrnstein Smith, B. (1978) On the Margins of Discourse. Chicago and London.
    Hinds, S. (1998) Allusion and Intertext. Dynamics of Appropriation in Roman Poetry. Cambridge.
    Hinds, S. (1999) ‘Do-it-yourself literary tradition: Statius, Martial and othersMD 39: 187–207.
    Hinds, S. (2007) ‘Martial's Ovid/Ovid's MartialJRS 97, 113–54.
    Holzberg, N. (1988) Martial. Heidelberg.
    Holzberg, N. (2002) Martial und das antike Epigramm. Darmstadt.
    Holzberg, N. (2004–5) ‘Martial, the book, and OvidHermathena 177/8: 209–24.
    Hope, V. M. (2000) ‘Contempt and respect. The treatment of the corpse in ancient Rome’ in Hope and Marshall (2000) 104–27.
    Hope, V. M. and Marshall, E. (2000) Death and Disease in the Ancient City. London.
    Howell, P. (1980) A Commentary on Book One of the Epigrams of Martial. London.
    Howell, P. (1995) Martial Epigrams V. Warminster.
    Howell, P. (1998) ‘Martial's return to Spain’ in Grewing (ed.) (1998a) 173–86.
    Hudson, H. H. (1947) The Epigram in the English Renaissance. Princeton.
    Humphreys, S. C. and King, H. (eds.) (1981) Mortality and Immortality. The Anthropology and Archaeology of Death. London.
    Hutchinson, G. O. (1993) Latin Literature from Seneca to Juvenal. A Critical Study. Oxford.
    Jackson, R. (1988) Doctors and Diseases in the Roman Empire. Norman, OK, and London.
    Janan, M. (1994) When the Lamp is Shattered. Desire and Narrative in Catullus. Illinois.
    Johnson, W. R. (2005) ‘Small wonders: the poetics of Martial, Book fourteen’ in Batstone, W. and Tissol, G. (eds.) Defining Genre and Gender in Latin literature. New York. 139–50.
    Jones, F. L. (1935) ‘Martial, the clientCJ 30: 355–61.
    Jones, W. B. (1992) The Emperor Domitian. London.
    Kay, N. M. (1985) Martial Book XI. London.
    Kenney, E. J. (1964) ‘Erotion againG&R 11: 77–81.
    Kenney, E. J. (1982) ‘Books and readers in the ancient world’ in Kenney, E. J. and Clausen, W. (eds.) The Cambridge History of Latin Literature, vol 2. Cambridge. 3–32.
    Kerenyi, C. (1962) The Religion of the Greeks and the Romans. Trans. Holme, C.. London.
    Knox, P. E. (1985) ‘Wine, water and Callimachean poeticsHSCP 89: 107–19.
    Knox, P. E. (2006) ‘Big names in MartialCQ 101(3): 299–300.
    Kübler-Ross, E. (1970) On Death and Dying. London.
    Kurke, L. (1991) The Traffic in Praise. Pindar and the Poetics of Social Economy. Ithaca, NY.
    Lattimore, R. (1962) Themes in Greek and Latin Epitaphs. Urbana, IL.
    Laurens, P. (1965) ‘Martial et l'épigramme grecque du 1er siècle ap. J.-C.’ REL 43: 315–41.
    Laurens, P. (1989) L'Abeille dans l'ombre: célébration de l'épigramme de l'époque Alexandrine à la fin de la Renaissance. Paris.
    Leary, T. L. (1996) The Apophoreta. Martial Book 14. London.
    Leary, T. L. (1998) ‘Martial's early Saturnalian verse’ in Grewing (ed.) (1998a) 37–47.
    Leary, T. L. (2001) The Xenia. Martial Book 13. London.
    Lehan, R. (1998) The City in Literature. An Intellectual and Cultural History. Berkeley and Los Angeles.
    Lilja, S. (1972) The Treatment of Odours in the Poetry of Antiquity. Helsinki.
    Lindsay, W. M. (1903) M. Val. Martialis Epigrammata. Oxford.
    Lorenz, S. (2002) Erotik und Panegyric. Martials epigrammatische Kaiser. Classica Monacensia 23, Tübingen.
    Lorenz, S. (2004) ‘Waterscape with black and white: epigrams, cycles and webs in Martial's Epigrammaton liber quartusAJPH 125: 255–78.
