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Select bibliography (compiled by Joanna Paul)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 September 2009

Charles Martindale
Affiliation:
University of Bristol
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Print publication year: 2004

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James, Heather, Shakespeare's Troy: Drama, Politics, and the Translation of Empire (Cambridge 1997)
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Kott, Jan, ‘The Aeneid and The Tempest’, Arion 3 (1978), 425–52Google Scholar
Miola, Robert S., ‘Vergil in Shakespeare: From Allusion to Imitation’, in Vergil at 2000: Commemorative Essays on the Poet and his Influence, ed. John D. Bernard (New York 1986), 241–59
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Wiltenburg, Robert, ‘The Aeneid in The Tempest’, ShS 39 (1986), 159–68Google Scholar
Wright, Laurence, ‘Epic into Romance: The Tempest, 4.1, and Virgil's Aeneid’, Shakespeare in Southern Africa 9 (1996), 49–65Google Scholar
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See also Shakespeare and Rome, Plutarch
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Kott, Jan, ‘Hamlet and Orestes’, Publications of the Modern Language Association of America 82 (1967), 303–13CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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Schleiner, Louise, ‘Latinized Greek Drama in Shakespeare's Writing of Hamlet’, ShQ 41 (1990), 29–48Google Scholar
Stewart, Douglas J., ‘Falstaff the Centaur’, ShQ 28 (1977), 5–21Google Scholar
Betts, John H., ‘Classical Allusions in Shakespeare's Henry V with Special Reference to Virgil’, Greece and Rome15 (1968), 147–63CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Merrix, Robert P., ‘The Alexandrian Allusion in Shakespeare's Henry V’, English Literary Renaissance 2 (1972), 321–33CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Womersley, D. J., ‘3 Henry VI: Shakespeare, Tacitus, and Parricide’, Notes and Queries 230 (1985), 468–73CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blits, Jan H., The End of the Ancient Republic: Essays on ‘Julius Caesar’ (Durham, NC 1982)
Bryant, A. J. Jr., ‘Julius Caesar from a Euripidean Perspective’, Comparative Drama 16 (1982), 97–111Google Scholar
Gentili, Vanna, ‘Shakespeare's Julius Caesar and the Elizabethans’ Roads to Rome', in Shakespeare Today: Directions and Methods of Research, ed. Keir Elam (Florence 1984), 186–214
Green, David C., ‘Julius Caesar’ and Its Sources (Jacobean Drama Series 86) (Salzburg 1979)
Homan, Sidney, ‘Dion, Alexander, and Demetrius – Plutarch's Forgotten Parallel Lives – as Mirrors for Shakespeare's Julius Caesar’, ShSt 8 (1975), 195–210Google Scholar
Miller, Anthony, ‘The Roman State in Julius Caesar and Sejanus’, in Jonson and Shakespeare, ed. Ian Donaldson (New Jersey 1983), 179–201
Miola, Robert S., ‘Julius Caesar and the Tyrannicide Debate’, Renaissance Quarterly 38 (1985), 271–89CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miola, Robert S., ‘Shakespeare and his Sources: Observations on the Critical History of Julius Caesar’, ShSt 40 (1987), 69–76Google Scholar
Ornstein, Robert, ‘Seneca and the Political Drama of Julius Caesar’, Journal of English and Germanic Philology 57 (1958), 51–6Google Scholar
Roe, John, Shakespeare and Machiavelli (Woodbridge, Suffolk 2002) (Chapter 5 on Julius Caesar)
