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Sappho in Propertius?
Published 2019“…By thoroughly mapping possible allusions to Sappho in Propertius, this chapter concludes that Sappho’s influence is most conspicuous in the case of Cynthia. …”
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Propertius 1.3: Sleep, surprise, and Catullus 64
Published 2013“…Although previous scholarship has noted some verbal and stylistic allusions to Catullus in Propertius 1.3, the extent to which the poem offers a profound and detailed engagement with Catullus 64 has not been recognised. …”
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Sextus propertius, praeceptor amoris: teaching love, loving poetry
Published 2021“…<p>Propertius has been known to teach for as long as he has been read. …”
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me iuuat in gremio doctae legisse puellae: mindful reading in the elegies of Propertius
Published 2015“…<p>In a critical climate that privileges the hermeneutic position of a reader of a text over the irretrievable intentions of its author, this thesis challenges the status quo by considering the elegist Propertius as his own first reader. Through an exploration of what I have called 'mindful reading'—how Propertius appears to engage intratextually with his own poetic material, recasting parts of it lexically and thematically—, alongside his interaction with the works of his peers and predecessors and wider cultural discourses, we, as readers, are able to appreciate how he may have understood aspects of his own poetry at a given moment. …”
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Changing the sail: Propertius 3.21, Catullus 64 and Ovid, Heroides 5
Published 2022“…Concentrating on Propertius 3.21 in particular, this article identifies a previously unnoticed network of allusions by three Roman poets (Catullus, Propertius and Ovid) to one another and to Book 1 of Apollonius Rhodius’ Argonautica. …”
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Fournival and propertius: A note on the early history of Leiden Voss. Lat. O 38
Published 2011“…Lat. 0 38, the fragmentary thirteenth-century manuscript of Propertius (A), is known to have been associated with the circle of Richard de Fournival (1201-1260). …”
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Augustan accounts of the regal period
Published 1991“…Elegy had traditionally rejected history, but in Propertius IV history is included, much of it regal. …”
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Life, love and death in Latin poetry
Published 2018“…Inspired by Theodore Papanghelis’ Propertius: A Hellenistic Poet on Love and Death (1987), this collective volume brings together seventeen contributions, written by an international team of experts, exploring the different ways in which ...…”
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The lost heir: C. Claudius Marcellus in Augustan poetry
Published 2017“…This paper considers the interesting and diverse traces of his short career and premature end to be found in the Latin poets Vergil, Horace and Propertius and in the Greek epigrammatist Crinagoras.…”
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Hard verses and soft books: the materials of elegy
Published 2018“…Beginning from the play with sepulchral epigram in Propertius 1 and 2, the paper explores the enormous variety of ways in which elegy presents itself as material (and immaterial) text. …”
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The elegiac book: patterns and problems
Published 2012“…In Horace’s Satires and Vergil’s Eclogues we have two fully realized books, transmitted with the poems in the artful order in which they were published by their authors. Propertius, Tibullus and Ovid followed the fashion in their own creative ways, and there are many sophisticated analyses of the books they produced. …”
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An elegist's career: from Cynthia to Cornelia
Published 2010“…Each cycle then returns to the personal elegy of lamentation in the Tristia; but even in exile Ovid expands his range with the curse poem Ibis, and more letters. <br> What of Propertius, Ovid's predecessor as love elegist? Does he show a similar reaction to the Virgilian pattern? …”
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The Ovidian love elegy in England
Published 1960“…<p>This thesis begins by outlining the origins of the elegy as a literary form, passing from the fragmentary remains of the Greek elegy, and of Roman love—poets before Catullus, to a brief discussion of the poetry of Catullus, Propertius and the elegists of the <u>Corpus Tibullianum</u>, indicating in each case the main differences between the literary attitudes of these posts and those of Ovid. …”
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