    Lowrie, M. (1997) Horace's Narrative Odes. Oxford.
    Maguire, H. (1996) Image and Imagination. The Byzantine Epigram as Evidence for Viewer Response. Toronto.
    Malamud, M. A. (1995) ‘Happy birthday dead Lucan: (p)raising the dead in Silvae 2.7’ in Boyle, (ed.) (1995b) 169–98.
    Malnati, T. P. (1987) ‘Juvenal and Martial on social mobilityCJ 83: 133–41.
    Manley, L. (1985) ‘Proverbs, epigrams and urbanity in Renaissance London’, English Literary Renaissance 15: 247–76.
    Mendell, C. W. (1922) ‘Martial and the satiric epigramCP 17: 1–20.
    Merli, E. (1993) ‘Ordinamento degli epigrammi e strategie cortigiane negli esordi dei libri I–XII di MarzialeMaia 45: 229–56.
    Merli, E. (1998) ‘Epigrammzyklen und “serielle Lektüre” in den Büchern Martials. Überlegungen und Beispiele’ in Grewing (ed.) (1998a) 139–56.
    Merli, E. (2006) ‘Identity and irony. Martial's tenth book, Horace, and the tradition of Roman satire’ in Nauta et al. (eds.) (2006) 257–70.
    Mills-Courts, K. (1990) Poetry as Epitaph. Representation and Poetic Language. Baton Rouge, LA, and London.
    Mohler, S. L. (1927–8) ‘ApophoretaCJ 23: 248–57.
    Moreau, P. (1978) ‘Osculum, basium, saviumRPh 52: 87–97.
    Moretti, G. (1962) ‘L'arena, Cesare e il mito: appunti sul De Spectaculis di MarzialeMaia 44: 55–63.
    Morgan, L. (1997) ‘Achilleae comae: hair and heroism according to DomitianCQ 47: 209–14.
    Morris, I. (1992) Death-Ritual and Social Structure in Classical Antiquity. Cambridge.
    Murray, O. and Tecusan, M. (1995) In Vino Veritas. Rome.
    Nadeau, Y. (1984) ‘Catullus’ sparrow, Martial, Juvenal and OvidLatomus 43: 861–8.
    Nagle, B. R. (1980) The Poetics of Exile. Brussels.
    Nauta, R. R (2002) Poetry for Patrons. Literary Communication in the Age of Domitian. Leiden, Boston and Cologne.
    Nauta, R. R., Dam, H.-J. and Smolenaars, J. J. L. (eds.) (2006) Flavian Poetry. Leiden and Boston.
    Newlands, C. (2002) Statius’ Silvae and the Poetics of Empire. New York.
    Newlands, C. (1997) ‘The role of the book in Tristia 3.1Ramus 26: 57–79.
    Newman, J. K. (1990) Roman Catullus and the Modification of the Alexandrian Sensibility. Hildesheim.
    Newmyer, S. (1984) ‘The triumph of art over nature. Martial and Statius on Flavian aesthetics’ Helios 11(1): 1–7.
    Nielsen, I. (1990) Thermae et balnea. The Architecture and Cultural History of Roman Public Baths. Aarhus.
    Nisbet, G. (2003) Greek Epigram in the Roman Empire. Martial's Forgotten Rivals. Oxford.
    Nisbet, R. G. M. and Rudd, N. (2004) A Commentary on Horace: Odes Book III. Oxford.
    Nixon, P. (1927) Martial and the Modern Epigram. London, Calcutta and Sydney.
    Ogilvie, R. M. (1970) A Commentory on Livy Books 1–5, 2nd edn. Oxford.
    Pailler, J.-M. (1990) ‘Le Poète, le prince e l'arène: à propos du “Livre des Spectacles” de Martial’ in Domergue, C., Landes, C. and Pailler, J.-M. (eds.) Spectacula, vol. 1: Gladiateurs et amphithéâtres. Lattes, 179–83.
    Panofsky, E. (1939) Studies in Iconology. New York and Oxford.
    Pasoli, E. (1970–2) ‘Cuochi, convitati, carta nella critica letteraria di MarzialeMusCrit 5–7: 188–93.
    Paukstadt, R. (1876) De Martiale Catulli Imitatore. Dissertation, Halle.
    Pavlovskis, Z. (1973) Man in an Artificial Landscape. Mnemosyne Suppl. 25. Leiden.
    Pitcher, R. A. (1984) ‘Flaccus, friend of MartialLatomus 43: 414–23.