See also Shakespeare and Rome, Cicero and Lucan
Miola, Robert S., ‘New Comedy in King Lear’, Philological Quarterly 73 (1994), 329–46Google Scholar
Evans, Malcolm, ‘Mercury Versus Apollo: A Reading of Love's Labour's Lost’, ShQ 26 (1975), 113–27Google Scholar
Bushnell, R. W., ‘Oracular Silence in Oedipus the King and Macbeth’, Classical and Modern Literature 2 (1981–2), 195–204Google Scholar
Ewbank, Inga-Stina, ‘The Fiend-Like Queen: A Note on Macbeth and Seneca's Medea’, ShS 19 (1966), 82–94Google Scholar
Paolucci, Anne, ‘Macbeth and Oedipus Rex: A Study in Paradox’, in Shakespeare Encomium, ed. Anne Paolucci (New York 1964), 44–70
Truax, Elizabeth, ‘Macbeth and Hercules: The Hero Bewitched’, Comparative Drama 23 (1989–90), 359–76CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rosenheim, Judith, ‘The Stoic Meanings of the Friar in Measure for Measure’, ShSt 15 (1982), 171–215Google Scholar
Rowe, M. W., ‘The Dissolution of Goodness: Measure for Measure and Classical Ethics’, International Journal of the Classical Tradition 5 (1998–9), 20–46CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wheater, Isabella, ‘Aristotelian Wealth and the Sea of Love: Shakespeare's Synthesis of Greek Philosophy and Roman Poetry in The Merchant of Venice (I–II)’, Review of English Studies 43 (1992), 467–87 and 44 (1993), 16–36CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hinely, Jan Lawson, ‘Comic Scapegoats and the Falstaff of The Merry Wives of Windsor’, ShSt 15 (1982), 37–54Google Scholar
Steadman, John M., ‘Falstaff as Actaeon: A Dramatic Emblem’, ShQ 14 (1963), 231–44Google Scholar
Carroll, W. C., The Metamorphoses of Shakespearean Comedy (Princeton 1985)
Doran, M., A Midsummer Night's Dream: A Metamorphosis (Rice Institute Pamphlets 46) (1960), 113–35Google Scholar
Fender, S., Shakespeare – A Midsummer Night's Dream (Studies in English Literature 35) (London 1968)
Garber, Marjorie B., Dream in Shakespeare: From Metaphor to Metamorphosis (New Haven (1974)
Holloway, Julia Bolton, ‘Apuleius and A Midsummer Night's Dream: Bottom's Metamorphoses’, in Tales Within Tales: Apuleius Through Time, ed. Constance S. Wright and Julia Bolton Holloway (New York 2000), 123–37
Kott, Jan, ‘The Bottom Translation’, Assays: Critical Approaches to Medieval and Renaissance Texts 1 (1981), 117–49Google Scholar
Langford, Larry, ‘The Story Shall Be Changed: The Senecan Sources of A Midsummer Night's Dream’, Cahiers Elisabéthains 25 (1984), 37–51CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McPeek, James A. S., ‘The Psyche Myth and A Midsummer Night's Dream’, ShQ 23 (1972), 69–79Google Scholar
Muir, Kenneth, ‘Pyramus and Thisbe: A Study in Shakespeare's Method’, Shakespeare Quarterly 5 (1954), 141–53CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taylor, A. B., ‘“When Everything Seems Double”: Peter Quince the Other Playwright in A Midsummer Night's Dream’, ShS (forthcoming)Google Scholar
See also Ovid
Evans, Robert C., ‘Flattery in Shakespeare's Othello: The Relevance of Plutarch and Sir Thomas Elyot’, Comparative Drama 35.1 (2001), 1–41CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Graves, Wallace, ‘Plutarch's Life of Cato Utican as a Major Source for Othello’, ShQ 24 (1973), 181–7Google Scholar
Miola, Robert S., ‘Othello Furens’, ShQ 41 (1990), 49–64Google Scholar
Greenfield, Thelma N., ‘A Re-Examination of the “Patient” Pericles’, ShSt 3 (1967), 51–61Google Scholar
