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Eleanor Winsor Leach

Eleanor Winsor Leach (August 16, 1937 – February 16, 2018) was the Ruth N. Halls Professor with the Department of Classical Studies at Indiana University.[2] She was a trustee of the Vergilian Society in 1978–83 and was second and then first vice-president in 1989–92.[3] Leach was the president of the Society of Classical Studies (formerly, the American Philological Association) in 2005/6, and the chair of her department (1978–1985).[4] She was very involved with academics and younger scholars – directing 26 dissertations, wrote letters for 200 tenure and promotion cases, and refereed more than 100 books and 200 articles.[4] Leach's research interests included Roman painting, Roman sculpture, and Cicero and Pliny's Letters.[5] She published three books (with another forthcoming) and more than 50 articles.[4] Leach's work had an interdisciplinary focus, reading Latin texts against their social, political, and cultural context. From the 1980s onwards, she combined her work on ancient literature with the study of Roman painting, monuments, and topography.[4]

Eleanor Winsor Leach
Born(1937-08-16)August 16, 1937
DiedFebruary 16, 2018(2018-02-16) (aged 80)[1]
NationalityAmerican
EducationBryn Mawr College; Yale University
OccupationClassical scholar
EmployerIndiana University

Education edit

Eleanor Winsor Leach was an undergraduate at Bryn Mawr College, where she took her A.B. magna cum laude with honors in Latin in 1959.[4] She achieved her M.A. from Yale University in 1960.[6] She achieved her Ph.D. in English and Latin from Yale University in 1963, with her dissertation focused on Ovid and Chaucer.[4]

Career edit

Eleanor Winsor Leach taught at Bryn Mawr (1962–66), Villanova University (1966–71), University of Texas at Austin (1972–74), Wesleyan University (1974–76), and Indiana University, Bloomington (1977–2018). When she joined the Department of Classical Studies at Indiana University, she was the only tenured woman. She was chair of the department between 1978 and 1985, and was the Director of Graduate Studies between 1997 and 2016.[4]

Leach published three books – Vergil's Eclogues: Landscapes of Experience (Ithaca, 1974); The Rhetoric of Space: Literary and Artistic Representations of Landscape in Republican and Augustan Rome (Princeton, 1988); The Social Life of Painting in Ancient Rome and on the Bay of Naples (Cambridge, 2004) – with another forthcoming – Epistolary Dialogues: Constructions of Self and Others in the Letters of Cicero and the Younger Pliny (University of Michigan Press). Leach's work had an interdisciplinary focus, reading Latin texts against their social, political, and cultural context. From the 1980s onwards, she combined her work on ancient literature with the study of Roman painting, monuments, and topography.[4]

Leach won many fellowships and awards (listed below) including ACLS, NEH, and Guggenheim fellowships. Leach was Vice-President for the Program Division of the Society for Classical Studies (1991–94) and later President of the Society for Classical Studies (2005/6). She was a trustee of the Vergilian Society (1978–93) and second and then first vice-president of it (1989–92). Leach was on the Classical Jury of the American Academy in Rome (1980–82), a Resident Scholar there (Fall 1983), and later conducted 3 NEH summer seminars there (1986, 1989, 2008). She was President of the central Indiana chapter of the Archaeological Institute of America (1985–87).[4]

Awards edit

Source:[6]

