• James I. Porter (ed.), Constructions of the Classical Body: University of Michigan Press (1999) [Introduction; Smashing Bodies: The Corinthian Tydeus and Ismene Amphora (Louvre E640); Reflections on Erotic Desire in Archaic and Classical Greece; Dirt and Desire: The Phenomenology of Female Pollution in Antiquity; Pindar and the Prostitutes, or Reading Ancient “Pornography”; From a Grin to a Death: The Body in the Greek Discovery of Politics; Sexual Bodybuilding: Aeschines against Timarchus; Odor and Power in the Roman Empire; Cicero’s Head; The Roman Blush: The Delicate Matter of Self-Control; Anti-Pygmalion: The Praeceptor in Ars Amatoria, Book 3; The Suffering Body: Philosophy and Pain in Seneca’s Letters; Chronic Pain and the Creation of Narrative; Truth Contests and Talking Corpses; Sweet Honey in the Rock: Pleasure, Embodiment, and Metaphor in Late-Antique Platonism; Ovid’s Body; Herculean Muscle!: The Classicizing Rhetoric of Bodybuilding] / bmcr
  • 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
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  • Bright, David, “Ovid vs. Apuleius,” Illinois Classical Studies 6.2 (1981) 356-366
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  • Cahoon, Leslie, “A Program for Betrayal: Ovidian Nequitia in Amores 1.1, 2.1 and 3.1,” Helios 12 (1985) 29-39
  • Cahoon, Leslie, “The Bed as Battlefield: Erotic Conquest and Military Metaphor in Ovid’s Amores,” Transactions of the American Philological Association 118 (1988) 293-307 / full text
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  • M. Desmond, “When Dido Reads Virgil: Gender and Intertextuality in Ovid’s Heroides 7,” Helios 20 (1993) 56-68
  • Lillian E. Doherty, Gender and the Interpretation of Classical Myth, London: Duckworth (2001) [ISBN 0-7156-3042-3] / bmcr
  • Lowell Edmunds and Shirley Werner, Tools of the Trade for the Study of Roman Literature / web link
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  • Trevor Fear, “The Poet as Pimp: Elegiac Seduction in the Time of Augustus,” Arethusa 33 no. 2 (2000) 217-40
  • Fredrick, David, “Reading Broken Skin: Violence in Roman Elegy,” in Roman Sexualities edited by Hallett, Judith P. and Skinner, Marilyn B., Princeton: Princeton University Press (1997) 172-193 / bmcr
  • Laurel Fulkerson, “Omnia vincit amor: why the Remedia fail,” Classical Quarterly 54.1 (2004) 211-223 / pdf
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  • R. Gentilcore, “The Landscape of Desire: The Tale of Pomona and Vertumnus in Ovid’s Metamorphoses,” Phoenix 49.2 (1995) 110-120
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  • Greene, Ellen, The Erotics of Domination: Male Desire and the Mistress in Latin Love Poetry, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press (1999) / bmcr
  • N. P. Gross, “Ovid, Amores 1.8: Whose Amatory Rhetoric?,” CW 89.3 (1996) 197ff.
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  • Laura McClure, Sexuality and Gender in the Classical World: Blackwell Publishers (2002) [1. Editor’s Introduction: Laura McClure. Part I: Greece: 2. Classical Attitudes to Sexual Behaviour: K. J. Dover. Excerpt:: Aristophanes’ Speech from Plato, Symposium 189d7-192a1. 3. Double-Consciousness in Sappho’s Lyrics: J. J. Winkler. Excerpt:s: Sappho 1 and 31; Homer, Iliad 5.114-132; Odyssey 6.139-85. 4. Bound to Bleed: Artemis and Greek Women: H. King. Excerpts: Hippocrates, On Unmarried Girls; Euripides, Hippolytus 59-105. 5. Playing the Other: Theater, Theatricality, and the Feminine in Greek Drama: F. Zeitlin. Excerpts: Sophocles, Women of Trachis 531-587, 1046-1084; Euripides, Bacchae 912-944. Part II: Rome: 6. The Silent Women of Rome: M. I. Finley. Excerpts: Funerary Inscriptions: CE 81.1-2, 158.2, 843, 1136.3-4; ILS 5213, 8402, 8394; CIL 1.1211, 1.1221, 1.1837. 7. The Body Female and the Body Politic: Livy’s Lucretia and Verginia: S. R. Joshel. Excerpts: Livy, On the Founding of Rome, 1.57.6-59.6. 8. Mistress and Metaphor in Augustan Elegy: M. Wyke. Excerpts: Propertius, 1.8a-b and 2.5; Cicero, In Defense of Marcus Caelius 20.47-21.50. 9. Pliny’s Brassiere. Excerpt:: Pliny, Natural History 28.70-82. Part III: Classical Tradition: 10. “The Voice of the Shuttle Is Ours.” P. K. Joplin. Excerpt: Ovid, Metamorphoses 6.424-623.] / bmcr
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  • Dominic Montserrat, Changing bodies, changing meanings: studies on the human body in antiquity, London: Routledge (1998) [Contributors: Angus Bowie, Gillian Clark, Richard Hawley, Lynn Meskell, Dominic Montserrat, Penelope Murray, Jane Stevenson, Nicholas Vlahogiannis, Terry Wilfong] / bmcr
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  • Maria Wyke, The Roman Mistress: Ancient and Modern Representations., Oxford: Oxford University Press (2002) [1. Part 1. Love Poetry Mistress and Metaphor in Augustan Elegy; 2. Written Women: Propertius’ scripta puella (2. 10-13); 3. The Elegiac Woman at Rome: Propertius Book 4; 4. Reading Female Flesh: Ovid Amores 3. 1; 5. Part 2. Reception Taking the Woman’s Part: Gender and Scholarship on Love Elegy; 6. Meretrix regina: Augustan Cleopatras; 7. Oriental Vamp; Cleopatra 1910s; 8. Glamour Girl: Cleopatra 1930s – 1960s; 9. Meretrix Augusta: Messalina 1870s – 1920s; 10. Suburban Feminist: Messalina 1930s – 1970s] / bmcr
  • Wyke, Maria, “Taking the Woman’s Part: Engendering Roman Love Elegy,” in Roman Literature and Ideology: Ramus Essays for J.P. Sullivan edited by A. J. Boyle, Bendigo, Australia: Aureal Publications (1995) 110-128 / bmcr
  • Andrew Zissos, “The Rape of Proserpina in Ovid Met. 5.341-661: Internal Audience and Narrative Distortion,” Phoenix 53 (1999) 97-113