Allen, Don Cameron, ‘Some Observations on The Rape of Lucrece’, ShS 15 (1962), 89–98Google Scholar
Donaldson, Ian, The Rapes of Lucretia: A Myth and its Transformations (Oxford 1982)
Hulse, S. Clark III, ‘“A Piece of Skilful Painting” in Shakespeare's Lucrece’, ShSt 31 (1978), 13–22Google Scholar
Muir, Kenneth, ‘The Rape of Lucrece’, in Shakespeare the Professional and Related Studies (London 1973), 187–203
Leon, Harry J., ‘Classical Sources for the Garden Scene in Richard II’, Philological Quarterly 29 (1950), 65–70Google Scholar
Logan, George M., ‘Lucan—Daniel—Shakespeare: New Light on the Relation between The Civil Wars and Richard II’, ShSt 9 (1976), 121–40Google Scholar
Brooks, Harold F., ‘Richard III, Unhistorical Amplifications: The Women's Scenes and Seneca’, Modern Language Review 75 (1980), 721–37CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Porter, Joseph A., Shakespeare's Mercutio: His History and Drama (Chapel Hill, NC 1988)
Bate, Jonathan, ‘Ovid and the Sonnets; or, Did Shakespeare Feel the Anxiety of Influence?’, ShS 42 (1990), 65–76Google Scholar
Everett, Barbara, ‘Good and Bad Loves: Shakespeare, Plato, and the Plotting of the Sonnets’, Times Literary Supplement (5 July 2002), 13–15Google Scholar
Leishman, J. B., Themes and Variations in Shakespeare's Sonnets (London 1961)
Barnett, Louise, ‘Ovid and The Taming of the Shrew’, Ball State University Forum 20. 3 (1979), 16–22Google Scholar
Harrold, William E., ‘Shakespeare's Use of Mostellaria in The Taming of the Shrew’, Deutsche Shakespeare-Gesellschaft West (1970), 188–94Google Scholar
Phillippy, Patricia B., ‘“Loytering in Love”: Ovid's Heroides, Hospitality, and Humanist Education in The Taming of the Shrew’, Criticism 40 (1998), 27–53Google Scholar
Brown, Sarah Annes, ‘Ovid, Golding and The Tempest’, Translation and Literature 3 (1994), 3–29CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nosworthy, J. M., ‘The Narrative Sources for The Tempest’, Review of English Studies 24 (1948), 281–94CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wills, Robin Headlam, ‘Blessing Europe: Virgil, Ovid, and Seneca in The Tempest’, in M. Marrapodi, ed., Shakespeare and Intertextuality: The Transition of Cultures Between Italy and England in the Early Modern Period (Rome 2000), 69–84
See also Virgil, Plautus, and Terence
Wallace, John M., ‘Timon of Athens and The Three Graces: Shakespeare's Senecan Study’, Modern Philology 83 (1980), 349–63CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Broude, Ronald, ‘Roman and Goth in Titus Andronicus’, ShS 6 (1970), 27–34Google Scholar
Ettin, Andrew V., ‘Shakespeare's First Roman Tragedy’, English Literary History 37 (1970), 325–41CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hunter, G. K., ‘Sources and Meanings in Titus Andronicus’, in Mirror up to Shakespeare: Essays in Honour of G. R. Hibbard, ed. J. C. Gray (Toronto 1984), 171–88
James, Heather, ‘Cultural Disintegration in Titus Andronicus: Mutilating Titus, Vergil, and Rome’, in Violence in Drama, ed. James Redmond (Cambridge 1991), 123–40
Law, Robert Adger, ‘The Roman Background of Titus Andronicus’, Studies in Philology 40 (1943), 145–53Google Scholar
Miola, Robert S., ‘Titus Andronicus and the Mythos of Shakespeare's Rome’, ShSt 14 (1981), 85–98Google Scholar