  • M. Carey Thomas Senior Essay Prize, Bryn Mawr College, 1959
  • Woodrow Wilson Fellowship, 1959–60
  • Yale University-Wilson Fellowships, 1959–62
  • Carnegie Teaching Internship, C.C.N.Y, summer 1961
  • U.S. Government Fulbright Award, 1962 (not accepted)
  • Grant-in-Aid, American Philosophical Society, 1971
  • Grant-in-Aid, ACLS, Summer 1972
  • Fellow, Wesleyan University Center for the Humanities, Spring 1974
  • Guggenheim Fellowship, 1976–77
  • N.E.H. Senior Fellowship for Independent Study and Research, 1983–84
  • Resident Scholar in Classical Studies, American Academy in Rome, Fall Semester 1983
  • Director, N.E.H. Summer Seminars for College Teachers, American Academy in Rome, Summers 1986, 1989 and 2008.
  • Blegen Distinguished Visiting Professor of Classics, Vassar College, 1987–88
  • ACLS Senior Research Fellowship, 1992–93
  • National Humanities Center Fellowship 1992–93
  • Visiting Scholar, Wolfson College, Oxford University, 1996, Trinity Term
  • Phi Beta Kappa, Hon. 1998
  • John and Penelope Biggs Resident Scholar in Classics, Washington University in St. Louis, March 2000
  • Freese Sr. Fellow, Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts, National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C. Spring Semester 2004
  • Visiting Fellow, Magdalen College, Oxford University, 2010, Michaelmas Term
  • Elected Honorary Member SCR 2011–2017

Publications edit

Source:[6]

Books edit

  • Vergil's Eclogues: Landscapes of Experience. Ithaca, New York. 1974.
  • The Rhetoric of Space: Literary and Artistic Representations of Landscape in Republican and Augustan Rome. Princeton. 1988.
  • The Social Life of Painting in Ancient Rome and on the Bay of Naples. Cambridge University Press. June 2004; September 2011.
  • Epistolary Dialogues: Constructions of Self and Others in the Letters of Cicero and the Younger Pliny. University of Michigan Press. Forthcoming.

