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The Classical Association SOOCTV fO« TW KOMOTlOn Of H€13«C Senate House, Malet Street, London WC1E 7HU President: Professor Patricia E. Easterling The Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies, generally known as the Hellenic Society, was founded in 1879 to advance the study of Greek language, literature, history, art and archaeology in the Ancient, Byzantine and Modern periods. It has done this ever since by various means, chief among them being the annual publication of the Journal of Hellenic Studies and, since the 1950's, its supplement, Archaeological Reports, which are both supplied free of charge to members of the Society. Occasional monographs also appear in the series Supplementary Papers. The Society also helps to maintain the Joint Library on the third floor of Senate House, in conjunction with the Roman Society and the Institute of Classical Studies. Membership of the Hellenic Society allows the reader to borrow (within the UK) up to four books at a time, either in person or by post. Members may also borrow slides from the Joint Library's extensive collection. The Society also arranges an annual lecture series in London, holds occasional receptions and other meetings, and helps to arrange other lectures in collaboration with the various local branches of the Classical Association. A programme of all these lectures and other meetings is circulated in September. The Society holds a list of lecturers on topics in Hellenic Studies, which is supplied to Classical Associations and others to help them plan their own lecture programmes. The Society aims to help those engaged in Hellenic Studies at all levels, and to this end it makes grants to schools, colleges, universities and individual students. Membership is open to all, and there is a reduced rate for students. For current subscription rates and all further information please contact: The Secretary, Hellenic Society, Senate House, Malet Street, London WC1E 7HU (telephone +44 (0)171-323-9590, fax +44 (0)171-323-9591, e-mail: [email protected], web site http://www.sas.ac.uk/icls/hellenic/). The Classical Association The Classical Association has a worldwide membership and is open to all who value the study of the languages, literature, and civilisations of ancient Greece and Rome. It creates opportunities for friendly exchange and co- operation among classicists, encourages scholarship through its journals and other publications, and supports classics in schools and universities. Every year it holds an annual conference, and it sponsors branches all over the country which put on programmes of lectures and other activities. The Classical Association has about 4,000 members. The annual subscription is £5; life membership is £105. Members receive Proceedings of the Classical Association once a year and a newsletter, CA News, twice a year. They may also subscribe at substantially reduced cost to the Classical Association journals Classical Quarterly, Classical Review, and Greece and Rome. Applications for membership and subscriptions (cheques payable to The Classical Association') should be sent to the Treasurer, Richard Wallace, Department of Classics, Keele University, Newcastle under Lyme, Staffs. ST5 5BG. The Treasurer can also give information about journal subscription rates, and about the Association's other publications, including the Greece and Rome suppllxents New Surveys in the Classics. Binding for the Journal of Roman Studies Green Street Bindery, Green Street, Oxford OX4 1YB - tel. no. 01865 243297 - will undertake to bind volumes in brown buckram, laced on boards, with title and year lettered in gold on spine to match the former standard binding, at an approximate cost of £26.50 per volume (wrappers and advertisements removed or bound in at customer's request). No extra charge for two volumes bound together. Postage chargeable extra. Journal of Roman Studies Back issues are available from Periodicals Service Company, 11 Main Street, Germantown, NY 12525, USA. Tel. 518 537-4700 Fax 518 537-5899 Vols 1-64 (1911-74) are available CAMBRIDGE Classics from Cambridge Patriarchy, Property and Death in the Roman The World of Rome Family An Introduction to Roman Culture Richard P. Sailer Edited by Peter Jones and Keith Sidwell The figure of the Roman father has traditionally Following the same model as The World of Athens, provided the pattern of patriarchy in European this book opens with two chapters outlining the thought. This book shows how the social realities history and identity of Rome 1000 BC-AD 476. and cultural representations diverged from this Subsequent chapters examine how Rome was paradigm. Demographic analysis and computer governed (from Republic to Empire), economic simulation demonstrate that before adulthood and social life and Roman attitudes towards the most Romans lost their fathers by death. Close rest of the world as reflected in the arts. Written by reading of Latin texts reveals Roman fathers as experts in the