Pincombe, Michael, ‘Classical and Contemporary Sources of the “Gloomy Woods” of Titus Andronicus: Ovid, Seneca, Spenser’, in Shakespearean Continuities: Essays in Honour of E. A. J. Honigmann, ed. John Batchelor, Tom Cain, and Claire Lamont (Basingstoke 1997), 40–55
Waith, E. M., ‘The Metamorphosis of Violence in Titus Andronicus’, ShS 10 (1957), 39–49Google Scholar
West, Grace Starry, ‘Going By The Book: Classical Allusions in Shakespeare's Titus Andronicus’, Studies in Philology 79 (1982), 62–77Google Scholar
Arnold, Margaret J., ‘“Monsters in Love's Train”: Euripides and Shakespeare's Troilus and Cressida’, Comparative Drama 18 (1984), 38–53Google Scholar
Bradshaw, Graham, Shakespeare's Scepticism (Brighton 1987)
Elton, William R., ‘Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics and Shakespeare's Troilus and Cressida’, Journal of the History of Ideas 58 (1997), 331–7Google Scholar
Henderson, W. B., ‘Shakespeare's Troilus and Cressida: Yet Deeper in its Tradition’, in Essays in Dramatic Literature: The Parrott Presentation Volume, ed. Hardin Craig (New York 1967), 127–56
Hunter, G. K., ‘Troilus and Cressida: A Tragic Satire’, ShSt (Tokyo) 13 (1974–5), 1–23Google Scholar
Muir, Kenneth, ‘Shakespeare and the Tale of Troy’, Aligarh Critical Miscellany 5 (1992), 113–31Google Scholar
Presson, Robert K., Shakespeare's ‘Troilus and Cressida’ and the Legends of Troy (Madison, WI 1953)
Simmons, J. L., ‘Holland's Pliny and Troilus and Cressida’, ShQ 27 (1976), 329–32Google Scholar
Smith, Valerie, ‘The History of Cressida’, in Self and Society in Shakespeare's ‘Troilus and Cressida’ and ‘Measure for Measure’, ed. J. A. Jowitt and R. K. S. Taylor (Bradford 1982), 61–79
Suzuki, Mihoko, ‘“Truth tired with iteration”: Myth and Fiction in Shakespeare's Troilus and Cressida’, Philological Quarterly 66 (1987), 153–74Google Scholar
Lamb, M. E., ‘Ovid's Metamorphoses and Shakespeare's Twelfth Night’, in Shakespearean Comedy, ed. Maurice Charney (New York 1980), 63–77
Taylor, A. B., ‘Shakespeare Rewriting Ovid: Olivia's Interview with Viola and the Narcissus Myth’, ShS 50 (1997), 81–9Google Scholar
Froes, João, ‘Shakespeare's Venus and the Venus of Classical Mythology’, in Venus and Adonis – Critical Essays, ed. Philip C. Kolin (New York and London 1997), 301–7
Hamilton, A. C., ‘Venus and Adonis’, Studies in English Literature 1 (1961), 1–15CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maguin, Jean-Marie, ‘The Mythical Background of Venus and Adonis – Intertexts and Invention’, in William Shakespeare, Venus and Adonis: Nouvelles Perspectives Critiques, ed. Jean-Marie Maguin and Charles Whitworth (Montpellier 1999), 19–42
Streitburger, W. R., ‘Ideal Conduct in Venus and Adonis’, ShQ 26 (1975), 285–91Google Scholar
Hanna, Sara, ‘Voices Against Tyranny: Greek Sources of The Winter's Tale’, Classical and Modern Literature 14 (1993–94), 335–44Google Scholar
Wilson, Douglas B., ‘Euripides’ Alcestis and the Ending of Shakespeare's The Winter's Tale', Iowa State Journal of Research 58 (1984), 345–55Google Scholar
See also Ovid
Dean, Paul, ‘Antony and Cleopatra: An Ovidian Tragedy?’, Cahiers Elisabéthains 40 (1991), 73–7CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Westbrook, Perry D., ‘Horace's Influence on Shakespeare's Antony and Cleopatra’, Publications of the Modern Language Association of America 62 (1947), 392–8CrossRefGoogle Scholar
See also Shakespeare and Rome, Plutarch
