Laughter in Ancient Rome (64 page)

BOOK: Laughter in Ancient Rome
11.88Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
Braund, D. 2000. “Learning, Luxury and Empire: Athenaeus’ Roman Patron.” In
Athenaeus and His World: Reading Greek Culture in the Roman Empire,
ed. Braund and J. Wilkins, 3–22. Exeter.
Braund, D., and J. Wilkins, eds. 2000.
Athenaeus and His World: Reading Greek Culture in the Roman Empire.
Exeter.
Bremmer, J. 1997. “Jokes, Jokers and Jokebooks in Ancient Greek Culture.” In
A Cultural History of Humour,
ed. Bremmer and H. Roodenburg, 11–28. Cambridge.
Bremmer, J., and H. Roodenburg, eds. 1997.
A Cultural History of Humour.
Cambridge.
Brendel, O. 1953. “Der Affen-Aeneas.”
RM
60: 153–59.
Briscoe, J. 2008.
A Commentary on Livy, Books 38–40
. Oxford.
Brothers, A. J. 2000.
Terence: The Eunuch.
Warminster.
Brown, P. G. McC. 1992. “Menander, Fragments 745 and 746 K-T, Menander’s
Kolax,
and Parasites and Flatterers in Greek Comedy.”
ZPE
92: 91–107.
Brugnola, V. 1896.
Le facezie di Cicerone.
Castello.
Burke, P. 1988. “Bakhtin for Historians.”
Social History
13: 85–90.
Cairns, D., ed. 2005.
Body Language in the Greek and Roman Worlds.
Swansea.
Cameron, A. 2011.
The Last Pagans of Rome.
Oxford.
Cameron, K., ed. 1993.
Humour and History.
Oxford.
Cantarella, R. 1975. “I ‘libri’ della
Poetica
di Aristotele.”
Rendiconti della Classe di scienze morali, storiche e filologiche dell’Accademia dei Lincei
30: 289–97.
Carey, C. 1981.
A Commentary on Five Odes of Pindar.
New York.
Carey, S. 2003.
Pliny’s Catalogue of Culture: Art and Empire in the “Natural History.”
Oxford.
Carter, A. 1992. “Alison’s Giggle.” In
Nothing Sacred: Selected Writings,
189–204. Rev. ed. London. Originally published in 1983.
Cassin, B., J.-L. Labarrière, and G. R. Dherbey, eds. 1997.
L’animal dans l’antiquité.
Paris.
Cataudella, Q. 1971.
La facezia in Grecia e a Roma.
Florence.
Cèbe, J.-P., 1966.
La caricature et la parodie dans le monde romain antique des origines à Juvénal.
Paris.
Ceccarelli, P. 2013.
Ancient Greek Letter Writing.
Oxford.
Champlin, E. 2003.
Nero.
Cambridge, MA.
Chartier, R. 1987. “Ritual and Print, Discipline and Invention: The
Fête
in France from the Middle Ages to the Revolution.” In
The Cultural Uses of Print in Early Modern France,
trans. L. G. Cochrane, 13–31. Princeton, NJ. Originally published in French in 1980.
Chesterfield, Earl of [Philip Dormer Stanhope]. 1774.
Letters Written by the Late Right Honourable Philip Dormer Stanhope, Earl of Chesterfield, to His Son, Philip Stanhope.
4 vols. London.
———. 1890.
Letters of Philip Dormer, Fourth Earl of Chesterfield, to His Godson and Successor.
Oxford.
Christenson, D. M. 2000.
Plautus: Amphitruo.
Cambridge.
Cioffi , F. 1998.
Wittgenstein on Freud and Frazer.
Cambridge.
Cixous, H. 1976. “The Laugh of the Medusa.” Trans. K. Cohen and P. Cohen.
Signs
1: 875–93. Originally published in French in 1975.
Cixous H., and C. Clément. 1986.
The Newly Born Woman.
Trans. B. Wing. Manchester. Originally published in French in 1975.
Clarke, J. R. 2003.
Art in the Lives of Ordinary Romans: Visual Representation and Non-elite Viewers in Roman Italy, 100 B.C.–A.D. 315
. Berkeley and London.
———. 2007.
Looking at Laughter: Humor, Power, and Transgression in Roman Visual Culture, 100 B.C.–A.D. 250
. Berkeley and London.
Clarke, M. 2005. “On the Semantics of Ancient Greek Smiles.” In
Body Language in the Greek and Roman Worlds,
ed. D. Cairns, 37–53. Swansea.
Clausen, W. 1994.
Virgil Eclogues, Edited with an Introduction and Commentary.
Oxford.
Cohen, A. 2008. “Response: Why Is Laughter Almost Non-existent in Ancient Greek Sculpture?”
Cogito
(Athens) 8: 20.
Coleiro, E. 1979.
An Introduction to Vergil’s

