A Commentary on Ovid, Tristia, Book 2 Ancient Rome and the Construction of Modern Homosexual Identities
Jennifer Ingleheart is a British classical scholar, who is known for her work on Ovid, Classical reception, and the influence of Rome on the modern understanding of homosexuality. She is Professor of Latin at the University of Durham.[1][2]
JenniferIngleheart is a British classical scholar, who is known for her work on Ovid, Classical reception, and the influence of Rome on the modern understanding...
text, but the two poems were separated by scholars in the 16th century. Ingleheart finds epigrammatic features in the poem, including a connection with Greek...
acted the same age, though the latter 'fell far behind in strength'. Ingleheart, Jennifer (4 September 2018). Masculine Plural: Queer Classics, Sex, and Education...
acted the same age, though the latter 'fell far behind in strength'. Ingleheart, Jennifer (4 September 2018). Masculine Plural: Queer Classics, Sex, and Education...
Ovid’s Poetics of Illusion. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge Univ. Press. Ingleheart, Jennifer, ed. 2011. Two Thousand Years of Solitude: Exile after Ovid. Oxford:...
"Elizabethan exile after Ovid: Thomas Churchyard's Tristia (1572)". In Ingleheart, Jennifer (ed.). Two Thousand Years of Solitude. Oxford: Oxford University...
Tristia (Stuttgart & Leipzig: Teubner 1995) (Bibliotheca Teubneriana). Ingleheart, Jennifer Tristia Book 2. (Oxford University Press, 2010). Richmond, J. A....
| Gender and Otherness in the Humanities". Retrieved 2022-12-14. Ingleheart, Jennifer (2015-06-01). "Responding to Ovid's Pygmalion episode and receptions...