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Barton, Anne, ‘Livy, Machiavelli, and Shakespeare's Coriolanus’, ShS 38 (1985), 115–29Google Scholar
Heuer, Hermann, ‘From Plutarch to Shakespeare: A Study of Coriolanus’, ShQ 10 (1957), 50–9Google Scholar
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Velz, John W., ‘Cracking Strong Curbs Asunder: Roman Destiny and the Roman Hero in Coriolanus’, English Literary Renaissance 13 (1983), 58–69CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wallace, John M., ‘The Senecan Context of Coriolanus’, Modern Philology 90 (1992–3), 465–78CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bergeron, David M., ‘Cymbeline: Shakespeare's Last Roman Play’, ShQ 31 (1980), 31–41Google Scholar
Gesner, Carol, ‘Cymbeline and the Greek Romance: A Study in Genre’, in Studies in English Renaissance Literature, ed. Waldo F. McNeir (Baton Rouge 1962), 105–31, 226–31
Kott, Jan, ‘Lucian in Cymbeline’, Modern Language Review 67 (1972), 742–4CrossRefGoogle Scholar
DiMatteo, Anthony, ‘Hamlet as Fable: Reconstructing a Lost Code of Meaning’, Connotations 6 (1996–7), 158–79Google Scholar
Eckert, Charles W., ‘The Festival Structure of the Orestes—Hamlet Tradition’, Comparative Literature 15 (1963), 321–37CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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Kilpatrick, Ross, ‘Hamlet the Scholar’, in Mélanges Offerts en Hommage au Révérend Père Étienne Gareau, ed. Pierre Brind'Amour (Ottawa 1982), 247–61
Kott, Jan, ‘Hamlet and Orestes’, Publications of the Modern Language Association of America 82 (1967), 303–13CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miola, Robert S., ‘Aeneas and Hamlet’, Classical and Modern Literature 8 (1987–8), 275–90Google Scholar
Schleiner, Louise, ‘Latinized Greek Drama in Shakespeare's Writing of Hamlet’, ShQ 41 (1990), 29–48Google Scholar
Stewart, Douglas J., ‘Falstaff the Centaur’, ShQ 28 (1977), 5–21Google Scholar
Betts, John H., ‘Classical Allusions in Shakespeare's Henry V with Special Reference to Virgil’, Greece and Rome15 (1968), 147–63CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Merrix, Robert P., ‘The Alexandrian Allusion in Shakespeare's Henry V’, English Literary Renaissance 2 (1972), 321–33CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Womersley, D. J., ‘3 Henry VI: Shakespeare, Tacitus, and Parricide’, Notes and Queries 230 (1985), 468–73CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blits, Jan H., The End of the Ancient Republic: Essays on ‘Julius Caesar’ (Durham, NC 1982)
Bryant, A. J. Jr., ‘Julius Caesar from a Euripidean Perspective’, Comparative Drama 16 (1982), 97–111Google Scholar
Gentili, Vanna, ‘Shakespeare's Julius Caesar and the Elizabethans’ Roads to Rome', in Shakespeare Today: Directions and Methods of Research, ed. Keir Elam (Florence 1984), 186–214
Green, David C., ‘Julius Caesar’ and Its Sources (Jacobean Drama Series 86) (Salzburg 1979)
Homan, Sidney, ‘Dion, Alexander, and Demetrius – Plutarch's Forgotten Parallel Lives – as Mirrors for Shakespeare's Julius Caesar’, ShSt 8 (1975), 195–210Google Scholar
Miller, Anthony, ‘The Roman State in Julius Caesar and Sejanus’, in Jonson and Shakespeare, ed. Ian Donaldson (New Jersey 1983), 179–201
Miola, Robert S., ‘Julius Caesar and the Tyrannicide Debate’, Renaissance Quarterly 38 (1985), 271–89CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miola, Robert S., ‘Shakespeare and his Sources: Observations on the Critical History of Julius Caesar’, ShSt 40 (1987), 69–76Google Scholar
