1.
Blanshard, A. J. L. Sex: Vice and Love from Antiquity to Modernity. (John Wiley and Sons Ltd, 2010).
2.
Cohen, David J. Sex, gender, and sexuality in ancient Greece. Classical Philology 145–160 (1992).
3.
Dover, K. J. Greek homosexuality. (Harvard University Press, 1989).
4.
Golden, M. & Toohey, P. Sex and difference in ancient Greece and Rome. vol. Edinburgh readings on the ancient world (Edinburgh University Press, 2003).
5.
Foxhall, L. Studying Gender in Classical Antiquity. vol. Key Themes in Ancient History (Cambridge University Press, 2013).
6.
Holmes, B. Gender: antiquity and its legacy. vol. Ancients and moderns series (I. B. Tauris, 2012).
7.
Hubbard, T. A companion to Greek and Roman sexualities. vol. Blackwell companions to the ancient world (Wiley Blackwell, 2014).
8.
Mottier, V. & dawsonera. Sexuality: a very short introduction. vol. Very short introductions (Oxford University Press, 2008).
9.
Orrells, D. Sex: antiquity and its legacy. vol. Ancients and moderns (I.B. Tauris, 2015).
10.
Peradotto, J. & Sullivan, J. P. Women in the ancient world: the Arethusa papers. vol. SUNY series in classical studies (State University of New York Press, 1984).
11.
Pomeroy, S. B. Goddesses, whores, wives and slaves: women in classical antiquity. (The Bodley Head, 2015).
12.
Robson, J. E. Sex and sexuality in classical Athens. vol. Debates and documents in ancient history (Edinburgh University Press, 2013).
13.
Williams, C. A. Roman homosexuality: ideologies of masculinity in classical antiquity. (Oxford University Press, 1999).
14.
Winkler, J. J. The constraints of desire: the anthropology of sex and gender in ancient Greece. (Routledge, 1990).
15.
Zeitlin, F. I. Playing the other: gender and society in classical Greek literature. vol. Women in culture and society (University of Chicago Press, 1996).
16.
Butler, J. Bodies that matter: on the discursive limits of ‘sex’. (Routledge, 1993).
17.
Butler, J. Gender trouble: feminism and the subversion of identity. (Routledge, 1999).
18.
Davidson, J. N. Courtesans & fishcakes: the consuming passions of classical Athens. (Harper Collins, 1997).
19.
Davidson, J. Dover, Foucault and Greek homosexuality: Penetration and the truth of sex. Past &Amp; Present 3–51 (2001) doi:https://bris.idm.oclc.org/login?url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/3600793.
20.
Davidson, J. N. The Greeks and Greek love: a radical reappraisal of homosexuality in ancient Greece. (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2007).
21.
Edwards, J. Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick. vol. Routledge critical thinkers (Routledge, 2009).
22.
Fine, C. Delusions of gender: the real science behind sex differences. (Icon, 2010).
23.
Foucault, M. The history of sexuality: Vol.1: The will to knowledge. (Penguin Books, 1998).
24.
Foucault, M. The history of sexuality: Vol.2: The use of pleasure. (Viking, 1986).
25.
Halperin, D. M., Winkler, J. J. & Zeitlin, F. I. Before sexuality: the construction of erotic experience in the ancient Greek world. (Princeton University Press, 1990).
26.
Halperin, D. M. One hundred years of homosexuality: and other essays on Greek love. vol. The new ancient world (Routledge, 1990).
27.
Halperin, David Halperin, David (correspondence author). Forgetting Foucault: Acts, Identities, and the History of Sexuality. Representations 93–120 (1998).
28.
Holmes, B. The symptom and the subject: the emergence of the physical body in ancient Greece. (Princeton University Press, 2010).
29.
Keuls, E. C. The reign of the phallus: sexual politics in ancient Athens. (University of California Press, 1993).
30.
Larmour, D. H. J., Miller, P. A. & Platter, C. Rethinking sexuality: Foucault and classical antiquity. (Princeton University Press, 1998).
31.
Loraux, N. The children of Athena: Athenian ideas about citizenship and the division between the sexes. (Princeton University Press, 1993).
32.
Rabinowitz, N. S. & Auanger, L. Among women: from the homosocial to the homoerotic in the ancient world. (University of Texas Press, 2002).
33.
