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The following articles are in CJ 105.4



RELATIVE CHRONOLOGY WITHIN (AN) ORAL TRADITION
Brandtly Jones

Abstract: The glottochronometric work of Richard Janko has had a profound impact on the question of archaic Greek epic language and chronology. The assumptions, however, on which his method is based do not withstand scrutiny. This paper explores some systematic problems in Janko's analysis, and uses the Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite as a specific example to illustrate the difficulty of ascribing linguistic variation among early Greek songs to chronology.



SICILIAN TYRANTS AND THEIR VICTORIOUS BROTHERS I: THE EMMENIDS
Monessa Finnerty Cummins

Abstract: In this two-part article I analyze six passages in which Pindar and Bakchylides praise the victor's successful brother(s) (Pi. P. 6.44-54; O. 2.46-51; I. 2.23-9; P. 1.71-80; B. 5.31-6; 3.17-19). The indirectness of the praise indicates that the laudandus or patron of a poem tolerated praise of a sibling only if it was subordinated to his own praise and enhanced his own prestige and that of the oikos. Part I analyzes poems for the Emmenids.



THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING JULIA: CIVIL WAR, HISTORICAL REVISION AND THE MUTABLE PAST IN LUCAN'S PHARSALIA
Angeline Chiu

Abstract: In the Pharsalia, Lucan presents two radically different versions of Julia, daughter of Julius Caesar and wife of Pompey. These reveal her as a touchstone of Lucan's concern with interpretations of the civil war, with the power of the poet to complicate historical judgment, and with the overall theme of cosmic chaos.





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