K. Blomqvist, “From Olympias to Aretaphila: women in politics in Plutarch,” in Plutarch and his Intellectual World edited by J. Mossman, London (1997) 73-98 / web link
J. Bremmer, “Plutarch and the Naming of Greek Women,” American Journal of Philology 102 (1981) 425-427 / full text
Jo-Marie Claassen, “Documents of a Crumbling Marriage: The Case of Cicero and Terentia,” Phoenix 50 no. 3-4 (1997) [Why did Cicero divorce his wife after more than thirty years? Is Plutarch right when he implies that she was dishonest and ill-treated her daughter? What was the nature of Roman marriage and family life? Was the Cicero family life ever “happy,” judged by modern standards? Can the resources of modern sociology apply, and will such application lead to an alternative interpretation of the known facts?]
E. P. Cueva, “Plutarch’s Ariadne in Chariton’s Chaereas and Callirhoe,” in AJPh 117 no. 3 (1996) 473ff.
F. E. Brenk, S. J., “Antony-Osiris, Cleopatra-Isis,” in Plutarch and the Historical Tradition edited by P. A. Stadter (1992) 159-182
K. Mayer, Chaironeia, Plutarch’s home on the Web (includes bibliography) / web link
Anastasios G. Nikolaidis, “Plutarch on Women and Marriage,” Wiener Studien 110 (1997) 27-88
Pelling, C. B. R., Plutarch, Life of Antony, Cambridge (1988)
Sarah B. Pomeroy, Plutarch’s Advice to the Bride and Groom and A Consolation to his Wife, New York, Oxford: Oxford University Press (1999) / bmcr / bmcr
Russell, Brigette Ford, “The Emasculation of Antony: The Construction of Gender in Plutarch’s Life of Antony,” Helios 25:2 (1998) 121-137
Y. Vernière, “Plutarque et les femmes,” AncW 25.2 (1994) 165-69
P. Walcot, “Plutarch on sex,” Greece & Rome 45.2 (1998) 166-187 / full text
Peter Walcot, “Plutarch on Women,” SO 74 (1999) 163-183
Victoria Wohl, “Scenes from a Marriage: Love and Logos in Plutarch’s Coniugalia Praecepta,” Helios 24 no. 2 (1997) 170-192