Richlin, A. Zeus and Metis: Foucault, feminism, classics. Helios 18, 160–180 (1991).
34.
Sedgwick, E. K. Epistemology of the closet. (Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1991).
35.
Sedgwick, E. K. Tendencies. (Routledge, 1994).
36.
Wallach Scott, J. Gender: Still a Useful Category of Analysis? Diogenes 57, 7–14 (2010).
37.
Skinner, Marilyn B. Zeus and Leda: The Sexuality Wars in Contemporary Classical Scholarship. Thamyris: Mythmaking from Past to Present 3, 103–23 (1996).
38.
Archer, L. J., Fischler, S. & Wyke, M. Women in ancient societies: an illusion of the night. (Macmillan, 1994).
39.
Arthur, M. B. Cultural strategies in Hesiod’s Theogony. Law, family, society. Arethusa 63–82 (1982).
40.
Zeitlin, F. Signifying Difference: The Myth of Pandora. in Women in antiquity: new assessments 58–74 (Routledge, 1995).
41.
King, H. The one-sex body on trial: the classical and early modern evidence. (Routledge, 2016).
42.
Lesher, J. H., Nails, D. & Sheffield, F. C. C. Plato’s Symposium: issues in interpretation and reception. vol. Hellenic studies (Center for Hellenic Studies, Trustees for Harvard University, 2006).
43.
Loraux, N. The experiences of Tiresias: the feminine and the Greek man. (Princeton University Press, 1995).
44.
Marquardt, Patricia A. Hesiod’s ambiguous view of woman. Classical Philology 283–291 (1982).
45.
Morris, Rosalind. All made up: performance theory and the new anthropology of sex and gender. Annual review of anthropology 24, 567–592 (1995).
46.
Morris, I. Archaeology and Gender Ideologies in Early Archaic Greece. Transactions of the American Philological Association (1974-) 129, (1999).
47.
Laqueur, T. W. Making sex: body and gender from the Greeks to Freud. (Harvard University Press, 1990).
48.
Calame, C. Choruses of young women in ancient Greece: their morphology, religious role and social function. vol. Greek studies : interdisciplinary approaches (Rowman & Littlefield, 1997).
49.
Dean-Jones, L. A. Women’s bodies in classical Greek science. (Clarendon Press, 1994).
50.
Helen’s ‘Judgment of Paris’ and Greek Marriage Ritual in Sappho 16. Arethusa 43, 1–20 (2009).
51.
King, H. Green sickness: Hippocrates, Galen and the origins of the "disease of virgins”. International Journal of the Classical Tradition 2, 372–387 (1996).
52.
King, H. Hippocrates’ woman: reading the female body in ancient Greece. (Routledge, 1998).
53.
McDonnell, M. A. Roman manliness: virtus and the Roman Republic. (Cambridge University Press, 2006).
54.
MONOSON, S. S. Citizen as Erastes: Erotic Imagery and the Idea of Reciprocity in the Periclean Funeral Oration. Political Theory 22, 253–276 (1994).
55.
Perlman, Paula. Acting the She-Bear for Artemis. Arethusa 22, (1989).
56.
Porter, J. I. & International Association for Philosophy and Literature. Constructions of the classical body. vol. The body, in theory (University of Michigan Press, 1999).
57.
Seaford, Richard A. S. The tragic wedding. Journal of Hellenic Studies 106–130 (1987) doi:10.2307/630074.
58.
Sissa, G. Greek virginity. (Harvard University Pres, 1990).
59.
Treggiari, S. Roman marriage: iusti coniuges from the time of Cicero to the time of Ulpian. (Clarendon Press, 1991).
60.
Vidal-Naquet, P. & Knox, B. The black hunter: forms of thought and forms of society in the Greek world. (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1986).
61.
Barthes, R. The lover’s discourse: fragments. (Penguin, 1990).
62.
Cahoon, L. The Bed as Battlefield: Erotic Conquest and Military Metaphor in Ovid’s Amores. Transactions of the American Philological Association (1974-) 118, (1988).
63.
Calame, C. The poetics of eros in Ancient Greece. (Princeton University Press, 1999).
64.
Carson, A. & Center for Hellenic Studies (Washington, D.C.). Eros the bittersweet: an essay. vol. Princeton legacy library (Princeton University Press, 1986).
65.
