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  1. Comic Sex and ‘Fragmentary Thinking’: Damoxenus, Fr. 3 Pcg.Matthew Wright - 2022 - Classical Quarterly 72 (1):191-201.
    Our extant texts never give a fully comprehensive or representative impression of classical literature. Fragments are valuable because they tell—or hint at—a different story. They represent vestigial traces of a counterfactual alternative version of literary history, and they offer tantalizing glimpses of voices or varieties of human experience that were (accidentally or deliberately) excluded from the classical canon. To ‘think fragmentarily’ is to think beyond the canon and to question traditionally dominant modes of thought. This article uses a neglected fragment (...)
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  • Sacred Sounds: The Cult of Pan and the Nymphs in the Vari Cave.Carolyn M. Laferrière - 2019 - Classical Antiquity 38 (2):185-216.
    Religious ritual in ancient Greece regularly incorporated music, so much so that certain instruments or vocal genres frequently became associated with the religious veneration of specific gods. The Attic cult of Pan and the Nymphs should also be included among this group: though little is often known about the specific ritual practices, the literary and visual evidence associated with the cults make repeated reference to music performed on the panpipes—and to auditory and sensory stimuli more generally—as a prominent feature of (...)
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  • Menander's Epitrepontes and the Festival of the Tauropolia.Eftychia Bathrellou - 2012 - Classical Antiquity 31 (2):151-192.
    The paper examines the surviving references to the setting of the rapes in New Comedy. It argues that the fact that rapes are commonly set in the course of nocturnal festival activities should not be seen merely as a convenient plot device. By using Menander's Epitrepontes as a case study, the paper suggests that there is a close relationship between the character of the festivals where rapes are set and a major theme in the plays themselves: namely, the maturation of (...)
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