    Pitcher, R. A. (1998) ‘Martial's debt to Ovid’ in Grewing (ed.) (1998a), 59–76.
    Plass, P. (1985) ‘An aspect of epigrammatic wit in Martial and TacitusArethusa 18: 187–210.
    Poinar, G. O. (1992) Life in Amber. Stanford, CA.
    Pomeroy, A. J. (1991) The Appropriate Comment. Death Notices in the Ancient Historians. Frankfurt, Bern, New York and Paris.
    Pott, J. A. and Wright, F. A. (1925) Martial. The Twelve Books of Epigrams. London and New York.
    Preston, K. (1920) ‘Martial and formal literary criticismCPh 15: 340–52.
    Prinz, K. (1911) Martial und die griechische Epigrammatik. Vienna and Leipzig.
    Prior, R. E. (1996) ‘Going around hungry: topography and poetics in Martial 2.14AJPH 117: 121–41.
    Quinn, K. (1982) ‘The poet and his audience in the Augustan ageANRW 30.1: 75–180.
    Richlin, A. (1981) ‘The meaning of irrumare in Catullus and MartialCP 76: 40–6.
    Richlin, A. (1992) The Garden of Priapus. Sexuality and Aggression in Roman Humour, rev. edn. Oxford and New York.
    Rimell, V. (2002) Petronius and the Anatomy of Fiction. Cambridge.
    Rimell, V. (2007) ‘The inward turn: writing, voice and the imperial author in Petronius’ in Rimell, V. (ed.) Seeing Tongues, Hearing Scripts. Orality and Representation in the Ancient Novel. Groningen. 61–85.
    Rimell, V. (forthcoming) ‘Martial's De Spectaculis and the arena of Rome’ in M. Gale and D. Scourfield (eds.) Violence in Roman Literature.
    Roman, L. (2001) ‘The representation of literary materiality in Martial's EpigramsJRS 91: 113–45.
    Russell, D. A. (2001) Quintilian. The Orator's Education Books 1–2. Cambridge, MA.
    Salemme, C. (1976) Marziale e la ‘poetica’ degli oggetti. Naples.
    Saller, R. P. (1983) ‘Martial on patronage and literatureCQ 33(1): 246–57.
    Santirocco, M. (1986) Unity and Design in Horace's Odes. Chapel Hill, NC.
    Saylor, C. (1987) ‘Funeral games: the significance of games in the cena TrimalchionisLatomus 46: 593–602.
    Scàndola, M. (1996) Marco Valerio Marziale. Epigrammi. Milan.
    Scarborough, J. (1969–70) ‘Romans and PhysiciansCJ 65: 296–306.
    Scherf, J. (1998) ‘Zur Komposition von Martials Gedichtbüchern 1–12’ in Grewing (ed.) (1998a) 119–38.
    Scherf, J. (2001) Untersuchungen zur Buchgestaltung Martials. Munich and Leipzig.
    Schiesaro, A. (2003) The Passions in Play. Thyestes and the Dynamics of Senecan Drama. Cambridge.
    Scodel, J. (1991) The English Poetic Epitaph. Commemoration and Conflict from Johnson to Wordsworth. Ithaca, NY, and London.
    Scodel, R. (1992) ‘Inscription, absence and memory: epic and early epitaphSIFC 10: 57–76.
    Segal, C. P. (1968) ‘Catullus 5 and 7. A study in complementaritiesAJPH 89: 284–301.
    Selden, D. (1992) ‘Caveat lector. Catullus and the rhetoric of performance’ in Hexter, R. and Selden, D. (eds.) Innovations of Antiquity. New York. 461–512.
    Shackelton Bailey, D. R. (1993) Martial Epigrams. Cambridge, MA, and London.
    Sharrock, A. (1994) Seduction and Repetition in Ovid's Ars Amatoria II. Oxford.
    Sherwin-White, A. N. (1966) The Letters of Pliny. A Historical and Social Commentary. Oxford.
    Siedschlag, E. (1977) Zur Form von Martials Epigrammen. Berlin.
    Smith, B. H. (1968) Poetic Closure. A Study of how Poems End. Chicago.
    Spaeth, J. W. (1929) ‘Martial looks at his worldCJ 24: 361–73.