DuBois, P. Sappho is burning. (University of Chicago Press, 1995).
66.
Kennedy, D. F. The arts of love: five studies in the discourse of Roman love elegy. vol. Roman literature and its contexts (Cambridge University Press, 1993).
67.
Sale, W. Aphrodite in the Theogony. Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 92, (1961).
68.
Thornton, B. S. Eros: the myth of ancient Greek sexuality. (Westview Press, 1997).
69.
Halperin, D. M., Winkler, J. J. & Zeitlin, F. I. Before sexuality: the construction of erotic experience in the ancient Greek world. (Princeton University Press, 1990).
70.
Wyke, M. The Roman mistress: ancient and modern representations. (Oxford University Press, 2002).
71.
Wyke, Maria. Mistress and metaphor in Augustan elegy. Helios 25–47 (1989).
72.
Wyke, Maria. The elegiac women at Rome. Proceedings of the Cambridge Philological Society 153–178 (1987).
73.
Bowie, A. M. & Cambridge Books Online (Online service). Aristophanes: Myth, Ritual and Comedy. (Cambridge University Press, 1993).
74.
Dodson-Robinson, E. Helen’s ‘Judgment of Paris’ and Greek marriage ritual in SAPPHO 16. Arethusa 43, 1–20 (2010).
75.
Foley, Helene Peet. The female intruder reconsidered. Women in Aristophanes, Lysistrata and Ecclesiazusae. Classical Philology 1–21 (1982).
76.
Gilhuly, K. The feminine matrix of sex and gender in classical Athens. (Cambridge University Press, 2009).
77.
Greene, E. SAPPHO, FOUCAULT, AND WOMENS EROTICS. Arethusa 29, 1–14.
78.
Greene, E. Reading Sappho: contemporary approaches. vol. Classics and contemporary thought (University of California Press, 1996).
79.
Henderson, J. & Aristophanes. Lysistrata. (Clarendon Press, 1987).
80.
Konstan, D. Greek comedy and ideology. (Oxford University Press, 1995).
81.
Morales, H. Aristophanes’ Lysistrata, the Liberian ‘sex strike’, and the Politics of Reception. Greece and Rome 60, 281–295 (2013).
82.
Rabinowitz, N. S. & Auanger, L. Among women: from the homosocial to the homoerotic in the ancient world. (University of Texas Press, 2002).
83.
Skinner. Woman and language in Archaic Greece, or, Why is Sappho a woman? in Feminist theory and the classics (1993).
84.
Taaffe, L. K. Aristophanes and women. (Routledge, 1993).
85.
Verstraete, Bc ; Provencal, V. Same-sex desire and love in Greco-Roman antiquity and in the classical tradition of the West - Preface. Journal Of Homosexuality 49, XXVII–XXIX (2005).
86.
‘Listening With’ Ovid: Intersexuality, Queer Theory, and the Myth of Hermaphroditus and Salmacis. Helios 36, 175–202 (2009).
87.
Boyd, Barbara Weiden. Virgil’s Camilla and the traditions of catalogue and ecphrasis : (Aeneid 7. 803-17). American Journal of Philology 113, 213–234.
88.
Cornelius, M. G. Of Muscles and Men: Essays on the Sword and Sandal Film. (McFarland & Co  Inc, 2010).
89.
Dinter, M. T. Anatomizing Civil War: studies in Lucan’s epic technique. (University of Michigan Press, 2012).
90.
Foxhall, L. & Salmon, J. When Men Were Men: Masculinity, Power and Identity in Classical Antiquity. (Taylor & Francis Ltd, 2011).
91.
Gorman, Vanessa B. Lucan’s Epic ‘Aristeia’ and the Hero of the ‘Bellum Civile’. The Classical Journal 96, 263–290 (2001).
92.
Keith, A. M. Engendering Rome: women in Latin epic. vol. Roman literature and its contexts (Cambridge University Press, 2000).
93.
Leigh, M. Lucan: spectacle and engagement. vol. Oxford classical monographs (Clarendon Press, 1997).
94.
Loraux, N. & Forster, A. Tragic ways of killing a woman. (Harvard University Press, 1987).
95.
Martindale, C. & Cambridge Collections Online (Online service). The Cambridge companion to Virgil. vol. The Cambridge companions to literature and classics (Cambridge University Press, 2006).
