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THE CLASSICAL
ASSOCIATION AUDIO LIBRARY
The audio library
is a resource service for members of the Classical Association. Below
are details of how to borrow tapes and a list of what is available.
Borrowers undertake
not to copy whole or part of any tape or to make a written transcript.
Hire copies are supplied on cassette. Every effort is made to supply
for a specific date if needed, but please give as much notice as possible.
Tapes are loaned for four weeks and MUST BE RETURNED PROMPTLY. The hire
fee of £1 per tape should be sent with the order and the reference numbers
of tapes quoted. (Cheques should be made payable to 'CA Tape Archive'
and borrowers overseas are asked to remit in sterling.) The cost of
outward postage must be refunded when tapes are returned. Please be
sure to return any printed material sent, and to enclose the advice
slip. A SAE would be appreciated with postal enquiries other than orders.
When orders are placed by telephone or fax or via e-mail, the hire fee
should be sent when returning the tapes. Concessions have been agreed
in respect of loans to visually-handicapped members who may borrow tapes
free of charge. Those registered as blind or partially-sighted do not
have to pay postage.
The Curator would be very pleased to hear from Secretaries of local
branches who are arranging lectures which could be recorded for the
Library, and also from any scholars willing to record papers. The Library
also has an archival function in preserving the voices of today's scholars
for the future.
Members of CA and
JACT also have use of the Teaching Resources Service administered by
the Curator for ARLT. Details of the collections (Antiquities, Coins,
Aural & Visual) may be had from the Curator:
W.B. O'Neill MBE BA, 4 Stonecliffe View, LEEDS, LS12 5BE.
E-mail: ca.tapearchive@classicsnet.plus.com
Tel: 0845 456 0992 (from UK); +44 113 263 4364 (outside UK)
Fax: +44 (0)113 229 0345
Mobile:+44 (0) 7966 460 080.
For further information go to http://resources-for-classics.co.uk
1. Prof E R Dodds:
Morals & Politics in the Oresteia
2. Prof P H J Lloyd Jones: The Sikyonios of Menander
3. Prof Sir Denys Page: The Lotos Eaters
4. Prof C O Brink: Mens sana in corpore sano
5. Prof W K C Guthrie: The Greek View of Man
6. General Sir John Hackett: Some Reflections on Epic Warfare
7. Prof A W H Adkins: Some Thoughts on Thinking in Greek & Latin
8. R G C Levens: Shakespeare's Classical Background
9. Prof R D Williams: The Purpose of the Aeneid
10. L P Wilkinson: The Cult of Outrageousness
11. Dr J Chadwick: The Decipherment of Lost Languages
12. Prof A W H Adkins: Teaching Classics in the '70's
13. L P Wilkinson: Ancient Literature & Modern Literary Criticism
14. Mrs P E Easterling: The Dramatic Technique of Aeschylus
15. R G G Coleman: Virgil and the Pastoral
16. Prof J E Gordon: Classics, Technology & History A New Approach
17. Prof M M Kelsall: English Augustanism
18. Prof K J Dover: The Skene in Aristophanes
19. Prof R M Ogilvie: Latin in the 18th Century
20. Prof D M McDowell: Clowning in Aristophanes
21. Lord Boyle: A Classical Education Re visited
22. Prof W J N Rudd: Sincerity and Mask
23. Prof E Schmidt: The Discovery of Arcadia
24. Prof M I Finley: The World of Odysseus Re visited
25. Prof W G Arnott: The Modernity of Menander
26. Prof A E Douglas: Boethius' De consolatione philosophiae A Literary
masterpiece?
