• P. Cartledge, “Xenophon’s Women: A Touch of the Other,” in Tria Lustra. Fest. J. Pinsent edited by H. D. Jocelyn and H. Hurt, Liverpool (1995 or 1996)
  • Dawe, R.D., “Some Erotic Suggestions. Notes on Achilles Tatius, Eustathius Macrembolites, Xenophon of Ephesus and Charito,” Philologus 145.2 (2001) 291-311
  • Dawe, R.D., “Some Erotic Suggestions. Notes on Achilles Tatius, Eustathius Macrembolites, Xenophon of Ephesus and Charito,” Philologus 145.2 (2001) 291-311
  • A. Gini, “The Manly Intellect of His Wife: Xenophon, Oeconomicus Ch. 7,” CW 86 (1993) 483-486
  • F. D. Harvey, “The Wicked Wife of Ischomachos,” EMC 28 (1984) 68-70
  • C. Hindley, “Eros and Military Command in Xenophon,” Classical Quarterly 44.2 (1994) 347 / full text
  • C. Hindley, “Xenophon on male love,” The Classical Quarterly 49.1 (1999) 74-99
  • S. B. Murnaghan, “How a Woman Can Be More Like a Man: the Dialogue Between Ischomachus and his Wife in Xenophon’s Oeconomicus,” Helios 15 (1988) 9-22
  • S.I. Oost, “Xenophon’s Attitude toward Women,” CW 71 (1977) 225-36
  • S. Pomeroy, Xenophon, Oeconomicus. A Social and Historical Commentary, With a New English Translation, Oxford (1994) / bmcr  / web link
  • Sarah Pomeroy, Spartan Women, Oxford: Oxford University Press (2002) / bmcr
  • R. Scaife, “Ritual and Persuasion in the House of Ischomachus,” CJ 90.3 (1995) 225-234
  • L. R. Shero, “Xenophon’s Portrait of a Young Wife,” CW 26 (1932) 17-21