Niedawno ukazała się praca zbiorowa Xenophon: Greece, Persia and Beyond pod redakcją Bogdana Burligi (Monograph Series Akanthina no. 5, Gdańsk 2011).
Table of Contents:
- Krzysztof Ulanowski, The Rational and Magical-Religious Semiotics of War. «Anabasis» and the Military Campaigns of the Assyrian Kings in the Ist Millenium B.C.
- Tytus Mikołajczak, Before Xenophon: Notes on Early Greek Accounts on the Core Inhabitants of the Persian Empire
- Sławomir Jędraszek, The Egyptian Phalanx in the «Cyropaedia»
- Nicolas V. Sekunda, Achaemenid and Lakedaimonian Infantry Organization in Xenophon’s «Cyropaedia»
- Tomasz Mojsik, The Muses and Sacrifices before Battle
- Jacek Rzepka, Xenophon and a Small «Polis». Phleoius in the «Hellenica»
- Małgorzata Mika, Xenophon as the First Theoretician of the Social Capital Concept
- Anna Ryś, Xenophon’s Socrates and the Oracles
- Anna Marchewka, Socratic Laughter in the Xenophon’s «Cyropaedia»
- Bogdan Burliga, ἀεὶ μέντοι <τῷ> ἰσχυροτέρῳ τὸ ἀσθενέστερον θηρᾶν: The Meaning of the ‘Hunting’ Comparison in Xenophon’s Equit. mag. 4.17
- Grzegorz Kotłowski, «Ways and Means» – the Last Work of Xenophon
- Bogdan Burliga, Did Xenophon Read Herodotus? The Tyrant’s Bloody End, «Or» the ‘Herodotean’ Character of Xenophon’s Hell. 6.4.35-37
- Jacek Pokrzywnicki, Xenophon in the XVIIIth Century School Curriculum: Strategies of Teaching Greek in the Academic Gymnasium in Gdańsk
- Karol Polejowski, Edouard Delebecque’s Research on Xenophon