Bucolics,” with a Critical Edition of the Text.
Amsterdam.
Coleman, R. 1977.
Vergil, Eclogues.
Cambridge.
Connolly, J. 2007.
The State of Speech: Rhetoric and Political Thought in Ancient Rome.
Princeton, NJ.
Connors, C. 2004. “Monkey Business: Imitation, Authenticity, and Identity from Pithekoussai to Plautus.”
ClAnt
23: 179–207.
Conte, G. B. 1997.
The Hidden Author: An Interpretation of Petronius’s

Satyricon.”
Berkeley.
Conybeare, C. 2002. “The Ambiguous Laughter of Saint Laurence.”
JECS
10: 175–202.
———. 2013.
The Laughter of Sarah: Biblical Exegesis, Feminist Theory, and the Concept of Delight.
New York and Basingstoke.
Corbeill, A. 1996.
Controlling Laughter: Political Humor in the Late Roman Republic.
Princeton, NJ.
Corbett, P. 1986.
The Scurra.
Edinburgh.
Cordero, N.-L. 2000. “Démocrite riait-il?” In
Le rire des Grecs: Anthropologie du rire en Grèce ancienne,
ed. M.-L. Desclos, 227–39. Grenoble.
Cristante, L. 1990. “Un verso fantasma di Ovidio.”
Prometheus
16: 181–86.
Critchley, S. 2002.
On Humour.
London and New York.
———. 2005. “Very Funny: An Interview with Simon Critchley,” by Brian Dillon.
Cabinet
17: 78–81.
Crompton, D. 2010.
A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum.
London.
Crusius, O. 1896. “Excurse zu Virgil.”
RhM
51: 544–59.
Csapo, E. 2002. “Kallipides on the Floor-Sweepings: The Limits of Realism in Classical Acting and Performance Styles.” In
Greek and Roman Actors: Aspects of an Ancient Profession,
ed. P. Easterling and E. Hall, 126–47. Cambridge.
Cumont, F. 1897. “Les Actes de S. Dasius.”
AB
16: 5–15.
Cunningham, I. C. 1987.
Herodas, Mimiambi cum appendice fragmentorum mimorum papyraceorum.
Leipzig.
D’Agostino, V. 1969. “Sugli antichi Saturnali.”
Rivista di Studi Classici
17: 180–87.
Damon, C. 1997.
Mask of the Parasite: A Pathology of Roman Patronage.
Ann Arbor, MI.
D’Arms, J. H. 1990. “The Roman
Convivium
and the Ideal of Equality.” In
Sympotica: A Symposium on the “Symposion,”
ed. O. Murray, 308–20. Oxford.
Darwin, C. 1872.
The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals.
London.
David, E. 1989. “Laughter in Spartan Society.” In
Classical Sparta: Techniques behind Her Success,
ed. A. Powell, 1–25. London.
Davila-Ross, M., B. Allcock, C. Thomas, and K. Bard. 2011. “Aping Expressions? Chimpanzees Produce Distinct Laugh Types When Responding to Laughter of Others.”
Emotion
11: 1013–20.
Davis, N. Z. 1975.
Society and Culture in Early Modern France: Eight Essays.
Stanford, CA.
Dawe, R. D., ed. 2000.
Philogelos
. Munich.
Deckers, L. 1993. “On the Validity for a Weight-Judging Paradigm for the Study of Humor.”
Humor
6: 43–56.
Deckers, L., and P. Kizer. 1974. “A Note on Weight Discrepancy and Humor.”
Journal of Psychology
86: 309–12.
———. 1975. “Humor and the Incongruity Hypothesis.”
Journal of Psychology
90: 215–18.
Della Corte, F. 1985.
Le Bucoliche di Virgilio, commentate e tradotte.
Genoa.
BOOK: Laughter in Ancient Rome
11.88Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Dragon Sim-13 by Mayer, Bob, 1959-
20 Years Later by Emma Newman
The Shadow of the Eagle by Richard Woodman
ClosertoFire by Alexis Reed
River of Blue Fire by Tad Williams
Heartless by Jaimey Grant