    Spisak, A. L. (1994a) ‘Martial 6.61: Callimachean poetics revaluedTAPA 124: 291–308.
    Spisak, A. L. (1994b) ‘Martial's theatrum of power pornographySyllClass 5: 79–89.
    Spisak, A. L. (1997) ‘Martial's special relation with his reader’ in Deroux, C. (ed.) Studies in Latin Literature and Roman History, vol. 8. Brussels. 352–63.
    Spisak, A. L. (1998) ‘Gift-giving in Martial’ in Grewing (ed.) (1998a) 243–55.
    Spisak, A. L. (2002) ‘The pastoral ideal in Martial book 10CW 95: 127–41.
    Sprenger, B. (1963) ‘Zahlenmotive in der Epigrammatik und in verwandten Literaturgattungen alter und neuer Zeit’. Dissertation, Münster.
    Stallybrass, P. and White, A. (1986) The Politics and Poetics of Transgression. Ithaca, NY.
    Stambaugh, J. E. (1988) The Ancient Roman City. Baltimore.
    Starr, R. J. (1987) ‘The circulation of literary texts in the Roman worldCQ 37: 213–23.
    Stroup, S. C. (2006) ‘Invaluable collections: the illusion of poetic presence in Martial's Xenia and Apophoreta’ in Nauta et al. (2006) 299–313.
    Sullivan, J. P. (1982) Essays on Roman Satire. Princeton.
    Sullivan, J. P. (1983) ‘Themes and variations from MartialHelix 18: 47–53.
    Sullivan, J. P. (1988) ‘Martial’ in Boyle, (ed.) (1988) 177–91.
    Sullivan, J. P. (1991) Martial. The Unexpected Classic. Cambridge.
    Sullivan, J. P. (1993a) The Classical Heritage. Martial. New York and London.
    Sullivan, J. P. (1993b) ‘Form opposed: elegy, epigram, satire’ in Boyle, A. J. (ed.) Roman Epic. London and New York. 143–61.
    Swann, B. W. (1994) Martial's Catullus. The Reception of an Epigrammatic Rival. Hildesheim.
    Swann, B. W. (1998) ‘Sic scribit Catullus. The importance of Catullus for Martial's Epigrams’ in Grewing, (ed.) (1998a) 48–58.
    Szelest, H. (1974) ‘Domitian and MartialEos 62: 105–14.
    Szelest, H. (1999) ‘Ovid und Martial’ in Schubert, W. (ed.) Ovid. Werk und Wirkung. Festgabe für Michael von Albrecht zum 65. Geburtstag. Frankfurt-am-Main, 861–4.
    Tanner, R. G. (1986a) ‘Levels of intent in MartialANRW II. 32.4: 2624–77.
    Tanner, R. G. (1986b) ‘Epic tradition and epigram in StatiusANRW II. 32.5: 3020–46.
    Tarán, S. L. (1979) The Art of Variation in the Hellenistic Epigram. Leiden.
    Thomas, R. F. (1998) ‘Melodious tears: sepulchral epigram and generic mobility’ in Harder, , Regtuit, and Wakker, (eds.) 205–23.
    Toynbee, J. M. C. (1971) Death and Burial in the Roman World. London.
    Turner, V. (1969) The Ritual Process. Structure and Anti-Structure. Ithaca, NY.
    Ullman, B. L. (1941) ‘Apophoreta in Petronius and MartialCP 36: 346–55.
    Valette-Cognac, E. (1997) La Lecture à Rome. Paris.
    Valk, H. L. M. (1957) ‘On the edition of books in antiquityVChr 11: 1–10.
    Sickle, J. (1980) ‘The book-roll and some conventions of the poetic bookArethusa 13: 5–42.
    Sickle, J (1981) ‘Poetics of opening and closure in Meleager, Catullus and GallusCW 75: 65–75.
    Vermeule, E. (1979) Aspects of Death in Early Greek Art and Poetry. Berkeley and Los Angeles.
    Vernant, J. P. (1981) ‘Death with two faces’ trans. Lloyd, J., in Humphreys, S. C. and King, H. (eds.) Mortality and Immortality. The Anthropology and Archaeology of Death. London.285–91.
    Videau-Delibes, A. (1991) Les Tristes d'Ovide et l'élégie romaine. Une poétique de la rupture. Paris.
    Walker, S. (1985) Memorials to the Roman Dead. London.