Articles edit

  • 'Georgic Imagery in the Ars Amatoria'. TAPA 95 (1964): 142–154.
  • 'Propertius 1.17: The Experimental Voyage'. YCS 19 (1966): 211–232.
  • 'Nature and Art in Vergil's Second Eclogue'. AJP 87 (1966): 427–445.
  • 'The Unity of Eclogue 6'. Latomus 27 (1968): 12–32.
  • 'Meam quom formam noscito: Language and Characterization in the Menaechmi'. Arethusa 2 (1969): 30–45.
  • 'De exemplo meo ipse aedificato: An Organizing Idea in the Mostellaria'. Hermes 97 (1969): 318–332.
  • 'The Blindness of Mezentius (Aeneid 10.762–768)'. Arethusa 4 (1971): 83–90.
  • 'Eclogue 4: Symbolism and Sources'. Arethusa 4 (1971): 167–184.
  • 'Horace's Pater Optimus and Terence's Demea: Autobiographical Fiction and Comedy in Sermo 1.4'. AJP 92 (1971): 616–632.
  • 'Corydon Revisited: An Interpretation of the Political Eclogues of Calpurnius Siculus'. Ramus 2 (1973): 53–97.
  • 'Plautus' Rudens: Venus Born from a Shell'. Texas Studies in Language and Literature 15 (1974): 915–932.
  • 'Ekphrasis and the Theme of Artistic Failure in Ovid's Metamorphoses'. Ramus 3 (1974): 102–142.
  • 'Ergasilus and the Ironies of the Captivi'. Classica et Mediaevalia 30 (1969): 263–296.
  • 'Neronian Pastoral and the World of Power'. Ramus 4 (1975): 204–233.
  • 'Sedes Apibus: From the Georgics to the Aeneid'. Vergilius 22 (1977): 2–16.
  • 'Parthenian Caverns: Remapping of an Imaginative Topography'. Journal of the History of Ideas 39 (1978): 539–560.
  • 'Vergil, Horace, Tibullus: Three Collections of Ten'. Ramus 7 (1978): 79–106.
  • 'Poetics and Poetic Design in Tibullus' First Elegiac Book'. Arethusa 13 (1980): 79–96.
  • 'Sacral-Idyllic Landscape Painting and the Poems of Tibullus' First Book'. Latomus 39 (1980): 47–69.
  • 'The Soldier and Society: Plautus' Miles Gloriosus as Popular Drama'. Rivista di Studi Classici 27 (1979): 185–209.
  • 'Georgics 2 and the Poem'. Arethusa 14 (1981): 35–48.
  • 'The Metamorphoses of the Myth of Acteon in Campanian Painting'. Mitteilungen des Deutschen Archaeologischen Instituts, Roemische Abteilung 88 (1981): 171–183 and pls. 131–141.
  • 'The Anonymity of Romano-Campanian Painting and the Transition from the Second to the Third Style'. In B. Gold (ed.), Literary and Artistic Patronage in Augustan Rome (Austin, Texas, 1982): 135–173.
  • '"Morwe of May": A Season of Feminine Ambiguity'. In Carruthers and Kirk (ed.), Acts of Interpretation: The Text in its Context 700–1600: Essays on Medieval and Renaissance Literature in Honor of E. Talbot Donaldson (Norman, Oklahoma, 1982): 299–310.
  • 'Illustration as Interpretation in Brant's and Dryden's Editions of Vergil'. In S. Hindman (ed.), The Early Illustrated Book: Essays in Honor of Lessing J. Rosenwald (Washington, Library of Congress, 1982): 175–210.
  • 'Transformations in the Georgics: Vergil's Italy and Varro's'. Atti del Convegno scientifico mondiale di studi su Virgilio, Accademia Nazionale Virgiliana, ed., 2 Vols. (Milan, 1984) Vol. I: 85–108.
  • 'The Punishment of Dirce: A Newly Discovered Continuous Narrative Painting in the Casa di Giulio Polibio and its Significance within the Visual Tradition'. Roemische Mitteilungen 93 (1986): 118–138 & color pl. 1; pls 49–59.
  • 'Landscape and the Prosperous Life: The Discrimination of Genre in Augustan Literature and Painting'. Archeologica Transatlantica: 5 (1985): 189–196.
  • 'The Implied Reader and the Political Argument of Seneca's Apocolocyntosis and De Clementia'. Arethusa 22 (1989): 197–230.
  • 'The Politics of Self-Presentation: Pliny's Letters and Roman Portrait Sculpture'. Classical Antiquity 9 (1990): 19–39.
  • 'The Iconography of the Black Salone in the Casa di Fabio Rufo at Pompeii'. Kölner Jahrbuch fur Vor-und Früh geschichte 24 (1991): 105–112.
  • 'Polyphemus in a Landscape: Traditions of Pastoral Courtship'. In John Dixon Hunt (ed.), The Pastoral Landscape, National Gallery of Art, Studies in the History of Art 36 (1992): 63–88.
  • 'Horace's Sabine Property in Lyric and Hexameter Verse'. AJP 114 (1993): 271–302.
  • 'Absence and Desire in Cicero's De Amicitia'. Classical World 87 (1993): 3–20.
  • 'The Entrance Room in the House of Julius Polibius and the Nature of the Roman Vestibulum'. In E.M. Moorman (ed.), Proceedings of the Fifth International Congress on Ancient Wall Painting, Amsterdam, 8–12 September 1992. Publications of the Dutch Institute in Rome, Stichtung Babesch (Leiden, 1993): 23–28.
  • 'Horace Odes 1.8: Achilles, the Campus Martius and the Articulation of Gender in Augustan Rome'. Classical Philology 89 (1994): 334–343.
