Tibullus: Some random bibliography (irregularly formatted) February 2003


Adams, J. N. 1982. The Latin Sexual Vocabulary. London.

Ball, R. J. 1983. Tibullus the Elegist: A Critical Survey. Göttingen.

Bassi, Karen. 1994. "Desired Silence: Amor and Mors in Tibullus 1.1" SyllClass 5: 53-62

Boyd B. W. 1984. "Parva seges satis est. The landscape of Tibullan elegy in 1.1 and 1.10." TAPA  114: 273-280

Bright, D. F. 1978. Haec mihi fingebam: Tibullus in his World. Leiden.

Cairns, Francis. 1979. Tibullus. A Hellenistic poet at Rome. Cambridge

Conte, G. B. 1994. Genres and Readers: Lucretius, Love Elegy, Pliny's "Encyclopedia," trans. G. W. Most. Baltimore.

Dettmer, H., The "Corpus Tibullianum" (1974-1980) ANRW II.30.3 (1983) 1962-1975

Elder, J. P. 1962. "Tibullus tersus atque elegans," in J. P. Sullivan, ed., Critical Essays on Roman Literature: Elegy and Lyric. London. 65-105.

Feeney, Denis. 1998. Literature and Religion at Rome. Cultures, Contexts, and Beliefs. Roman Literature and its Contexts. Cambridge.

Fisher, J.M. 1983. The Life and Work of Tibullus ANRW II.30.3: 1924-1961

Gaisser, J. H. 1971. "Structure and Tone in Tibullus 1,6," AJP 92.202-16.

Gamel, M. 1998. "Reading as a Man: Performance and Gender in Roman Elegy." Helios 25: 79-95.

Gotoff, H.C. 1974. "Tibullus: Nunc Levis Est Tractanda Venus." HSCP 78: 231-51

Greene, Ellen, 1999. The Erotics of Domination: Male Desire and the Mistress in Latin Love Poetry. Baltimore.

Hallett, Judith P. 1973. "The Role Of Women In Roman Elegy: Counter-Cultural Feminism," Arethusa 6.103-24.

Hinds, S. 1998. Allusion and Intertext: Dynamics of Appropriation in Roman Poetry. Cambridge.

James, Sharon L. 2003. Learned Girls and Male Persuasion: Gender and Reading in Roman Love Elegy. Berkeley.

James, 1998. "Introduction: Constructions of Gender and Genre in Roman Comedy and Elegy," Helios 25.3-16.

Johnson, W.R. 1990. "Messalla's Birthday: the Politics of Pastoral," Arethusa 23.1: 95-113

Kennedy, D. F. 1992. "'Augustan' and 'Anti-Augustan': Reflections on Terms of Reference," in A. Powell, ed., Roman Poetry and Propaganda in the Age of Augustus. Bristol. 26-58.

Kennedy 1993. The Arts of Love: Five Studies in the Discourse of Roman Love Elegy. Cambridge.

Lee, G. 1974. "Otium cum indignitate: Tibullus 1.1," in T. Woodman and D. West, eds., Quality and Pleasure in Latin Poetry. Cambridge. 94-111.

Lee 1990. Tibullus: Elegies. Leeds.

Lee-Stecum, Parshia. 1998. Powerplay in Tibullus: Reading Elegies Book 1. Cambridge ; New York

Lee-Stecum, 2000. "Poet/reader, authority deferred : re-reading Tibullan elegy." Arethusa 33 (2) : 177-215.

Levin, D.N. 1983. Reflections of the Epic Tradition in the Elegies of Tibullus ANRW II.30.3: 2000-2127

Lilja, S. 1965. The Roman Love Elegists' Attitude to Women. Helsinki.

Littlewood, R.J. 1983. Humour in Tibullus ANRW II.30.3: 2128-2158

Luck, G. 1959. The Latin Love Elegy. London.

Luck 1982. "Tibullus," in Cambridge History of Classical Literature Volume II, E. J. Kenney, ed., Cambridge. 411-13.

