Women Classical Scholars
Women Classical Scholars
Unsealing the Fountain from the Renaissance to Jacqueline de Romilly
Wyles, Rosie; Hall, Edith
Oxford University Press
01/2020
496
Mole
Inglês
9780198855088
15 a 20 dias
608
2: Carmel McCallum-Barry: Learned Women of the Renaissance and Early Modern Period in Italy and England: the Relevance of their Scholarship
3: Sofia Frade: Hic sita Sigea est: satis hoc: Luisa Sigea and the Role of D. Maria, Infanta of Portugal, in Female Scholarship
4: Rosie Wyles: Menage's Learned Ladies: Anne Dacier (1647-1720) and Anna Maria van Schurman (1607-1678)
5: Jacqueline Fabre-Serries: Anne Dacier (1681), Renee Vivien (1903), or What Does it Mean for a Woman to Translate Sapphoa
6: Edith Hall: Intellectual Pleasure and the Woman Translator in 17th and 18th-Century England
7: Jennifer Wallace: Confined and Exposed: Elizabeth Carter's Classical Translations
8: Liz Gloyn: This Is Not A Chapter About Jane Harrison: Teaching Classics at Newnham College, 1882-1922
9: Michele Valerie Ronnick: Classical Education and the Advancement of African American Women in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
10: Barbara F. McManus: Grace Harriet Macurdy (1866 1946): Redefining the Classical Scholar
11: Judith P. Hallett: Greek (and Roman) Ways and Thoroughfares: the Routing of Edith Hamilton's Classical Antiquity
12: Roland Mayer: Margaret Alford: a Cambridge Latinist (1868-1951)
13: Judith P. Hallett: Eli's Daughters: Female Classics Graduate Students at Yale, 1892-1941
14: Catharine Roth: 'Ada Sara Adler (1878-1946): "The greatest woman philologist who ever lived"'
15: Nina Braginskaya: Olga Freidenberg: a Creative Mind Incarcerated
16: Eleanor Irwin: An Unconventional Classicist: the Work and Life of Kathleen Freeman
17: Laetitia Parker: A.M. Dale
18: Rowena Fowler: Betty Radice (1912-1985) and the Survival of Classics
19: Barbara K. Gold: Simone Weil: Receiving the Iliad
20: Ruth Webb: Jacqueline de Romilly
Afterword
Bibliography
2: Carmel McCallum-Barry: Learned Women of the Renaissance and Early Modern Period in Italy and England: the Relevance of their Scholarship
3: Sofia Frade: Hic sita Sigea est: satis hoc: Luisa Sigea and the Role of D. Maria, Infanta of Portugal, in Female Scholarship
4: Rosie Wyles: Menage's Learned Ladies: Anne Dacier (1647-1720) and Anna Maria van Schurman (1607-1678)
5: Jacqueline Fabre-Serries: Anne Dacier (1681), Renee Vivien (1903), or What Does it Mean for a Woman to Translate Sapphoa
6: Edith Hall: Intellectual Pleasure and the Woman Translator in 17th and 18th-Century England
7: Jennifer Wallace: Confined and Exposed: Elizabeth Carter's Classical Translations
8: Liz Gloyn: This Is Not A Chapter About Jane Harrison: Teaching Classics at Newnham College, 1882-1922
9: Michele Valerie Ronnick: Classical Education and the Advancement of African American Women in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
10: Barbara F. McManus: Grace Harriet Macurdy (1866 1946): Redefining the Classical Scholar
11: Judith P. Hallett: Greek (and Roman) Ways and Thoroughfares: the Routing of Edith Hamilton's Classical Antiquity
12: Roland Mayer: Margaret Alford: a Cambridge Latinist (1868-1951)
13: Judith P. Hallett: Eli's Daughters: Female Classics Graduate Students at Yale, 1892-1941
14: Catharine Roth: 'Ada Sara Adler (1878-1946): "The greatest woman philologist who ever lived"'
15: Nina Braginskaya: Olga Freidenberg: a Creative Mind Incarcerated
16: Eleanor Irwin: An Unconventional Classicist: the Work and Life of Kathleen Freeman
17: Laetitia Parker: A.M. Dale
18: Rowena Fowler: Betty Radice (1912-1985) and the Survival of Classics
19: Barbara K. Gold: Simone Weil: Receiving the Iliad
20: Ruth Webb: Jacqueline de Romilly
Afterword
Bibliography