  • 'Roman Painting' s.v. In B. M. Fagan (ed.), Oxford Companion to Archaeology (New York/Oxford, 1996): 603–605.
  • 'Cicero Decorates a Gymnasium'. Omnibus, 1997: 13–16.
  • 'Oecus on Ibycus: Investigating the Vocabulary of the Roman House'. In Rick Jones and Sarah Bon (ed.), Space and Sequence in Ancient Pompeii (Oxbow Books, Oxford, 1997): 50–71.
  • 'Venus, Thetis and the Social Construction of Maternal Behavior'. Classical Journal 92 (1997): 347–371.
  • 'Horace and the Material Culture of Augustan Rome: A Revisionary Reading'. In T. Habinek and A. Schiesaro (ed.), The Roman Cultural Revolution (Cambridge University Press, November 1997): 105–121.
  • 'Personal and Communal Memory in the Reading of Horace's Odes Books I-III'. Arethusa 31 (1998): 43–74.
  • 'Satyrs and Spectators: Reflections of Theatrical Settings in Third Style Mythological Continuous Narrative Painting.' In D. Scagliarini Corlàita (ed.), I temi figurativi nella pittura parietale antica (IV sec. a.C. – IV sec. d.C.). Atti del Vi Convegna Internazionale sulla Pittura Parietale Antica (Bologna, 1998): 81–85; 335–336.
  • 'Viewing the spectacula of Aeneid 6'. In Christine Perkell (ed.), Reading Vergil's Aeneid (University of Oklahoma Press, 1999): 111–127.
  • Contribution to Household Archaeology, P. M. Allison (ed.) Routledge, April 1999.
  • 'Ciceronian "Bi-Marcus": Correspondence with M. Terentius Varro and L. Papirius Paetus in 46 B.C.' TAPA 1999: 139–180.
  • 'Cicero's Pro Sestio: Spectacle and Performance'. In J. Hallett and S. Dickison (ed.), Rome and her Monuments: Essays on the City and Literature of Rome in Honor of Katherine A Geffcken (Illinois. 2000): 369–397.
  • 'G.P. Bellori and the Sepolcro dei Nasonii: Writing a Poet's Tomb'. In Alix Barbet (ed.), La peinture funéraire antique IV siècle av. J.-C. – IV siècle apr. J.-C. (Paris. 2001): 69–77.
  • 'Gendering Clodius'. Classical World 94 (2001): 335–359.
  • 'Narrative Space and the Viewer in Philostratus' Eikones'. Mitteilungen des Deutschen Archaeologischen Instituts Römische Abteilung 107 (2000): 237–252.
  • 'Otium as Luxuria in the Status Economy of Pliny's Letters'. In Roy Gibson and Ruth Morello (ed.), Re-Imagining Pliny the Younger. Arethusa 36 (2003): 147–166.
  • 'Doctus spectare lacunar: Roman Ceilings in Verbal Contexts'. In László Borhy (ed.), Plafonds e voûtes à l’époque antique (Budapest, 2004): 55–60.
  • 'Constructing Identity: Q. Haterius and C Trimalchio Decorate their Tombs'. In E.V. D’Ambra and Guy Metraux (ed,), The Art of Citizens, Soldiers and Freedmen in the Roman World (Archeo Press, 2006): 1–18.
  • 'An gravius aliquid scribam: Roman Seniores write to Iuniores'. TAPA 137 (2006): 247–267.
  • 'Claudia Quinta (pro Caelio 34) and an Altar to Magna Mater'. Dictynna 4 (2007). 1–14.
  • 'Hypermestra's Querela: Coopting the Danaids in Horace Odes 3.11 and in Augustan Rome'. Classical World 102 (2008): 13–32.
  • 'The Implied Reader and the Political Argument in Seneca's Apocolocyntosis AND De Clementia'. Article published in 1989 Arethusa, republished with revisions and added bibliography in John Fitch (ed.), Oxford Readings in Seneca (Oxford, 2008): 264–298.
  • 'Harry Berger's Sprezzatura and the Rhetorical Poses of Cicero's de Oratore'. In D. Miller and N. Levene (ed.), A Touch More Rare: Harry Berger’s Art of Interpretation (Fordham, 2009): 182–196.
  • 'Litora picta...nativis lapillis: Campanian mosaic foutains and their contexts'. In Irene Bragantini (ed.), Proceedings of the 11th Congress of the Association Internationale pour l’Etude de la Peinture Antique (Naples, University Press 2010): 65–76.
  • 'Fortune's Extremities: Q Lutatius Catulus and Largo Argentina Temple B: A Roman Consular and his Monument'. Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome 55 (2010): 111–134.
  • 'Rhetorical Inventio and the Expectations of Roman Continuous Narrative Painting'. In D. Balch and A. Weissenreider (ed.), Contested Space (Mohr-Siebeck, Tübingen 2011): 109–127.
  • 'Rome's Elegiac Topography: the View form the Via Sacra'. In B. Gold (ed.), Blackwells Companion to Roman Elegiac Poetry (Wiley-Blackwell Press, 2012): 134–152.
  • 'Pliny's Diffident Suetonius: A Portrait in Six Epistles'. New England Classical Journal 2012: 87–98.
  • 'Response Essay: What has Pliny to Say'. In Ramsby and Bell (eds.), Free at Last: The Impact of Freed Slaves on the Roman Empire (Bristol, UK, 2012): 196–210.
  • 'M. Atilius Regulus: Turning Defeat into Victory: Diverse Values in an Ambivalent Story'. In C Pieper and J. Ker (ed.), Valuing the Past in the Greco-Roman World (Leiden 2014): 243–268.