Ornstein, Robert, ‘Seneca and the Political Drama of Julius Caesar’, Journal of English and Germanic Philology 57 (1958), 51–6Google Scholar
Roe, John, Shakespeare and Machiavelli (Woodbridge, Suffolk 2002) (Chapter 5 on Julius Caesar)
See also Shakespeare and Rome, Cicero and Lucan
Miola, Robert S., ‘New Comedy in King Lear’, Philological Quarterly 73 (1994), 329–46Google Scholar
Evans, Malcolm, ‘Mercury Versus Apollo: A Reading of Love's Labour's Lost’, ShQ 26 (1975), 113–27Google Scholar
Bushnell, R. W., ‘Oracular Silence in Oedipus the King and Macbeth’, Classical and Modern Literature 2 (1981–2), 195–204Google Scholar
Ewbank, Inga-Stina, ‘The Fiend-Like Queen: A Note on Macbeth and Seneca's Medea’, ShS 19 (1966), 82–94Google Scholar
Paolucci, Anne, ‘Macbeth and Oedipus Rex: A Study in Paradox’, in Shakespeare Encomium, ed. Anne Paolucci (New York 1964), 44–70
Truax, Elizabeth, ‘Macbeth and Hercules: The Hero Bewitched’, Comparative Drama 23 (1989–90), 359–76CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rosenheim, Judith, ‘The Stoic Meanings of the Friar in Measure for Measure’, ShSt 15 (1982), 171–215Google Scholar
Rowe, M. W., ‘The Dissolution of Goodness: Measure for Measure and Classical Ethics’, International Journal of the Classical Tradition 5 (1998–9), 20–46CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wheater, Isabella, ‘Aristotelian Wealth and the Sea of Love: Shakespeare's Synthesis of Greek Philosophy and Roman Poetry in The Merchant of Venice (I–II)’, Review of English Studies 43 (1992), 467–87 and 44 (1993), 16–36CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hinely, Jan Lawson, ‘Comic Scapegoats and the Falstaff of The Merry Wives of Windsor’, ShSt 15 (1982), 37–54Google Scholar
Steadman, John M., ‘Falstaff as Actaeon: A Dramatic Emblem’, ShQ 14 (1963), 231–44Google Scholar
Carroll, W. C., The Metamorphoses of Shakespearean Comedy (Princeton 1985)
Doran, M., A Midsummer Night's Dream: A Metamorphosis (Rice Institute Pamphlets 46) (1960), 113–35Google Scholar
Fender, S., Shakespeare – A Midsummer Night's Dream (Studies in English Literature 35) (London 1968)
Garber, Marjorie B., Dream in Shakespeare: From Metaphor to Metamorphosis (New Haven (1974)
Holloway, Julia Bolton, ‘Apuleius and A Midsummer Night's Dream: Bottom's Metamorphoses’, in Tales Within Tales: Apuleius Through Time, ed. Constance S. Wright and Julia Bolton Holloway (New York 2000), 123–37
Kott, Jan, ‘The Bottom Translation’, Assays: Critical Approaches to Medieval and Renaissance Texts 1 (1981), 117–49Google Scholar
Langford, Larry, ‘The Story Shall Be Changed: The Senecan Sources of A Midsummer Night's Dream’, Cahiers Elisabéthains 25 (1984), 37–51CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McPeek, James A. S., ‘The Psyche Myth and A Midsummer Night's Dream’, ShQ 23 (1972), 69–79Google Scholar
Muir, Kenneth, ‘Pyramus and Thisbe: A Study in Shakespeare's Method’, Shakespeare Quarterly 5 (1954), 141–53CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taylor, A. B., ‘“When Everything Seems Double”: Peter Quince the Other Playwright in A Midsummer Night's Dream’, ShS (forthcoming)Google Scholar
See also Ovid