27. R Wallace: Loadstones and Other Magnetic Phenomena in the Ancient
World
28. Prof P Walcot: Greek Tragedy in its Social Environment
29. Prof P G Walsh: The Archpoet's Confession
30. Prof M L Clarke: Poets and Patrons in Rome
31. Dr J T Killen: The Wool Industry of Mycenaean Crete
32. A G Lee: Tibullus A Poetry Reading
33. J P V D Balsdon: Snobbery Begins at Rome
34. Prof W K Lacey: Some Aspects of Greek Marriage
35. Prof K F Quinn: On a Passage from Aeneid IV
36. Dr R O A M Lyne: Roman Love Poets
37. C D N Costa: Lucretius Philosopher or Poet?
38. Lord Wolfenden: "I speak as a fool"
39. Mrs P E Easterling: The World of Greek Tragedy
40. Prof R G M Nisbet: From Tomi by Telstar
41. M Grant: A View of the Etruscans
42. Prof R D Williams: Virgil's Aeneid The First 2000 Years
43. Dr O P Taplin: The Endings of Greek Tragedy
44. B R Rees: "Strength in What Remains"
45. Prof W B Stanford: The Emotional Power of Greek Tragedy
46. Sir Kenneth Dover: On Writing for the General Reader
47. Dr J Percival: The Spirit of Asterix Romans, Celts and the Villa
system
48. Lord Wolfenden: The Glory that was Greece and the Grandeur that
was Rome
49. Dr E L Harrison: Virgil and his Critics
50. Prof M A Screech: Erasmus and the Folly of the Gospel
51. Mary Beard: Decline and Fall? Roman State Religion in the Late Republic
52. Sir David Hunt: Lessons from Diplomacy in Antiquity
53. Prof E J Kenney: The Key and the Cabinet Ends and Means in Classical
Studies
54. Dr P J Rhodes: Solon
55. Mrs P E Easterling: Sophocles
56. Dr D F Kennedy: Ovid's Heroides
57. Prof W G Arnott: Euripides' Bacchae
58. Dr A Drummond: Roman Religion
59. J J Patterson: Sulla
60. Prof R Williams: Writing, Speech and the Classical
61. Dr M S Silk: Heracles and Greek Drama
62. K W Gransden: The Fall of Troy
63. Prof K Hopkins: From Shamelessness to Guilt the Roman Moral Revolution
64. Prof E Handley: Aristophanes and Real Life
65. Prof P G Walsh: De coniuge non ducenda: the anti feminist Tradition
in classical and medieval literature
66. J D Smart: Tragedy and History: Euripides' Medea
67. Prof W G Arnott: Aristophanes and the society of his time
68. Prof D C Earl: Greeks and Romans: reflections on a Confrontation
69. Prof O P Taplin: Explanation & Justification in the Iliad
70. Dr G P Edwards: Locus Classicus Borealis: Latin & Gree in a Scottish
Tradition
71. Sir Nicholas Goodison: Education and Business
72. A F Garvie: The Resentment of the Gods
73. Dr M H Hansen: Democracy and Demography: the number of Citizens
in fourth century Athens
74. Prof S R L Clark: Philosophy and Consolation
75. Dr A S Gratwick: The Texture of Early Latin Verse
76. Prof F G B Millar: Popular Politics at Rome in the Late Republic
77. Dr A M Wilson: Philosophy to the Rescue: Augustinian and Boethian
imagery and the (Classical) Latin tradition
78. Prof A J Woodman: Was Livy an Augustan Historian?
79. J Ferguson: Two Classical Poets: Housman & Hopkins
80. Dr C J Rowe: Platonic Irony
81. Dr O Taplin: Agamemnon in the Iliad
82. J Griffin: Aspects of Myth
83. Miss N P Miller: Talking about Tacitus
84. Miss J F Gardner: Proofs of Status in the Roman World
85. Prof P G Walsh: The Rights & Wrongs of Curiosity (from Plutarch
to Augustine)