    Wallace-Hadrill, A. (1989) Patronage in Ancient Society. London.
    Walsh, G. B. (1991) ‘Callimachean passages: the rhetoric of epitaph in epigramArethusa 24: 77–105.
    Waters, K. H. (1963) ‘The second dynasty of RomePhoenix 17(3): 198–218.
    Waters, K. H. (1964) ‘The character of DomitianPhoenix 18(1): 49–77.
    Watson, L. (1998) ‘Martial 8.21, literary lusus, and imperial panegyricPLLS 10: 337–57.
    Watson, L. and Watson, P. A. (2003) Martial. Select Epigrams. Cambridge.
    Watson, P. A. (1998) ‘Ignorant Euctus. Wit and literary allusion in Martial 8.6Mnemosyne 51: 30–40.
    Watson, P. A. (2001) ‘Martial's snake in amber: ekphrasis or poetic fantasy?Latomus 60: 938–43.
    Weber, F. P. (1914) Aspects of Death and Correlated Aspects of Life in Art, Epigram and Poetry. London.
    Whaley, J. (ed.) (1981) Mirrors of Mortality. Studies in the Social History of Death. Rochester.
    Whigham, P. (1985) Martial. Letter to Juvenal and Other Poems. London.
    Whipple, T. K. (1925) Martial and the English Epigram from Sir Thomas Wyatt to Ben Jonson. California Publications in Modern Philology 10. Berkeley, CA.
    White, P. (1974) ‘The presentation and dedication of the Silvae and the EpigramsJRS 64: 40–61.
    White, P. (1975) ‘The friends of Martial, Statius and Pliny and the dispersal of patronageHSCP 79: 265–300.
    White, P. (1978) ‘Amicitia and the profession of poetry in early imperial RomeJRS 68: 74–92.
    White, P. (1982) ‘Positions for poets in early imperial Rome’ in Gold, B. (ed.) Literary and Artistic Patronage in Ancient Rome. Austin, TX. 50–66.
    White, P. (1996) ‘Martial and pre-publication textsEMC 40 n.s. 15: 397–412.
    Wickkiser, B. L. (1999) ‘Famous last words: Putting Ovid's sphragis back into the MetamorphosesMD 42: 113–42.
    Williams, C. (2002a) ‘Ovid, Martial and poetic immortality. Traces of Amores 1.15 in the epigramsArethusa 35: 417–33.
    Williams, C. (2002b) ‘Sit nequior omnibus libellis: text, poet and reader in the epigrams of MartialPhilologus 146: 150–71.
    Williams, C. (2004) Martial Epigrams Book 2. A Commentary. Oxford.
    Williams, C. (2006) ‘Identified quotations and literary models: the example of Martial 2.41’ in Nauta et al. (eds.) (2006) 329–48.
    Williams, G. D. (1994) Banished Voices. Readings in Ovid's Exile Poetry. Cambridge.
    Wiseman, T. P. (1985) Catullus and his World. A Reappraisal. Cambridge.
    Woolf, G. (1996) ‘Monumental writing and the expansion of Roman society in the early Roman empireJRS 86: 22–39.
    Yegül, F. (1992) Baths and Bathing in Classical Antiquity. New York.
    Zingerle, A. (1877) Martial's Ovid-Studien. Innsbruck.

    Metrics

    Full text views

    Total number of HTML views: 0
    Total number of PDF views: 0 *
    Loading metrics...

    Book summary page views

    Total views: 0 *
    Loading metrics...

    * Views captured on Cambridge Core between #date#. This data will be updated every 24 hours.

    Usage data cannot currently be displayed.

    Accessibility standard: Unknown

    Why this information is here

    This section outlines the accessibility features of this content - including support for screen readers, full keyboard navigation and high-contrast display options. This may not be relevant for you.

    Accessibility Information

    Accessibility compliance for the PDF of this book is currently unknown and may be updated in the future.