96.
Mitchell-Boyask, Robin N. The violence of virginity in the Aeneid. Arethusa 24, 219–238.
97.
McDonnell, M. A. Roman manliness: virtus and the Roman Republic. (Cambridge University Press, 2006).
98.
WHITTAKER, T. Sex and the Sack of the City. Greece and Rome 56, (2009).
99.
Anderson, W. S. Essays on Roman satire. vol. Princeton series of collected essays (Princeton University Press, 1982).
100.
Henderson, John G. W. Satire writes « woman ». Gendersong. Proceedings of the Cambridge Philological Society 50–80 (1989).
101.
Hooley, D. M. Roman satire. vol. Blackwell introductions to the classical world (Blackwell, 2007).
102.
Lloyd-Jones, H. & Quinton, M. Females of the species: Semonides on women. (Duckworth, 1975).
103.
Miller, Paul Allen. The bodily grotesque in Roman satire : images of sterility. Arethusa 31, 257–283 (1998).
104.
Osborne, Robin. The use of abuse : Semonides 7. Proceedings of the Cambridge Philological Society 47–64 (2001).
105.
Richlin, A. The garden of Priapus: sexuality and aggression in Roman humour. (Yale University Press, 1983).
106.
Richlin, Amy. Invective against women in Roman satire. Arethusa 17, 67–80 (1984).
107.
David, R. & Howard, M. Comedies of Transgression in Gangsta Rap and Ancient Classical Poetry. New Literary History 30, 897–928 (1999).
108.
Cohen, D. & Cambridge Books Online (Online service). Law, Sexuality, and Society: The Enforcement of Morals in Classical Athens. (Cambridge University Press, 1991).
109.
Gunderson, E. Declamation, paternity, and Roman identity: authority and the rhetorical self. (Cambridge University Press, 2003).
110.
Roisman, J. The rhetoric of manhood: masculinity in the Attic orators. vol. The Joan Palevsky imprint in classical literature (University of California Press, 2005).
111.
Winkler, J. J. The constraints of desire: the anthropology of sex and gender in ancient Greece. (Routledge, 1990).
112.
Carey, C. Rape and Adultery in Athenian Law. The Classical Quarterly 45, (1995).
113.
Deacy, S. & Pierce, K. F. Rape in antiquity. (Classical Press of Wales in association with Duckworth, 2002).
114.
Harris, E. M. Did the Athenians Regard Seduction as a Worse Crime than Rape? The Classical Quarterly 40, (1990).
115.
Keuls, E. C. The reign of the phallus: sexual politics in ancient Athens. (University of California Press, 1993).
116.
Richlin, A. Not before Homosexuality: The Materiality of the Cinaedus and the Roman Law against Love between Men. Journal of the History of Sexuality 3, 523–573 (1993).
117.
Beard, M. & Henderson, J. With This Body I Thee Worship: Sacred Prostitution in Antiquity. Gender  History 9, 480–503 (1997).
118.
Davidson, J. N. Courtesans & fishcakes: the consuming passions of classical Athens. (Harper Collins, 1997).
119.
Dillon, M. Girls and women in classical Greek religion. (Routledge, 2002).
120.
Evans, J. K. Prostitutes and Courtesans in the Ancient World ? Edited by C. A. Faraone and L. K. McClure. The Historian 69, 583–584 (2007).
121.
Foxhall, L. Studying gender in classical antiquity. vol. Key themes in ancient history (Cambridge University Press, 2013).
122.
Gilhuly, K. The feminine matrix of sex and gender in classical Athens. (Cambridge University Press, 2009).
123.
Hallett, J. P. & Skinner, M. B. Roman sexualities. (Princeton University Press, 1997).
124.
Hawley, R. & Levick, B. Women in antiquity: new assessments. (Routledge, 1995).
125.
Hubbard, T. A companion to Greek and Roman sexualities. vol. Blackwell companions to the ancient world (Wiley Blackwell, 2014).
126.
Kurke, L. Inventing the hetaira: Sex, politics, and discursive conflict in archaic Greece. Classical Antiquity 16, 106- (1997).
127.
Hamel, D. Trying Neaira: the true story of a courtesan’s scandalous life in ancient Greece. (Yale University Press, 2003).
128.
Parker, R. Polytheism and society at Athens. (Oxford University Press, 2005).