Evans, Robert C., ‘Flattery in Shakespeare's Othello: The Relevance of Plutarch and Sir Thomas Elyot’, Comparative Drama 35.1 (2001), 1–41CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Graves, Wallace, ‘Plutarch's Life of Cato Utican as a Major Source for Othello’, ShQ 24 (1973), 181–7Google Scholar
Miola, Robert S., ‘Othello Furens’, ShQ 41 (1990), 49–64Google Scholar
Greenfield, Thelma N., ‘A Re-Examination of the “Patient” Pericles’, ShSt 3 (1967), 51–61Google Scholar
Allen, Don Cameron, ‘Some Observations on The Rape of Lucrece’, ShS 15 (1962), 89–98Google Scholar
Donaldson, Ian, The Rapes of Lucretia: A Myth and its Transformations (Oxford 1982)
Hulse, S. Clark III, ‘“A Piece of Skilful Painting” in Shakespeare's Lucrece’, ShSt 31 (1978), 13–22Google Scholar
Muir, Kenneth, ‘The Rape of Lucrece’, in Shakespeare the Professional and Related Studies (London 1973), 187–203
Leon, Harry J., ‘Classical Sources for the Garden Scene in Richard II’, Philological Quarterly 29 (1950), 65–70Google Scholar
Logan, George M., ‘Lucan—Daniel—Shakespeare: New Light on the Relation between The Civil Wars and Richard II’, ShSt 9 (1976), 121–40Google Scholar
Brooks, Harold F., ‘Richard III, Unhistorical Amplifications: The Women's Scenes and Seneca’, Modern Language Review 75 (1980), 721–37CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Porter, Joseph A., Shakespeare's Mercutio: His History and Drama (Chapel Hill, NC 1988)
Bate, Jonathan, ‘Ovid and the Sonnets; or, Did Shakespeare Feel the Anxiety of Influence?’, ShS 42 (1990), 65–76Google Scholar
Everett, Barbara, ‘Good and Bad Loves: Shakespeare, Plato, and the Plotting of the Sonnets’, Times Literary Supplement (5 July 2002), 13–15Google Scholar
Leishman, J. B., Themes and Variations in Shakespeare's Sonnets (London 1961)
Barnett, Louise, ‘Ovid and The Taming of the Shrew’, Ball State University Forum 20. 3 (1979), 16–22Google Scholar
Harrold, William E., ‘Shakespeare's Use of Mostellaria in The Taming of the Shrew’, Deutsche Shakespeare-Gesellschaft West (1970), 188–94Google Scholar
Phillippy, Patricia B., ‘“Loytering in Love”: Ovid's Heroides, Hospitality, and Humanist Education in The Taming of the Shrew’, Criticism 40 (1998), 27–53Google Scholar
Brown, Sarah Annes, ‘Ovid, Golding and The Tempest’, Translation and Literature 3 (1994), 3–29CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nosworthy, J. M., ‘The Narrative Sources for The Tempest’, Review of English Studies 24 (1948), 281–94CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wills, Robin Headlam, ‘Blessing Europe: Virgil, Ovid, and Seneca in The Tempest’, in M. Marrapodi, ed., Shakespeare and Intertextuality: The Transition of Cultures Between Italy and England in the Early Modern Period (Rome 2000), 69–84
See also Virgil, Plautus, and Terence
Wallace, John M., ‘Timon of Athens and The Three Graces: Shakespeare's Senecan Study’, Modern Philology 83 (1980), 349–63CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Broude, Ronald, ‘Roman and Goth in Titus Andronicus’, ShS 6 (1970), 27–34Google Scholar
Ettin, Andrew V., ‘Shakespeare's First Roman Tragedy’, English Literary History 37 (1970), 325–41CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hunter, G. K., ‘Sources and Meanings in Titus Andronicus’, in Mirror up to Shakespeare: Essays in Honour of G. R. Hibbard, ed. J. C. Gray (Toronto 1984), 171–88
James, Heather, ‘Cultural Disintegration in Titus Andronicus: Mutilating Titus, Vergil, and Rome’, in Violence in Drama, ed. James Redmond (Cambridge 1991), 123–40
