| Faculty Profile
Robert Renehan
Robert Renehan, Professor of Classics, has taught previously at Berkeley, Harvard, and Boston College. His interests include classical literature and philosophy, textual criticism, ancient medicine and lexicography. These interests are reflected in his five books. At present he is chiefly occupied with the preparation of his collected articles and notes for publication by Teubner
>>Click
here for a full CV
Books
- Greek Lexicographical Notes I and II (Göttingen 1975 and 1982)
- Studies in Greek Texts (Göttingen 1976)
- Greek Textual Criticism (Harvard University Press 1969)
- Leo Medicus, De Natura Hominis (Berlin 1969)
Selected Articles
- “Some Passages in Aristophanes,” Rheinisches Museum für Philologie, 149 (2006) 31-50
- “Euripidean Annotations,” Classical Review, 54 (2004) 304-305
- “Inserted Apposition in Classical Greek Poetry,” Illinois Classical Studies, 27-28 (2003-2004) 101-108
- “Some Notes on Longus, Daphnis and Chloe,” Rheinisches Museum für Philologie, 144 (2001) 233-238
- “Some Supplements to the Revised LSJ Supplement,” Glotta, 77 (2001) 221-243“
- "On Gender Switching as a Literary Device in Latin Poetry," Style and Tradition. Studies in Honor of Wendell Clausen, Teubner (1998) 212-229
- "Aristotle's Doctrine of the Proper End of Man: Some Observations," Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium in Ancient Philosophy, 7 (1992) 79-101
- "Some Special Problems in the Editing of Aristotle," SIFC, 3rd series, 10 (1992) 719-724
- "The Heldentod in Homer: One Heroic Ideal," Classical Philology, 82 (1987) 99-116
- "A New Hesiodic Fragment," Classical Philology, 81 (1986) 221-222
- "Herodotean Cruces," Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, 89 (1985) 25-35
- "The Early Greek Poets: Some Interpretations," Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 87 (1983) 1-29
- "A New Lexicon of Classical Greek," Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies 24 (1983) 5-20
- "Aristotle as Lyric Poet: The Hermeias Poem," Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies 23 (1982) 251-274
- "The Greek Anthropocentric View of Man," Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 84 (1981) 239-259
- "The meaning of SWMA in Homer: A Study in Methodology," California Studies in Classical Antiquity 12 (1980) 269-282
|