References edit

  1. ^ "In Memoriam: Eleanor Winsor Leach". Society for Classical Studies. 20 February 2018.
  2. ^ "Faculty | Classical Studies| Indiana University". classics.indiana.edu. Retrieved 2018-01-22.
  3. ^ "Classical Studies In Memoriam".
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Classical Studies In Memoriam".
  5. ^ "Faculty Profile Indiana University".
  6. ^ a b c "Eleanor Winsor Leach Curriculum Vitae" (PDF). Retrieved 22 January 2018.

eleanor, winsor, leach, august, 1937, february, 2018, ruth, halls, professor, with, department, classical, studies, indiana, university, trustee, vergilian, society, 1978, second, then, first, vice, president, 1989, leach, president, society, classical, studie. Eleanor Winsor Leach August 16 1937 February 16 2018 was the Ruth N Halls Professor with the Department of Classical Studies at Indiana University 2 She was a trustee of the Vergilian Society in 1978 83 and was second and then first vice president in 1989 92 3 Leach was the president of the Society of Classical Studies formerly the American Philological Association in 2005 6 and the chair of her department 1978 1985 4 She was very involved with academics and younger scholars directing 26 dissertations wrote letters for 200 tenure and promotion cases and refereed more than 100 books and 200 articles 4 Leach s research interests included Roman painting Roman sculpture and Cicero and Pliny s Letters 5 She published three books with another forthcoming and more than 50 articles 4 Leach s work had an interdisciplinary focus reading Latin texts against their social political and cultural context From the 1980s onwards she combined her work on ancient literature with the study of Roman painting monuments and topography 4 Eleanor Winsor LeachBorn 1937 08 16 August 16 1937Providence Rhode Island U S DiedFebruary 16 2018 2018 02 16 aged 80 1 Bloomington Indiana U S NationalityAmericanEducationBryn Mawr College Yale UniversityOccupationClassical scholarEmployerIndiana University Contents 1 Education 2 Career 3 Awards 4 Publications 4 1 Books 4 2 Articles 5 ReferencesEducation editEleanor Winsor Leach was an undergraduate at Bryn Mawr College where she took her A B magna cum laude with honors in Latin in 1959 4 She achieved her M A from Yale University in 1960 6 She achieved her Ph D in English and Latin from Yale University in 1963 with her dissertation focused on Ovid and Chaucer 4 Career editEleanor Winsor Leach taught at Bryn Mawr 1962 66 Villanova University 1966 71 University of Texas at Austin 1972 74 Wesleyan University 1974 76 and Indiana University Bloomington 1977 2018 When she joined the Department of Classical Studies at Indiana University she was the only tenured woman She was chair of the department between 1978 and 1985 and was the Director of Graduate Studies between 1997 and 2016 4 Leach published three books Vergil s Eclogues Landscapes of Experience Ithaca 1974 The Rhetoric of Space Literary and Artistic Representations of Landscape in Republican and Augustan Rome Princeton 1988 The Social Life of Painting in Ancient Rome and on the Bay of Naples Cambridge 2004 with another forthcoming Epistolary Dialogues Constructions of Self and Others in the Letters of Cicero and the Younger Pliny University of Michigan Press Leach s work had an interdisciplinary focus reading Latin texts against their social political and cultural context From the 1980s onwards she combined her work on ancient literature with the study of Roman painting monuments and topography 4 Leach won many fellowships and awards listed below including ACLS NEH and Guggenheim fellowships Leach was Vice President for the Program