• J. Balmer, Classical Women Poets, Newcastle-upon-Tyne: Bloodaxe Books (1996) [anthology] / bmcr
  • Laurel Bowman, “Nossis, Sappho and Hellenistic Poetry,” Ramus 27 no. 1 (1998) 39-59
  • Calame, Claude, The Poetics of Eros in Ancient Greece, Princeton: Princeton University Press (1999)
  • Gigante, Marcello, “Il Manifesto poetico di Nosside,” Letterature comparate: problemi e metodo I, Bologna (1981) 243-245
  • Nancy Sorkin Rabinowitz and Lisa Auanger, Among Women: From the Homosocial to the Homoerotic in the Ancient World: University of Texas Press (2002) [Introduction (Nancy Sorkin Rabinowitz); Imag(in)ing a Women’s World in Bronze Age Greece: The Frescoes from Xeste 3 at Akrotiri, Thera (Paul Rehak); Aphrodite Garlanded: Erts and Poetic Creativity in Sappho and Nossis (Marilyn B. Skinner); Subjects, Objects, and Erotic Symmetry in Sappho’s Fragments (Ellen Greene); Excavating Female Homoeroticism in Ancient Greece: The Evidence from Attic Vase Painting (Nancy Sorkin Rabinowitz); Women in Relief: “Double Consciousness” in Classical Attic Tombstones (John G. Younger); Glimpses through a Window: An Approach to Roman Female Homoeroticism through Art Historical and Literary Evidence (Lisa Auanger); Ovid’s Iphis and Ianthe: When Girls Won’t Be Girls (Diane T. Pintabone); Lucian’s “Leaena and Clonarium”: Voyeurism or a Challenge to Assumptions? (Shelley P. Haley); “Friendship and Physical Desire”: The Discourse of Female Homoeroticism in Fifth-Century CE Egypt (Terry G. Wilfong) ]
  • M. B. Skinner, “Sapphic Nossis,” Arethusa 22 (1989) 5-18
  • Skinner, Marilyn B., “Greek Women and the Metronymic: A Note on an Epigram by Nossis,” Ancient History Bulletin 1 (l987) 39-42
  • Skinner, Marilyn B., “Aphrodite Garlanded: Eros and Poetic Creativity in Sappho and Nossis,” in Rose di Pieria edited by F. de Martino, Bari: Lavante (1991 🙂 79-96
  • Skinner, Marilyn B., “Nossis Thelyglossos: The Private Text and the Public Book,” in Women’s History and Ancient History edited by Sarah B. Pomeroy, Chapel Hill and London (1991) 210-47
  • J. M. Snyder, The Woman and the Lyre. Women Writers in Classical Greece and Rome, Carbondale and Edwardsville: Southern Illinois University Press (1989) / bmcr