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287 List of Contributors c SUSANNA MORTON BRAUND is professor of classics at Stanford University. She is the author of books and articles on Roman satire, Roman epic, and other aspects of Roman literature. Her books include Beyond Anger: A Study of Juvenal’s Third Book of Satires (Cambridge, 1988), Juvenal: “Satires” Book 1 (Cambridge, 1996), and The Roman Satirists and Their Masks (Bristol, 1996). Her new Loeb Classical Library volume of Juvenal and Persius has just been published (Cambridge, 2004). ELIZABETH A. CLARK is John Carlisle Kilgo professor of religion at Duke University . A specialist in late ancient Christianity, she has written on women, asceticism, heresy, and biblical interpretation. Among her books are Jerome, Chrysostom, and Friends: Essays and Translations (New York, 1979) and History, Theory, Text (Cambridge, 2004). A fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, she has been president of the American Academy of Religion, the American Society of Church History, and the North American Patristics Society. BARBARA FEICHTINGER is Ordinaria für Latinistik at the University of Konstanz, Germany. Her research areas, on which she has published numerous articles, include literary theory, early Christian literature, and gender studies. Among her publications are Apostolae Apostolorum: Frauenaskese als Befreiung und Zwang bei Hieronymus (Vienna, Frankfurt, and New York, 1995) and Iphis: Beiträge zur alterumswissenschaftlichen Gender -Forschung, with Georg Wöhrle (Trier, 2001). RALPH HANNA III is professor of paleography at the University of Oxford and tutorial fellow of Keble College. His research interests include Piers Plowman and alliterative poetry, and he does extensive work with English manuscript books. His publications include Pursuing History: Middle English Manuscripts and Their Texts (Stanford, 1996) and, edited with Traugott Lawler, Jankyn’s Book of Wikked Wyves (Athens, Ga., 1997). RICHARD HAWLEY is lecturer in classics at Royal Holloway, University of London . He has published numerous articles on ancient concepts of gender in Greek drama, Greek women philosophers, Plutarch, Dio Chrysostom, and Greek declamation. He coorganized for ten years the innovative Oxford “Women in Antiquity” seminar series and coedited Women in Antiquity: New Assessments (London and New York, 1995). He is currently working on a commentary on Plutarch’s Banquet of the Seven Sages. REGINE MAY is fellow in classical languages and literature at Merton College, Oxford University. Her academic interests include Greek and Latin literature (especially drama and the novel), papyrology, and paleography. She has published articles on Apuleius and the novel; contributed to editions of literary papyri for the Oxyrhynchus Papyri, Oxford; and prepared a forthcoming lemmatized concordance on Cornelius Nepos. KARLA POLLMANN, currently professor of classics at the University of St. Andrews, Scotland, is a former Humboldt scholar and member of the Institute for Advanced Studies at Princeton. Her books include a major study (Freiburg, 1996) and German edition (Stuttgart, 2002) of Augustine’s hermeneutical treatise De doctrina Christiana and the edited volumes History, Apocalypse, and the Secular Imagination (Bowling Green, Ohio, 1999) and Double Standards in the Ancient and Medieval World (Göttingen, 2000). WARREN S. SMITH is professor of classics and chairman of the Foreign Languages and Literatures Department at the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque. He has published extensively on Apuleius and the Roman novel, Juvenal and Roman satire, and the Latin sources of English literature, and he was coeditor and translator, with Robert Sider and others, of two volumes of Erasmus’s New Testament scholarship published by University of Toronto Press: Paraphases on Romans and Galatians (1984) and Annotations on Romans (1995). P. G. WALSH is emeritus professor and professorial research fellow at the University of Glasgow, Scotland. His many books on classical and medieval literature include The Roman Novel: The “Satyricon” of Petronius and the “Metamorphoses” of Apuleius (2d ed., Bristol, 1995); Andreas Capellanus on Love, edited with an English translation (London , 1982); and Augustine, “De Bono Coniugali” and “De Sancta Virginitate,” edited with introduction, translation, and notes (Oxford, 2001). Contributors 288 ...

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