86. Dr N Purcell: Images of Poverty: the fisherman of the Mediterranean
87. Dr J March: Euripides the Misogynist
88. Prof M M Willcock: The Iliad: the first scenes of fighting
89. P H Vellacott: Religion & Morality in Greek Tragedy
90. P H Vellacott: Order, Truth & Style: a Manifesto for Classical Studies
91. P H Vellacott: The Pious Spectator of the Oresteia
92. P Freeman: The Way the Roman Empire Expanded
93. J G Randall: Vergil's Aeneid
94. Dr P J Beaumont: The Oresteia
95. Prof J Bremmer: Modern Ancient Historians and the Rise of Christianity
96. Prof P Wiseman: Killing Caligula
97. Dr S Goldhill: Language and Sophocles' Electra
98. Dr N Mackie: The Price of Safety: "National Security" in Imperial
Rome
99. R Waterfield: Deforming Plato
100. I Du Quesnay: Patronage and the Interpretation of Augustan Literature
101. Tony Harrison: Facing up to the Muses
102. Prof D West: Parsifal without the jokes, or sense of humour in
the Aeneid
103. Prof D West: Eheu fugaces: Horace Odes 2,14
104. Dr S H Braund: City and Country in Roman Satire: Juvenal 3 & Horace
Sat 2.6
105. J G Randall: Homer & Virgil: Creating a Vision of the Hero
106. P H Vellacott: Oedipus at Colonus: an alternative view
107. P H Vellacott: Helen of Troy
108. P H Vellacott: Father and Son: Sophocles' Trachiniae
109. Prof P E Easterling: Regions of the Mind: City Settings in Greek
Poetry
110. Prof A H Sommerstein: Aristophanes in performance: the Thesmophoriazusae
111. Prof D A Russell: Rhetoric and the teaching of Latin
112. N Purcell: Roman games of chance
113. Prof J K Davies: What we are at: new directions in Ancient History
114. Dr E Kearns: Work of women's hands: cakes in Greek Religion and
society
115. Mrs H Brigstock: Classics today and tomorrow
116. Prof R G M Nisbet: Bad news at Syracuse: Cicero Verrine 5
117. Dr R A S Seaford: Euripides' Bacchae
118. A G Woodhead: What's in it for me? Democracy ancient and Modern.
119. J G Randall: Masks of Aeneas: Characterisation in the Aeneid.
120. Dr J Briscoe: Cicero, Sallust, and Catiline
121. Prof W G Arnott: Aristophanes' Frogs
122. Janet Watson: The Poetry of Battle in the Iliad
123. Prof D M McDowell: Cloud Cuckoo Land
124. Prof P G Walsh: "Si linguis angelicis"
125. Dr G Anderson; Fantasy in Greek and Latin Literature
126. K Dowden: Homer and the Mythology Game
127. Dr R O A M Lyne: Prudence, Politics, and Image: Horace in the 30s
128. Sir Jeremy Morse: Presidential Address to the Classical Association
1990
129. J Paterson: The Romans and the Countryside
130. Charlotte Roueche: Is Classical Education in Terminal Decline?
The Evidence of the 5th century AD
131. Dr R Osborne: Herodotus and the Abuse of Power
132. Dr M Mackenzie: Reading Plato's Writing
133. R Wallace: Sing, Muse, of the Sphere and the Cylinder. Greek Mathematics
as Literature.
134. Dr N R E Fisher: Hybris and the Tragic Emotions
135. Prof J Percival: Truth in the Greek and Roman Historians
136. Peter Wynn Thomas: Latin Legacy to Welsh Language
137. Prof G R Kerferd: Presidential Address to the Classical Association
1991
138. J D Smart: Sophocles' Oedipus Tyrannus
139. Prof A H Sommerstein: Aristophanes as a Witness to Athenian Society
140. Lord Runcie: Presidential Address to the Classical Association
1992
141. Dr M Lloyd: Politics in Euripides
142. Rev D Parsons: 2 dimensions or 3? The life and death of Pastoral
143. Dr G Anderson: The image of the schoolmaster
144. Mrs E Henry: What is poetry for?
145. Prof J S Richardson: Robert Graves on Claudius: the novelist as
historian
146. Prof J Griffin: Passion and Patriotism in the Aeneid
147. P Brown: Love and Marriage in Menander
148. Prof F G B Millar: Presidential Address 1993
149. Prof P Wiseman: Lucretius and the Survival of Prophecy
150. Rev Dr A Griffin: Aeneas the Wimp
151. Prof P J Rhodes: Democracy, Oligarchy and all that
152. Colin Haycraft: Presidential Address 1994: On not knowing Greek,
or Latin either
153. Dr M Heath: Aristophanes and Cleon
154. J M Fisher: Attitudes to war in Vergil's Aeneid
155. D West: Horace and the Muses
156. J G Randall: Vergil's Homer: windows on the past