Lyne, R. O.A.M. 1996. Tibullus. The Oxford Classical Dictionary. Third Edition. Edd. S. Hornblower and A. Spawforth. Oxford & New York 1996. - p. 1524

Lyne, 1998. "Propertius and Tibullus: early exchanges" CQ 48.2: 519-544

Maltby, Robert. 2002. Tibullus: Elegies: Text, Introduction and Commentary (Arca Classical and Medieval Texts, Papers and Monographs, 41). Leeds.

Maltby, 1999. Tibullus and the language of Latin elegy. In: Aspects of the language of Latin poetry. J.N. Adams & R.G. Mayer (Edd.). Oxford: (Proceedings of the British Academy. 93.). pp. 377-398

McGann, M.J. "The Marathus Elegies of Tibullus," ANRW II.30.3 (1983)

Miller, Paul Allen. 2002. Latin Erotic Elegy: An Anthology and Reader. London and New York.

Miller, 1994. Lyric Texts and Lyric Consciousness: The Birth of a Genre from Archaic Greece to Augustan Rome. London.

Miller, and Platter, Charles 1999. "Crux as Symptom: Augustan Elegy and Beyond," CW 92.5.445-54.

Miller, and Platter, C. 1999. Power, Politics, and Discourse in Augustan Elegy. CW 92.5.

Miller, "The Tibullan dream text." TAPhA 1999 129 : 181-224.

Miller, 1994. Lyric Texts and Lyric Consciousness: The Birth of a Genre

Murgatroyd, P. 1980. Tibullus 1: A Commentary. Pietermaritzburg.

Myers, K. Sara. 1996. "The poet and the procuress : the lena in Latin love elegy." JRS 86 : 1-21.

Murgatroyd 1994. Tibullus: Elegies II. Oxford.

Newman, John Kevin. 1998. '"Saturno Rege:" Themes of the Golden Age in Tibullus and other Augustan poets.' In: Candide iudex. Beiträge zur augusteischen Dichtung. Festschrift für Walter Wimmel Ö. Ed. Anna Elissa Radke. Stuttgart. pp. 225-246

Oliensis, E. 1997. The erotics of amicitia: readings in Tibullus, Propertius, and Horace. In: Roman sexualities. J. P. Hallett and M. B. Skinner (Edd.). Princeton. - pp. 151-171

Putnam, M. C. J. 1973. Tibullus: A Commentary. Norman.

Ross, David O. 1986. 'Tibullus and the country. 251-265 in Atti del Convegno internazionale di studi su Albio Tibullo (Roma-Palestrina, 10-13 maggio 1984). Roma

Sharrock, A. R. 1991. "Womanufacture," JRS 81.36-49.

Shea., George W. 1998. Delia and Nemesis : the elegies of Albius Tibullus / introduction, translation, and literary commentary,. Lanham

Smith, K. F. 1913. The Elegies of Albius Tibullus. New York.

Solmsen, F. 1962. "Tibullus as an Augustan Poet," Hermes 90.295-325.

Van Nortwick, Thomas. 1990. "Huc veniet Messalla Meus: Commentary on Johnson [1990]," Arethusa 23.1: 115-23

Van Sickle, J. 1980. "The Book-Roll and Some Conventions of the Poetic Book," Arethusa 13.5-40.

Veyne, P. 1988. Roman Erotic Elegy: Love, Poetry, and the West, trans. D. Pellauer.

Wimmel, Walter. 1968. Der frühe Tibull München : Fink, 1968.

Wyke, Maria 1987. "Written Women: Propertius' scripta puella," JRS 77.47-61.

Wyke 1989. "Mistress and Metaphor in Augustan Elegy," Helios 16.25-47.

Wyke 1989. "Reading Female Flesh: Amores 3.1," in History as Text, ed. Averil Cameron.Chapel Hill. 111-43.

Wyke 1994. "Taking the Woman's Part: Engendering Roman Love Elegy," Ramus 23.110-28.

Wyke. 2002. The Roman Mistress: Ancient and Modern Representations. Oxford.