THE CLASSICAL JOURNAL INDEX: VOL. 104 (2008-2009) What’s in a Name? The Real Identity of Palinurus in ARTICLES Plautus’ Curculio(Pa paioan- Cicero on Historiography: De nou) 104.2.111 Oratore 2.51-64 (Woodman) 104.1.23 Diogenes’ Doggerel: Chreia and FORUM Quotation in Cynic Perfor- A Century of the Classical mance (Usher) 104.3.207 Association of the Pacific Forbidding Marriage: Neaira 16 Northwest (Nicholson) 104. and Metic Spousesa t Athens 2.165 (Bakewell) 104.2.97 A Poem in Other Words is a Hauranus the Epicurean. (Rigs- Language Lesson (Neu- by) 104.1.19 mann) 104.1.63 Heard but Not Seen: Domitius Lessons for Classics from the and the Gaze in Statius’ Sil- History of Mathematics vae (McCullough) 104.2.145 (Houghtalin, Sumner) 104.4. Judging Ovid (Bablitz) 104.1.33 35] Lyric, History and Imagination: “Now Pass Your Paper to Your Horace as Historiographer Neighbor...”: A Disrespec- (C. 2.1) Johnson) 104.4.311 ted Under-Utilized and Magna Perseis: A Note on Valeri- Highly Effective Teaching us Flaccus, Arg. 7.238 (Stov- Strategy (West) 104.1.59 er) 104.4.321 Quantitative Reasoning and Practicing Death in Petronius’ Scientific Analysis in the Cena Trimalchionis and Pla- Ancient Art Classroom (Sa- to’s Phaedo (Holmes) 104. lowey) 104.4.341 1.43 lhe Beauty of Measure and the Scheduling Spectacle: Factors Measure of Beauty (Fisher, Contributing to the Dates of Rabung) 104.4.33 Pompeian Munera (Tuck) Whatever Happened to Claudi- 104.2.123 us Claudianus? A Pedago- Sinon in Roman Drama (Scatog- gical Proposition (Fletcher) lio) 104.1.11 104.3.259 Suppliant Danaids and Argive Nymphs in Aeschylus (Bachvarova) 104.4.289 BOOK REVIEWS The Aristeia of Menelaos (Ste- Barchiesi, Ovidio: Metamorfost, low) 104.3.193 Volume I (Libri I-l]) (Myers) The Mist Shed by Zeus in Iliad 104.2.182 | XVII (Fenno) 104.1.1 Barchiesi and Rosati, Ovidio: Two Types of Ovidian Person- Metamorfost, Volume II (Libri ification (Park) 104.3.225 III-IV) (Myers) 104.3.284 What Would Pompey Do? Exem- Behr, Feeling History: Lucan, pla and Pompeian Failure Stoicism, and the Poetics of in the Bellum Africum (Mel- Passion (Sklenaf) 104.1.80 chior) 104.3.241 THE CLASSICAL JOURNAL Breed, Pastoral Inscriptions: Read- OVATIONES ing and Writing in Vireil’s Ec- 104.1.89 logues (Thibodeau) 104.2.180 Cairns, Sextus Propertius: The CONTRIBUTORS Augustan Elegist (Miller) Bablitz 104.1.33 104.3.275 Bachvarova 104.4.289 Dufallo, The Ghosts of the Past: Beckman 104.2.175 Latin Literature, the Dead, and Boyd 104.3.280 Rome's Transition to a Princi- Brody 104.4.371 pate (Rea) 104.1.75 Closterman 104.4.365 Finkelberg, Greeks and Pre-Greeks: Fenno 104.1.1 Aegean Prehistory and Greek Fisher 104.4.331 Heroic Tradition (Beckman) Fletcher 104.3.259 104.2.175 Holmes 104.1.43 Grethlein, Das Geschichtsbild der Houghtalin 104.4.351 llias: Eine Untersuchung aus Johnson 104.4.311 phanomenologischer und Knox 104.2.184 narratologischer Perspektive McCullough 104.2.145 (Sammons) 104.1.73 McNeill 104.2.177 Herman, Morality and Behaviour Melchior 104.3.241 in Democratic Athens: A So- Miller 104.3.275 cial History (Closterman) Myers 104.2.182; 104.3.284 104.4.365 Neumann 104.1.63 Inwood, Reading Seneca: Stoic Nicholson 104.2.165 Philosophy at Rome (Wilcox) Papaioannou 104.2.111 104.1.77 Park 104.3.225 Littlewood, A Commentary on Rabung 104.4.331 Ovid: Fasti Book VI (Knox) Rea 104.1.75 104.2.184 Rigsby 104.1.19 Marvin, The Language of the Salowey 104.4.341 Muses: The Dialogue between Sammons 104.1.73 Roman and Greek Sculpture Scafoglio 104.1.11 (Brody) 104.4.371 Sklenaf 104.1.80 Putnam, Poetic Interplay: Catul- Stelow 104.3.193 lus and Horace (McNeill) Stover 104.4.321 104.2.177 Sumner 104.4.351 Rea, Legendary Rome: Myth, Mon- Sutherland 104.4.368 uments, and Memory on the Pal- Thibodeau 104.2.180 antine and Capitoline (Boyd) in 23 104.3.280 West 104.1.59 Vout, Power and _ Eroticism in Imperial Rome (Sutherland) Wilcox 104.1.77 104.4.368 Woodman 104.1.23 Usher 104.3.207