All Stories

  1. E. GUNDERSON, LAUGHING AWRY: PLAUTUS AND TRAGICOMEDY. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015. Pp. x + 283.isbn 9780198729303. £60.00.
  2. Reconsidering some Plautine Elements in Plautus (Amphitryo 302–7, Captivi 80–4)
  3. 13 The Intercalary Scenes in Joannes Burmeister’s Aulularia (1629)
  4. A Cranberry-Morpheme Joke in Plautus (Menaechmi 295)
  5. The Oxford Handbook of Greek and Roman Comedy
  6. On Being Sane in an Insane Place – The Rosenhan Experiment in the Laboratory of Plautus’ Epidamnus
  7. Titus Maccius Plautus, Cistellaria edidit Waltharius Stockert.
  8. Review
  9. Funny Words in Plautine Comedy
  10. Equivocation and Other Ambiguities
  11. Verba Perplexabilia
  12. Parapraxis and Parechesis
  13. Double Entendre
  14. Conclusion
  15. Innuendo and the Audience
  16. Plautus, Truculentus 78
  17. Parasitus colax (Terence, Eunuchus 30)
  18. Freudian Slips in Plautus: Two Case Studies
  19. Troy Destroyed (PlautusBacchides973–74 and 1053)
  20. Sicilicissitat (Plautus, Menaechmi 12) and Early Geminate Writing in Latin (with an Appendix on Men. 13)
  21. Propertius 3.4, 1.1, and the Aeneid incipit
  22. Agnvs ΚOϒPIΩN (Plautus Aulularia 561–64)
  23. Freudian Bullseyes in Classical Perspective: The Psycholinguistics of Guilt in Virgil’s Aeneid
  24. The Aulularia inversa of Joannes Burmeister
  25. The reception of Greek comedy in Rome
  26. Is the Story of Susanna and the Elders Based on a Greek New Comedy?
  27. Dynamics of Appropriation in Roman Comedy: Menander’s Kolax in Three Roman Receptions (Naevius, Plautus and Terence’s Eunuchus)