157. Dr J Roy: Keeping it in the family: the Greek oikos
158. Dr Miriam T Griffin: Philosophical Badinage in Cicero's Letters
159. J J Paterson: Augustus in his own write
160. R Gibson: Ovid and the Reception of the Ars Amatoria
161. A Spooner: Words charged with History
162. Prof P G Walsh: Making a drama out of a crisis Livy 39.8-19
163. Prof J Powell: Bad Latin and the origin of the Romance languages
164. K Dowden: Greek Myth: a coded message
165. Dr Richard Hunter: Character and characters in Aristophanes
166. Prof W J N Rudd: Necessity and invention in the Aeneid
167. Sir Anthony Cleaver: Presidential Address 1996
168. Dr C Kelly: Nero: a Rescue Mission
169. Dr J R Morgan: Ancient Fiction
170. Dr J March: Tragic Pleasures
171. Prof A H Sommerstein: Aristophanes' Frogs
172. Dr M Clark: Werewolves and heroes: a sidelight on the Iliad
173. Prof P E Easterling: Making sense of Greek plays
174. Lindsey Davis: The descent to Avernus: with ticket office
175. Walter Burkert: Imaginary Words and Epic Tradition in the Odyssey
176. Prof W G Arnott: Humour in Menander
177. Prof D West: The Aeneid as Satire (X 1-95)
178. Prof F. Millar: Aristotle and the Roman Republic
179. No longer available
180. Prof D. West: Presidential Address 1995
181. Dr D. Hill: Ovid's Metamorphoses
182. Dr A. Sharrock: Following the Argument: didactic and narrative
in Lucretius
183. Dr M. Heath: Aristophanes' Wasps: pleasing and teasing an audience
184. Donald Hill: Virgil's Aeneid
185. Dr J. March: Looking at Greek Tragedy
186. Dr J. Landels: Classical Music from Aristophanes to Gilbert & Sullivan
187. Dr J. March: The Pleasures of Greek Tragedy
188. Prof. T.P. Wiseman: Virgil Aeneid VIII
189. Prof. J.G.F. Powell: Latin and her Counsins: The Indo-European
Languages
190. Prof. J.G.F. Powell: Latin and her Sisters: The Languages of Ancient
Italy
191. Prof. J.G.F. Powell: Latin and her Daughters: The Roman Languages
with Particular Reference to Italian
192. Dr S. Ireland: Menander: New Comedy - Ancient Soap?
193. Dr H. King: The Doctor at the Deathbed: towards a Comparative Study
194. Prof. A. Sommerstein: Wasps - Handle with Care: What was(n't) wrong
with the Athenian Court System?
195. Prof. A. Mayer: Virgil's Aeneid: Creating a National Poem
196. Dr R.B. Rutherford: The Burden of the past in Homer and Virgil
197. Dr N.J. Lowe: What makes a Greek Tragedy?
198. Prof. J.G.F. Powell: Cicero for the Prosecution: the Pirate Attack
and the Trial of the Sea-Captains
199. Prof. T.P. Wiseman: The Principal Thing (Presidential Address 2001)
200. Mr P. Howard: Tempora Mutantur (Presidential Address 2002)
201. Prof. K. Dowden: Homer's Iliad: the Story You Are Not Told
202. Prof. P.E. Easterling: Ancient Drama for Modern Audiences
203. Dr P.V. Jones: Fac et spera (Presidential Address 2003)
204. Dr N. Lowe: The Writing of "Gladiator"
205. Dr Efi Spentzou: Redefining the Epic Hero in the Aeneid
206. Dr Jenny March: Dangerous Women in Greek Tragedy
207. Dr Catherine Steel: Cicero and his Friends (Real and Imagined)
208. Dr K. Clarke: Re-reading Tacitus' Agricola
209. Prof. P. Hardie: Aeneid 3: second-class travel? Aeneas on Tour
210. Prof. M.F. Heath: How Dangerous are Tragic Women?
211. S. Smith: Entering the Aeneid: the first half of Virgil's epic
work
212. Baroness Susan Greenfield: Presidential Address 2004
213. Dr T. Harrison: How the Greeks believed in Oracles
214. Mr J. Paterson: Augustus and the Benefactor of Mankind
215. Dr R. Brock: How to be a citizen in Ancient Greece
216. Dr N. Lowe: What makes a Greek Tragedy
217. Dr S. Green: Promethean birds and poor cows: religious fracture
in Ovid's Fasti
218. Prof. N. Fisher: Independent Slaves and the ideology of slavery
in classical Athens
219. Prof. S. Harrison: Aeneid X: Virgil as Poet of War
220. Prof. J.G.F. Powell: New Perspectives on Latin Word Order
221. Dr L. Rubinstein: Accountability in the Ancient Greek World
222. Dr J. March: Off-stage drama in Greek Tragedy
A cassette slide
programme on the Greek Trireme is also available: contact the Curator
for details.
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