field, beautifully illustrated and with devoted and loving and not harsh exploitative copious sources, this is the essential introduction masters of slaves. The demographic and cultural to the Roman world. It serves as a background to contexts deepen our understanding of how the Reading Latin (CUP 1986). patrimony was transmitted. £45.00 HB 0 521 38421 4 424 pp. £15.95 PB 0 52159978 4 264 pp. £15.95 PB 0 52138600 4 Cambridge Studies in Population, Economy and Society in Past Time 25 Friendship in the Classical World David Konstan This book - the only history of friendship in classical antiquity that exists in English - examines the nature of friendship in Greece and Rome from Homer to the Christian Roman Empire of the fourth century AD. It demonstrates how ancient friendship resembles modern conceptions, and how it evolves in different social contexts. £35.00 HB 0 521 45402 6 220 pp. £12.95 PB 0 52145998 2 Key Themes in Ancient History The Passions in Roman Thought Authority and Tradition in Ancient and Literature Historiography Edited by Susanna Morton Braund John Marincola and Christopher Gill This book is a study of the various claims to New essays explore the understanding of emotions authority made by the ancient Greek and (or 'passions') in Roman thought and literature Roman historians throughout their histories, and from a wide range of Latin prose and verse writers. of the way in which the tradition of ancient These fresh and searching studies of key literary historiography shaped their responses and and intellectual texts are all in clear and non- moulded the presentation of themselves to their technical language, with Greek and Latin translated. audience. £37.50 HB 0 521 47391 8 276 pp. £45.00 HB 0 521480191 384 pp. 1 CAMBRIDGE P UNIVERSITY PRESS he Edinburgh Building, Cambridge cm nu THE CLASSICS BOOKSHOP 3, TURL STREET, OXFORD, 0X1 3DQ. Telephone / Fax . 01865 726466. We have the largest secondhand stock of Latin and Greek Classics in the United Kingdom. We always have a wide selection of secondhand and Antiquarian Classics on view in our shop. The stock includes texts and commentaries, translations, general works, Archaeology, Ancient History, Philosophy and periodicals. We usually have runs of periodicals available, although these are not kept in the shop. We issue three catalogues a year, free in the U.K. WE ARE ALWAYS KEEN TO BUY CLASSICS AND RELATED MATERIAL, FROM SINGLE VOLUMES TO COLLECTIONS IN THE U.K. AND ABROAD. Tne Poet and tne Prince Ovid ana Augustan Discourse Alessandro Barchiesi "A brilliant development botb or Pisan worfc on genre and intertextuality and of Anglo-American approaches." — Times Literary Supplement In tbis fresh assessment of Ovid's fascinating poem Fasti, Alessandro Barchiesi provides a new vision of the interaction between Ovid and the renowned ruler Augustus. A Joan Palevsky Classical Literature Book, £35.00 clotK w.ucpresg.edu NEW IN PAPERBACK At bookstores or order (1243) 842165 Guardians oi Language The Grammarian ana Society in Late Antiquity Robert A. Kaster "Demonstrates . the fundamental role of language teaching and usage in creating the late-classical society's concept of itself, and in influencing the ambitions and actions of individu- Of als within that society. ... A deeply learned and complex book whose audience will stretch far beyond its immediate scholarly audience."—Envoi Tne Transformation of the Classical Heritage, £19.95 paper INTHE Vergil's STUDIES HISTORY Eclogues OF AND Translated by GREECE ROME Barbara Hughes Fowler "A remarkable The Artists of the Ara Pacis translation of an The Process of Hellenization in important text. Roman Relief Sculpture Immediate, re- Diane Atnally Conlin laxed, and close "[Conlin] provides an historio- to the spirit of graphic context for the Ara Pacis the original." and allows us to see what kinds of —Eugene W artists were responsible for carving Bushala, Boston it. ... The reader feels as if he/she College is seeing a familiar monument for 65 pp. the first time."—C. Brian Rose, $22.50 cloth University of Cincinnati $9.95 paper 360 pp., 8'A x 11, 254 photos/illus. $65 cloth Piscinae Artificial Fishponds in Roman Italy James Higginbotham "Higginbotham records vanishing archaeologi- cal evidence and makes a significant contri- bution to Roman archaeology and social history."—Gail L. Hoffman, Yale University 312 pp., 108 illus. $49.95 cloth -Jyear. at bookstores or by toll-free order THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA PRESS Chapel Hill • Phone (800) 848-6224, Fax (800) 272-6817 • http://sunsite.unc.edu/uncpress/ BRITANNIA MONOGRAPHS ISSN 0953-542X Roman Mosaics in Britain No. l out of print Skeleton Green: A Late Iron Age and Romano-British Site No. 2 Clive Partridge 1981, 359 pp., 15 pis, paperback ISBN 0 907764 00 2 £6/US$12 Wall-Painting in Roman Britain No. 3 Norman Davey and Roger Ling 1982, 231 pp., 123 illus., 1 fiche, paperback ISBN 0 907764 15 0 £8/US$16 Vindolanda: The Latin Writing-Tablets No.
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