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This special Bulletin Supplement contains seven essays which deepen
and extend our knowledge of classical reception and the history of
scholarship. Two of them deal with books: John Davies examines a
little-known life of the tyrant Agathocles of Syracuse published in
the 1660s in which the more recent `tyrant', Oliver Cromwell, is
targeted, while Christian Flow surveys the agendas and self-images
of Latin lexicographers from the Estiennes in the sixteenth century
to the Thesaurus Linguae Latinae, still in progress. Three essays
are devoted to classical journals: Graham Whitaker surveys German
nineteenth-century periodicals in relation to F. A. Wolf's
conception of Alterthumswissenschaft; Ward Briggs gives an account
of The American Journal of Philology and of its founding editor
Basil Gildersleeve; drawing on previously unpublished
correspondence, Christopher Stray describes the controversy between
W. S. Watt and Shackleton Bailey over their editing of Cicero's
letters, as played out in the pages of the Classical Review and the
Proceedings of the Cambridge Philological Society. Two essays focus
on the classical scholarship of African-Americans: Kenneth Goings
and Eugene O'Connor tell the story of the rise of classical
programmes in US black colleges, together with the funding
difficulties and prejudice that such programmes faced, while
Michele Valerie Ronnick provides a survey of writings on classics
by scholars of African descent from the sixteenth to the twentieth
century. The range of these essays is wide, covering 500 years, and
dealing with scholarly production in Britain, Germany, the USA and
elsewhere.
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