Omnibus

Omnibus is the magazine for students of the Classical world published by the Joint Association of Classical Teachers Senate House, Malet Street, London WC1E 7HU.

There are two issues a year published in January and September.

The price of Omnibus is £3.00 per copy (plus postage & packing). 

A number of back issues are now on sale for £1 a copy. Hurry while stocks last!

 For details of available issues please see the order form  (available in Word (.doc), or pdf.) which also has UK and international p&p details.

Please click here (Word) or here (pdf) for a direct debit form to take out a subscription.

 Contacting Omnibus  

Orders and enquiries should be addressed to: 

Omnibus
c/o JACT
Senate House
Malet Street
London
WC1E 7HU

 Email:  office@jact.org       Telephone:  020 7862 8719

The 2011 £75 Omnibus
Sam Hood
translation prize
For details see Omnibus 61, p.33

to access texts click here.


 

 

Submissions for consideration by the Editor should ideally be emailed to:  omnibus@jact.org  or alternatively can be sent to the postal address above, marked for the attention of the Omnibus Editor.

To read a sample article on the Erechtheum by Robin Osborne from issue 39 click here.

To read a sample article on the Death of Hector by Johannes Haubold from issue 39 click here.

For the contents of back issues 35-53,56 and Omnibus Omnibus II click here.

OMNIBUS 62 SEPTEMBER 2011

 CONTENTS

 

‘George Washington in Nude Pollie Panic’: debating classical art in the USA

 Alastair Blanshard

1

Sex and gender in Euripides’ Hippolytus

James Morwood 

4

Permanent emergency? Augustus establishes the principate

 John Rich

6

Herakles, the Kerkopes, and Archilochos

Robert Fowler

9

‘So how about we rise up at last?’ Rebellion in Tacitus and in contemporary France

Katherine Low

12

Berlitz Latin for travellers: a Greek speaker goes to Rome

Eleanor Dickey

15

Deception and self-deception in Ovid’s Amores

Donncha O’Rourke

18

The body of Christ

Michael Squire

21

Sophocles’ Ajax and the vase-painters

Patrick Finglass

25

Ancient military technology

Tracey Rihll

28

Omnibus interviews novelist

Meg Clothier

31

Berlitz Latin (p. 15): the answers...

inside back cover


                                                             

OMNIBUS 61 CONTENTS

 

 

Divine and human in Euripides’ Medea

Edith Hall

1

Peace at Rome? Placing Augustus’ Ara Pacis in context(s)

Alison Cooley

4

Homer and the Ancient Near East-what’s in a parallel?

Adrian Kelly

7

Courting controversy: Shakespeare’s use of Ovid in Venus and Adonis

George Ellis

10

Wisdom through ignorance: Meno meets Socrates

Daniel Silvermintz

13

To hell with Aeneas: looking backwards and forwards in Aeneid 6

Fiachra Mac Gorain

15

Augustus and the women of Akmoneia

Peter Thonemann

18

Catullus 63, a song of Attis for the Megalesia

Elena Theodorakopoulos

21

Dancing like a maenad in the twentieth century

Fiona Macintosh

24

Cicero the consistent consul: saviour of the Republic

Eleanor Brooke

27

Xenophon, son of Gryllos, in conversation with Maria Pretzler

 

30

 

OMNIBUS 60 CONTENTS

   

Augustus’ bath towel

Robin Osborne

1

Penelope to Arachne: the stories weaving women tell

Karen Ní Mheallaigh

4

Study abroad: Cicero in Athens and Rhodes

Henriette van der Blom

7

Early Christianity and the Greek language

Philomen Probert

10

Elephant mountaineers – route finally revealed

 

12

Storms of passion in the Aeneid

Bob Cowan

13

Good and bad comedy in Aristophanes’ Clouds

James Robson

16

Diving in: bringing to light the lost cities of Egypt

Damian Robinson

19

Beyond tragedy:Thucydides and the Sicilian Expedition

Richard Seaford

22

A visit to virtual pasts: the new museum in Ercolano

Shelley Hales

24

Greed, grit, and grandeur: Roman civilization in the

Victorian nursery

Mark Bradley

27

It’s all going down the drain...

 

30

Roman table-talk, Greek style

Jason König

31

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

This Web Page Created with PageBreeze Free HTML Editor