@incollection{CarlaUhink2021, author = {Carl{\`a}-Uhink, Filippo}, title = {The impact of Roman Roads on Landscape and Space}, series = {The Impact of the Roman Empire on Landscapes}, booktitle = {The Impact of the Roman Empire on Landscapes}, publisher = {Brill}, address = {Leiden \& Boston}, isbn = {978-90-04-41144-9}, doi = {10.1163/9789004411449_005}, pages = {69 -- 91}, year = {2021}, language = {en} } @book{CarlaUhink2020, author = {Carl{\`a}-Uhink, Filippo}, title = {Representations of classical Greece in theme parks}, publisher = {Bloomsbury Academic}, address = {London}, isbn = {978-1-4742-9784-4}, pages = {X, 263}, year = {2020}, language = {en} } @article{CarlaUhink2019, author = {Carl{\`a}-Uhink, Filippo}, title = {(Re-)Founding Italy: The Social War, Its Aftermath and the Construction of a Roman-Italic Identity in the Roman Republic}, series = {History in Flux: Journal of the Department of History, Faculty of Humanities, Juraj Dobrila University of Pula}, volume = {1}, journal = {History in Flux: Journal of the Department of History, Faculty of Humanities, Juraj Dobrila University of Pula}, number = {1}, doi = {10.32728/flux.2019.1.1}, pages = {3 -- 19}, year = {2019}, abstract = {The Social War (91-88 BCE) is one of the most significant episodes in Roman history: from this war, in which Rome fought against her Italic allies, emerged the elite that would lead the Republic in the last decades of its existence and that would provide the senatorial aristocracy of the early imperial age. The Italic rebels were defeated militarily, yet they achieved their political aims. As such, this war - and its elaboration and memorialization in Roman cultural memory - provides a very interesting case study about how "victory" and "defeat" are constructed discursively after a disruptive war, and how its narration is "functionalized" for a re-foundation of the civic body.}, language = {en} } @misc{CarlaUhink2020, author = {Carl{\`a}-Uhink, Filippo}, title = {Review of Helen Roche \& Kyriakos Demetriou: Brill's Companion to the Classics, Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany}, series = {thersites 10: Modern Identities and Classical Antiquity}, volume = {2019}, journal = {thersites 10: Modern Identities and Classical Antiquity}, number = {10}, doi = {10.34679/thersites.vol10.144}, pages = {234 -- 238}, year = {2020}, language = {en} } @article{CarlaUhinkGori2020, author = {Carl{\`a}-Uhink, Filippo and Gori, Maja}, title = {Preface}, series = {thersites 10: Modern Identities and Classical Antiquity}, volume = {2019}, journal = {thersites 10: Modern Identities and Classical Antiquity}, number = {10}, doi = {10.34679/thersites.vol10.159}, pages = {i -- vi}, year = {2020}, language = {en} } @misc{CarlaUhink2021, author = {Carl{\`a}-Uhink, Filippo}, title = {Rez. zu: Stephen L. Dyson; Archaeology, ideology and urbanism in Rome from the grand tour to Berlusconi. - Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2019, 327 p. - ISBN 978-0-521-87459-5}, series = {Anabases : traditions et r{\´e}ception de l'Antiquit{\´e}}, journal = {Anabases : traditions et r{\´e}ception de l'Antiquit{\´e}}, number = {33}, publisher = {ERASME}, address = {Toulouse}, issn = {1774-4296}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.4000/anabases.12253}, pages = {283 -- 285}, year = {2021}, language = {en} } @incollection{CarlaUhinkWieber2020, author = {Carl{\`a}-Uhink, Filippo and Wieber, Anja}, title = {Introduction}, series = {Orientalism and the reception of powerful women from the ancient world}, booktitle = {Orientalism and the reception of powerful women from the ancient world}, publisher = {Bloomsbury Academic}, address = {New York}, isbn = {978-1-3500-5011-2}, doi = {10.5040/9781350077416}, pages = {1 -- 15}, year = {2020}, abstract = {In 1932, Grace Harriet Macurdy, Professor of Greek at Vassar College, wrote about Cleopatra's and Marc Antony's lifestyle in Egypt: In a manner of living as though taken from the Arabian Nights Entertainment, they gambled, drank, hunted and fished together, and wandered about Alexandria by night in disguise.  .  . Even Macurdy - the author of a pioneering study on Hellenistic queens and 'woman-power', in which she stressed the necessity of evaluating powerful women by the same standards as their male counterparts - could not avoid using an Orientalist flair when describing the most famous Ptolemaic queen. It is the aim of this book to show that Macurdy was and is anything but alone, and that discourses and images developed by the Orientalist imagination have dominated the ways in which powerful ancient women have been represented in modern reception. The reason for this, we argue, is...}, language = {en} } @incollection{CarlaUhinkRollinger2023, author = {Carl{\`a}-Uhink, Filippo and Rollinger, Christian}, title = {The Tetrarchy as Ideology}, series = {The Tetrarchy as Ideology. Recoonfigurations and Representations of an Imperial Power}, booktitle = {The Tetrarchy as Ideology. Recoonfigurations and Representations of an Imperial Power}, editor = {Carl{\`a}-Uhink, Filippo}, publisher = {Franz Steiner}, address = {Stuttgart}, isbn = {978-3-515-13403-3}, pages = {11 -- 24}, year = {2023}, language = {en} } @incollection{CarlaUhink2022, author = {Carl{\`a}-Uhink, Filippo}, title = {Cicero, the Poor, and Roman Rhetoric}, series = {Poverty in Ancient Greece and Rome. Realities and Discourses}, booktitle = {Poverty in Ancient Greece and Rome. Realities and Discourses}, publisher = {Routledge}, address = {London / New York}, isbn = {978-0-36722-115-7}, doi = {10.4324/9780367221157-11}, pages = {166 -- 183}, year = {2022}, language = {en} } @incollection{CarlaUhink2020, author = {Carl{\`a}-Uhink, Filippo}, title = {Theodora A.P. (After Procopius) / Theodora A.S. (After Sardou): Metamorphoses of an Empress}, series = {Orientalism and the Reception of Powerful Women from the Ancient World}, booktitle = {Orientalism and the Reception of Powerful Women from the Ancient World}, publisher = {Bloomsbury}, address = {London et al.}, isbn = {978-1-3500-5010-5 print}, doi = {10.5040/9781350077416.ch-011}, pages = {167 -- 183}, year = {2020}, language = {en} }