• Arkins, Brian, “Glubit in Catullus 58.5,” LCM 4 (1979) 85-86
  • Arkins, Brian, Sexuality in Catullus, Hildesheim (1982)
  • F. Bessone, “Medea’s response to Catullus: Ovid, Heroides 12.23-4 and Catullus 76.1-6,” Classical Quarterly 45.2 (1995) 575-578 / full text
  • Claes, P., “Catullus c. 94: The penetrated penis,” Mnemosyne 49.1 (1996) 66
  • Fitzgerald, William, “Catullus and the Reader: The Erotics of Poetry,” Arethusa 25 (1992) 419-443
  • Giangrande, G., “Catullus’ Lyrics on the Passer,” MPhilLond 1 (1975) 137-146
  • E. Greene, “Re-Figuring the Feminine Voice: Catullus Translating Sappho,” Arethusa 32.1 (1996) 1-18 / pdf
  • Greene, Ellen, “The Catullan Ego: Fragmentation and the Erotic Self,” American Journal of Philology 116.1 (1995) 77
  • R. Drew Griffith , “Catullus’ Coma Berenices and Aeneas’ farewell to Dido,” Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 125 (1995) 47-59 / full text
  • Richard W. Hooper, “In Defence of Catullus’ Dirty Sparrow,” Greece & Rome 32.2 (1985) 162-178 / full text
  • Janan, Micaela, When the Lamp Is Shattered”: Desire and Narrative in Catullus, Carbondale and Edwardsville (1994) / bmcr
  • Jenkyns, Richard, Three Classical Poets: Sappho, Catullus and Juvenal, London (1982)
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  • David H. J. Larmour, Paul Allen Miller and Charles Platter, Rethinking Sexuality: Foucault and Classical Antiquity, Princeton: Princeton University Press (1997) [The essays include “Situating The History of Sexuality” (the editors), “Taking the Sex Out of Sexuality: Foucault’s Failed History” (Joel Black), “Incipit Philosophia” (Alain Vizier), “The Subject in Antiquity after Foucault” (Page duBois), “This Myth Which Is Not One: Construction of Discourse in Plato’s Symposium” (Jeffrey S. Carnes), “Foucault’s History of Sexuality: A Useful Theory for Women?” (Amy Richlin), “Catullan Consciousness, the ‘Care of the Self,’ and the Force of the Negative in History” (Paul Allen Miller), “Reversals of Platonic Love in Petronius’ Satyricon” (Daniel B. McGlathery), and an essay from Dislocating Masculinity (Lin Foxhall).] / bmcr
  • Lyne, R.O.A.M, The Latin Love Poets from Catullus to Horace, Oxford (1980)
  • Nadeau, Yvan, “O passer nequam (Catullus 2,3),” Latomus 39 (1980) 879-880
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  • O’Hara, James J., “Sostratus Suppl. Hell. 733,” Transactions of the American Philological Association 126 (1996) A Lost, Possibly Catullan-Era Elegy on the Six Sex Changes of Tiresias / full text
  • James J. O’Hara, “The Significance of Vergil’s Acidalia Mater, and Venus Erycina in Catullus and Ovid,” Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 93 (1990) 335-342 / full text
  • D. O’Higgins, “Sappho’s Splintered Tongue: Silence in Sappho 31 and Catullus 51,” American Journal of Philology 111 (1990) 156-167 / full text
  • Papanghelis, Theodore, “Hoary Ladies: Catullus 64. 305ff. and Apollonius of Rhodes,” SO 69 (1994) 41-46
  • Petrini, M., The Child and the Hero: Coming of Age in Catullus and Vergil, Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press (1995)
  • Quinn, K., Catullus’ Poems, New York (1973)
  • Amy Richlin, “The Meaning of Irrumare in Catullus and Martial (in Notes and Discussions),” Classical Philology 76 no. 1 (1981) 40-46 / full text
  • Richlin, Amy, “The Meaning of irrumare in Catullus and Martial,” Classical Philologyh 76 (1981a) 40-46
  • Geert Roskam, “Mariage ou virginite? Le carmen 62 de Catulle et la lutte entre deux ideaux de vie,” Latomus 59 no. 1 (2000) 41-56
  • Judith Sebesta, “The Wedding Gifts in Catullus 64,” SyllClass 11 (2000) 127-140
  • Selden, Dan, “Ceveat lector: Catullus and the Rhetoric of Performance,” in Innovations of Antiquity edited by R. Hexter and D. Selden, New York and London (1992) 461-512
  • Simpson, C. J., “Unnecessary Homosexuality. The Correspondent’s Request in Catullus 68A,” Latomus 53.3 (1994) 564-569
  • Marilyn Skinner, “Parasites and Strange Bedfellows: A Study in Catullus’ Political Imagery,” Ramus 8 (1979) 137-152
  • Skinner, Marilyn, “Pretty Lesbius,” Transactions of the American Philological Association 112 (1982) 197-208 / full text
  • Marilyn B. Skinner, “Ut Decuit Cinaediorem: Power, Gender, and Urbanity in Catullus 10,” Helios 16 (1989) 7-23
  • Marilyn B. Skinner, “Ego Mulier: The Construction of Male Sexuality in Catullus,” Helios 20 (1993) 107-130
  • Skinner, Marilyn B., “Ego Mulier: The Construction of Male Sexuality in Catullus,” in Roman Sexualities edited by Hallett, Judith P. and Skinner, Marilyn B., Princeton: Princeton University Press (1993) 129-150 / bmcr
  • Thomsen, Ole, Ritual and Desire: Catullus 61 and 62, Aarhus (1992)
  • Williams, Craig A., Roman Homosexuality: Ideologies of Masculinity in Classical Antiquity, Oxford: Oxford University Press (1999) / bmcr  / bmcr  / web link
  • G. Wills, “Sappho 31 and Catullus 51,” GRBS 8 (1967) 167-197
  • Winter, Thomas Nelson, “Catullus Purified: A Brief History of Carmen 16,” Arethusa 6 (1973) 257-265
  • Wiseman, T.P., Catullus and His World: A Reappraisal, Cambridge (1985)
  • Wiseman, T.P., Catullan Questions, Leicester (1969)
  • Wiseman, T.P., “Catullus 16,” LCM 1 (1976) 14-17