Division of the Society for Classical Studies 1991 94 and later President of the Society for Classical Studies 2005 6 She was a trustee of the Vergilian Society 1978 93 and second and then first vice president of it 1989 92 Leach was on the Classical Jury of the American Academy in Rome 1980 82 a Resident Scholar there Fall 1983 and later conducted 3 NEH summer seminars there 1986 1989 2008 She was President of the central Indiana chapter of the Archaeological Institute of America 1985 87 4 Awards editSource 6 M Carey Thomas Senior Essay Prize Bryn Mawr College 1959 Woodrow Wilson Fellowship 1959 60 Yale University Wilson Fellowships 1959 62 Carnegie Teaching Internship C C N Y summer 1961 U S Government Fulbright Award 1962 not accepted Grant in Aid American Philosophical Society 1971 Grant in Aid ACLS Summer 1972 Fellow Wesleyan University Center for the Humanities Spring 1974 Guggenheim Fellowship 1976 77 N E H Senior Fellowship for Independent Study and Research 1983 84 Resident Scholar in Classical Studies American Academy in Rome Fall Semester 1983 Director N E H Summer Seminars for College Teachers American Academy in Rome Summers 1986 1989 and 2008 Blegen Distinguished Visiting Professor of Classics Vassar College 1987 88 ACLS Senior Research Fellowship 1992 93 National Humanities Center Fellowship 1992 93 Visiting Scholar Wolfson College Oxford University 1996 Trinity Term Phi Beta Kappa Hon 1998 John and Penelope Biggs Resident Scholar in Classics Washington University in St Louis March 2000 Freese Sr Fellow Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts National Gallery of Art Washington D C Spring Semester 2004 Visiting Fellow Magdalen College Oxford University 2010 Michaelmas Term Elected Honorary Member SCR 2011 2017Publications editSource 6 Books edit Vergil s Eclogues Landscapes of Experience Ithaca New York 1974 The Rhetoric of Space Literary and Artistic Representations of Landscape in Republican and Augustan Rome Princeton 1988 The Social Life of Painting in Ancient Rome and on the Bay of Naples Cambridge University Press June 2004 September 2011 Epistolary Dialogues Constructions of Self and Others in the Letters of Cicero and the Younger Pliny University of Michigan Press Forthcoming Articles edit Georgic Imagery in the Ars Amatoria TAPA 95 1964 142 154 Propertius 1 17 The Experimental Voyage YCS 19 1966 211 232 Nature and Art in Vergil s Second Eclogue AJP 87 1966 427 445 The Unity of Eclogue 6 Latomus 27 1968 12 32 Meam quom formam noscito Language and Characterization in the Menaechmi Arethusa 2 1969 30 45 De exemplo meo ipse aedificato An Organizing Idea in the Mostellaria Hermes 97 1969 318 332 The Blindness of Mezentius Aeneid 10 762 768 Arethusa 4 1971 83 90 Eclogue 4 Symbolism and Sources Arethusa 4 1971 167 184 Horace s Pater Optimus and Terence s Demea Autobiographical Fiction and Comedy in Sermo 1 4 AJP 92 1971 616 632 Corydon Revisited An Interpretation of the Political Eclogues of Calpurnius Siculus Ramus 2 1973 53 97 Plautus Rudens Venus Born from a Shell Texas Studies in Language and Literature 15 1974 915 932 Ekphrasis and the Theme of Artistic Failure in Ovid s Metamorphoses Ramus 3 1974 102 142 Ergasilus and the Ironies of the Captivi Classica et Mediaevalia 30 1969 263 296 Neronian Pastoral and the World of Power Ramus 4 1975 204 233 Sedes Apibus From the Georgics to the Aeneid Vergilius 22 1977 2 16 Parthenian Caverns Remapping of an Imaginative Topography Journal of the History of Ideas 39 1978 539 560 Vergil Horace Tibullus Three Collections of Ten Ramus 7 1978 79 106 Poetics and Poetic Design in Tibullus First Elegiac Book Arethusa 13 1980 79 96 Sacral Idyllic Landscape