• J. Balmer, Classical Women Poets, Newcastle-upon-Tyne: Bloodaxe Books (1996) [anthology] / bmcr
  • Currie, H. MacL., “The Poems of Sulpicia,” ANRW 30.3 (l983) 1751-1764
  • Davies, Ceri, “Poetry in the ‘Circle’ of Messalla,” Greece & Rome 20 (1973) 25-35 / full text
  • Hallett, Judith, “Contextualizing the Text: The Journey to Ovid,” Helios 17 (1990) 187-95
  • Hinds, S., “The Poetess and the Reader: Further Steps toward Sulpicia,” Hermathena 143 (1987) 29-46
  • Keith, Allison, “Tandem venit amor: A Roman Woman Speaks of Love,” in Roman Sexualities edited by Hallett, Judith P. and Skinner, Marilyn B., Princeton: Princeton University Press (1997) 295-310 / bmcr
  • Lowe, N.J., “Sulpicia’s Syntax,” Classical Quarterly 38 (1988) 193-205 / full text
  • Parker, Holt, “Sulpicia, the Auctor de Sulpicia, and the Authorship of 3.9 and 3.11 of the Corpus Tibullianum,” Helios 21 (1994) 39-62
  • Roessel, David, “The Significance of the Name Cerinthus in the Poems of Sulpicia,” Transactions of the American Philological Association 120 (1990) 243-250 / full text
  • Santirocco, Matthew, “Sulpicia Reconsidered,” Classical Journal 74 (1979) 229-39
  • J. M. Snyder, The Woman and the Lyre. Women Writers in Classical Greece and Rome, Carbondale and Edwardsville: Southern Illinois University Press (1989) / 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