900 Geschichte und Geografie
Refine
Has Fulltext
- no (22)
Year of publication
- 2020 (22) (remove)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (22) (remove)
Keywords
- Martial (2)
- Rome (2)
- classical reception (2)
- intertextuality (2)
- Aeneid (1)
- Antonie Wlosok (1)
- Apophoreta (1)
- Aristophanes (1)
- Augustus (1)
- Bethlehem (1)
- Caesar (1)
- Classical Archaeology (1)
- Cleopatra (1)
- Dido (1)
- Gender Studies (1)
- Hercules (1)
- Jerome (1)
- Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz (1)
- Lotte Eisner (1)
- Lucan (1)
- M. Annaeus Lucanus (1)
- Metamorphoses (1)
- Neronian age (1)
- Orpheus (1)
- Ovid (1)
- P. Ovidius Naso (1)
- Pliny the Younger (1)
- Pompeius Magnus (1)
- Propertius (1)
- Reinhard Mey (1)
- Roman epic (1)
- Saturnalia (1)
- Scheherazade (1)
- Semiramis (1)
- Silius Italicus (1)
- Synesius (1)
- Theocritus (1)
- Varro (1)
- Zenobia (1)
- advertising (cosmetics, USA, ca. 1900) (1)
- aetiology (1)
- body (1)
- bucolic genre (1)
- cultural hybridity (1)
- divination (1)
- dreams (1)
- elegy (1)
- epigram (1)
- exile (1)
- expressionism (1)
- fictionality (1)
- heroism (1)
- historical memory (1)
- history of classical philology (1)
- history of women in academia (1)
- literary patronage (1)
- love elegy (1)
- masculinity (1)
- metapoetry (1)
- orientalism (1)
- otium–negotium (1)
- philosophy (1)
- pilgrimage (1)
- poetic glory (1)
- poetics (1)
- political Eros (1)
- racist subtext (1)
- senatorial class (1)
- silent film (1)
- theurgy (1)
- vase-painting (1)
Institute
Sängers Glück
(2020)
The German singer-songwriter Reinhard Mey, although not pretending to be a second Orpheus, nevertheless appears to be very familiar with classical myth.
„An Herrn Prof. A. Wlosok“
(2020)
In contrast to other European countries, female professors of Classical Philology have been severely underrepresented in Germany. This article wants to shed light on Antonie Wlosok (1930–2013), the first or second woman to hold a Chair of Classical Philology in Germany. How can Wlosok’s work at Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz be described, considering especially the very male-dominated academic world? Based on testimonials from the university archives and selected publications, this essay aims to give insights to this question, highlighting current debates about women in academia.
Lotte Eisner
(2020)
Lotte Eisner (1896–1983) is without doubt one of the most important early film critics and pioneers of film history. In the history of Classical Studies, however, she plays no role. She is not even mentioned in the relevant scholarly books or articles, although she received a doctorate degree in Classical Archaeology. But it is worth taking a closer look at this relatively short phase of her life. The following lines are to be understood as a sketch of her specific ‘archaeological’ view of German Expressionist silent films. Lotte Eisner herself comments on this in her autobiography.