Painting and the Poems of Tibullus First Book Latomus 39 1980 47 69 The Soldier and Society Plautus Miles Gloriosus as Popular Drama Rivista di Studi Classici 27 1979 185 209 Georgics 2 and the Poem Arethusa 14 1981 35 48 The Metamorphoses of the Myth of Acteon in Campanian Painting Mitteilungen des Deutschen Archaeologischen Instituts Roemische Abteilung 88 1981 171 183 and pls 131 141 The Anonymity of Romano Campanian Painting and the Transition from the Second to the Third Style In B Gold ed Literary and Artistic Patronage in Augustan Rome Austin Texas 1982 135 173 Morwe of May A Season of Feminine Ambiguity In Carruthers and Kirk ed Acts of Interpretation The Text in its Context 700 1600 Essays on Medieval and Renaissance Literature in Honor of E Talbot Donaldson Norman Oklahoma 1982 299 310 Illustration as Interpretation in Brant s and Dryden s Editions of Vergil In S Hindman ed The Early Illustrated Book Essays in Honor of Lessing J Rosenwald Washington Library of Congress 1982 175 210 Transformations in the Georgics Vergil s Italy and Varro s Atti del Convegno scientifico mondiale di studi su Virgilio Accademia Nazionale Virgiliana ed 2 Vols Milan 1984 Vol I 85 108 The Punishment of Dirce A Newly Discovered Continuous Narrative Painting in the Casa di Giulio Polibio and its Significance within the Visual Tradition Roemische Mitteilungen 93 1986 118 138 amp color pl 1 pls 49 59 Landscape and the Prosperous Life The Discrimination of Genre in Augustan Literature and Painting Archeologica Transatlantica 5 1985 189 196 The Implied Reader and the Political Argument of Seneca s Apocolocyntosis and De Clementia Arethusa 22 1989 197 230 The Politics of Self Presentation Pliny s Letters and Roman Portrait Sculpture Classical Antiquity 9 1990 19 39 The Iconography of the Black Salone in the Casa di Fabio Rufo at Pompeii Kolner Jahrbuch fur Vor und Fruh geschichte 24 1991 105 112 Polyphemus in a Landscape Traditions of Pastoral Courtship In John Dixon Hunt ed The Pastoral Landscape National Gallery of Art Studies in the History of Art 36 1992 63 88 Horace s Sabine Property in Lyric and Hexameter Verse AJP 114 1993 271 302 Absence and Desire in Cicero s De Amicitia Classical World 87 1993 3 20 The Entrance Room in the House of Julius Polibius and the Nature of the Roman Vestibulum In E M Moorman ed Proceedings of the Fifth International Congress on Ancient Wall Painting Amsterdam 8 12 September 1992 Publications of the Dutch Institute in Rome Stichtung Babesch Leiden 1993 23 28 Horace Odes 1 8 Achilles the Campus Martius and the Articulation of Gender in Augustan Rome Classical Philology 89 1994 334 343 Roman Painting s v In B M Fagan ed Oxford Companion to Archaeology New York Oxford 1996 603 605 Cicero Decorates a Gymnasium Omnibus 1997 13 16 Oecus on Ibycus Investigating the Vocabulary of the Roman House In Rick Jones and Sarah Bon ed Space and Sequence in Ancient Pompeii Oxbow Books Oxford 1997 50 71 Venus Thetis and the Social Construction of Maternal Behavior Classical Journal 92 1997 347 371 Horace and the Material Culture of Augustan Rome A Revisionary Reading In T Habinek and A Schiesaro ed The Roman Cultural Revolution Cambridge University Press November 1997 105 121 Personal and Communal Memory in the Reading of Horace s Odes Books I III Arethusa 31 1998 43 74 Satyrs and Spectators Reflections of Theatrical Settings in Third Style Mythological Continuous Narrative Painting In D Scagliarini Corlaita ed I temi figurativi nella pittura parietale antica IV sec a C IV sec d C Atti del Vi Convegna Internazionale sulla Pittura Parietale Antica Bologna 1998 81 85 335 336 Viewing the spectacula of Aeneid 6 In Christine