Law, Robert Adger, ‘The Roman Background of Titus Andronicus’, Studies in Philology 40 (1943), 145–53Google Scholar
Miola, Robert S., ‘Titus Andronicus and the Mythos of Shakespeare's Rome’, ShSt 14 (1981), 85–98Google Scholar
Pincombe, Michael, ‘Classical and Contemporary Sources of the “Gloomy Woods” of Titus Andronicus: Ovid, Seneca, Spenser’, in Shakespearean Continuities: Essays in Honour of E. A. J. Honigmann, ed. John Batchelor, Tom Cain, and Claire Lamont (Basingstoke 1997), 40–55
Waith, E. M., ‘The Metamorphosis of Violence in Titus Andronicus’, ShS 10 (1957), 39–49Google Scholar
West, Grace Starry, ‘Going By The Book: Classical Allusions in Shakespeare's Titus Andronicus’, Studies in Philology 79 (1982), 62–77Google Scholar
Arnold, Margaret J., ‘“Monsters in Love's Train”: Euripides and Shakespeare's Troilus and Cressida’, Comparative Drama 18 (1984), 38–53Google Scholar
Bradshaw, Graham, Shakespeare's Scepticism (Brighton 1987)
Elton, William R., ‘Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics and Shakespeare's Troilus and Cressida’, Journal of the History of Ideas 58 (1997), 331–7Google Scholar
Henderson, W. B., ‘Shakespeare's Troilus and Cressida: Yet Deeper in its Tradition’, in Essays in Dramatic Literature: The Parrott Presentation Volume, ed. Hardin Craig (New York 1967), 127–56
Hunter, G. K., ‘Troilus and Cressida: A Tragic Satire’, ShSt (Tokyo) 13 (1974–5), 1–23Google Scholar
Muir, Kenneth, ‘Shakespeare and the Tale of Troy’, Aligarh Critical Miscellany 5 (1992), 113–31Google Scholar
Presson, Robert K., Shakespeare's ‘Troilus and Cressida’ and the Legends of Troy (Madison, WI 1953)
Simmons, J. L., ‘Holland's Pliny and Troilus and Cressida’, ShQ 27 (1976), 329–32Google Scholar
Smith, Valerie, ‘The History of Cressida’, in Self and Society in Shakespeare's ‘Troilus and Cressida’ and ‘Measure for Measure’, ed. J. A. Jowitt and R. K. S. Taylor (Bradford 1982), 61–79
Suzuki, Mihoko, ‘“Truth tired with iteration”: Myth and Fiction in Shakespeare's Troilus and Cressida’, Philological Quarterly 66 (1987), 153–74Google Scholar
Lamb, M. E., ‘Ovid's Metamorphoses and Shakespeare's Twelfth Night’, in Shakespearean Comedy, ed. Maurice Charney (New York 1980), 63–77
Taylor, A. B., ‘Shakespeare Rewriting Ovid: Olivia's Interview with Viola and the Narcissus Myth’, ShS 50 (1997), 81–9Google Scholar
Froes, João, ‘Shakespeare's Venus and the Venus of Classical Mythology’, in Venus and Adonis – Critical Essays, ed. Philip C. Kolin (New York and London 1997), 301–7
Hamilton, A. C., ‘Venus and Adonis’, Studies in English Literature 1 (1961), 1–15CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maguin, Jean-Marie, ‘The Mythical Background of Venus and Adonis – Intertexts and Invention’, in William Shakespeare, Venus and Adonis: Nouvelles Perspectives Critiques, ed. Jean-Marie Maguin and Charles Whitworth (Montpellier 1999), 19–42
Streitburger, W. R., ‘Ideal Conduct in Venus and Adonis’, ShQ 26 (1975), 285–91Google Scholar
Hanna, Sara, ‘Voices Against Tyranny: Greek Sources of The Winter's Tale’, Classical and Modern Literature 14 (1993–94), 335–44Google Scholar
Wilson, Douglas B., ‘Euripides’ Alcestis and the Ending of Shakespeare's The Winter's Tale', Iowa State Journal of Research 58 (1984), 345–55Google Scholar
See also Ovid

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