Perkell ed Reading Vergil s Aeneid University of Oklahoma Press 1999 111 127 Contribution to Household Archaeology P M Allison ed Routledge April 1999 Ciceronian Bi Marcus Correspondence with M Terentius Varro and L Papirius Paetus in 46 B C TAPA 1999 139 180 Cicero s Pro Sestio Spectacle and Performance In J Hallett and S Dickison ed Rome and her Monuments Essays on the City and Literature of Rome in Honor of Katherine A Geffcken Illinois 2000 369 397 G P Bellori and the Sepolcro dei Nasonii Writing a Poet s Tomb In Alix Barbet ed La peinture funeraire antique IV siecle av J C IV siecle apr J C Paris 2001 69 77 Gendering Clodius Classical World 94 2001 335 359 Narrative Space and the Viewer in Philostratus Eikones Mitteilungen des Deutschen Archaeologischen Instituts Romische Abteilung 107 2000 237 252 Otium as Luxuria in the Status Economy of Pliny s Letters In Roy Gibson and Ruth Morello ed Re Imagining Pliny the Younger Arethusa 36 2003 147 166 Doctus spectare lacunar Roman Ceilings in Verbal Contexts In Laszlo Borhy ed Plafonds e voutes a l epoque antique Budapest 2004 55 60 Constructing Identity Q Haterius and C Trimalchio Decorate their Tombs In E V D Ambra and Guy Metraux ed The Art of Citizens Soldiers and Freedmen in the Roman World Archeo Press 2006 1 18 An gravius aliquid scribam Roman Seniores write to Iuniores TAPA 137 2006 247 267 Claudia Quinta pro Caelio 34 and an Altar to Magna Mater Dictynna 4 2007 1 14 Hypermestra s Querela Coopting the Danaids in Horace Odes 3 11 and in Augustan Rome Classical World 102 2008 13 32 The Implied Reader and the Political Argument in Seneca s Apocolocyntosis AND De Clementia Article published in 1989 Arethusa republished with revisions and added bibliography in John Fitch ed Oxford Readings in Seneca Oxford 2008 264 298 Harry Berger s Sprezzatura and the Rhetorical Poses of Cicero s de Oratore In D Miller and N Levene ed A Touch More Rare Harry Berger s Art of Interpretation Fordham 2009 182 196 Litora picta nativis lapillis Campanian mosaic foutains and their contexts In Irene Bragantini ed Proceedings of the 11th Congress of the Association Internationale pour l Etude de la Peinture Antique Naples University Press 2010 65 76 Fortune s Extremities Q Lutatius Catulus and Largo Argentina Temple B A Roman Consular and his Monument Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome 55 2010 111 134 Rhetorical Inventio and the Expectations of Roman Continuous Narrative Painting In D Balch and A Weissenreider ed Contested Space Mohr Siebeck Tubingen 2011 109 127 Rome s Elegiac Topography the View form the Via Sacra In B Gold ed Blackwells Companion to Roman Elegiac Poetry Wiley Blackwell Press 2012 134 152 Pliny s Diffident Suetonius A Portrait in Six Epistles New England Classical Journal 2012 87 98 Response Essay What has Pliny to Say In Ramsby and Bell eds Free at Last The Impact of Freed Slaves on the Roman Empire Bristol UK 2012 196 210 M Atilius Regulus Turning Defeat into Victory Diverse Values in an Ambivalent Story In C Pieper and J Ker ed Valuing the Past in the Greco Roman World Leiden 2014 243 268 References edit In Memoriam Eleanor Winsor Leach Society for Classical Studies 20 February 2018 Faculty Classical Studies Indiana University classics indiana edu Retrieved 2018 01 22 Classical Studies In Memoriam a b c d e f g h i Classical Studies In Memoriam Faculty Profile Indiana University a b c Eleanor Winsor Leach Curriculum Vitae PDF Retrieved 22 January 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eleanor Winsor Leach amp oldid 1207546623, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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