Browsing Harvard Central Administration and University Research Centers by Title
Now showing items 883-902 of 1016
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A Tale of Two Bills: The Research Works Act and Federal Research Public Access Act
(Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition, 2012)Peter Suber, A tale of two bills: the Research Works Act and Federal Research Public Access Act, SPARC Open Access Newsletter, March 2, 2012. -
The taxpayer argument for open access
(Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition, 2003) -
Tectonic movements toward OA in the UK and Europe
(Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition, 2012) -
Ten challenges for open-access journals
(Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition, 2009) -
Ten lessons from the funding agency open access policies
(Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition, 2006) -
Text and reperformance: do you really need a text for your reperformance?
(Center for Hellenic Studies, 2021-06-24) -
The theo-eroticism of mythmaking about Aphrodite’s love for boys like Adonis
(Harvard University, Center for Hellenic Studies, 2021-01-09)In a previous study, I used the term theo-eroticism as a way of describing a kind of sexuality that gets transformed into something sublime by way of blending eroticism with divinity. In line with terminology used by ... -
Theories of Intellectual Property
(Cambridge University Press, 2001) -
Things noted during eight days of travel-study in Greece, 2016.06.10-18
(Harvard University, Center for Hellenic Studies, 2016-06-24) -
Things noted during five days of travel-study in Greece, 2016.03.13-18
(Harvard University, Center for Hellenic Studies, 2016-03-24)During the five full days of contact time for myself and the participants of the 2016 Harvard Spring Break travel-study program (who are all listed at the conclusion of my posting for 2016.03.16), I tried each day to focus ... -
Thinking about prestige, quality, and open access
(Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition, 2008) -
Thinking comparatively about Greek mythology I, Hēraklēs as athlete
(Harvard University, Center for Hellenic Studies, 2019-07-26)There is no single way to think comparatively about mythology—or about anything else. And Greek mythology is surely no exception. In my own work on mythology in general and on Greek mythology in particular, I have found ... -
Thinking comparatively about Greek mythology II, Hēraklēs as an ‘Indo- European’ hero
(Harvard University, Center for Hellenic Studies, 2019-08-02)In the posting for 2019.07.26, I argued that the role of the Greek hero Hēraklēs as a boxer was cognate with the role of the Scandinavian hero Starkaðr as, likewise, a boxer. In using the term “cognate,” I was saying, in ... -
Thinking comparatively about Greek mythology III, Hēraklēs compared to a hero of the Mahābhārata
(2019-08-08)So far, I have been comparing Greek myths about the hero Hēraklēs with Old Norse myths about the hero Starkaðr, concentrating on details that these myths have in common. Now I add to the comparison some further details to ... -
Thinking comparatively about Greek mythology IV, Reconstructing Hēraklēs backward in time
(2019-08-15)As I have argued in the posting for 2019.07.26, “Thinking comparatively about Greek mythology I” (hereafter TC I), the myths about the Greek hero Hēraklēs and the Scandinavian hero Starkaðr are cognate, verbalized in cognate ... -
Thinking comparatively about Greek mythology IX, Further rough patches for Hēraklēs
(2019-09-20)Picking up from where I left off in my essay TC VIII in Classical Inquiries 2019.09.13, I continue here in TC IX with further observations about difficulties or “rough patches” to be encountered in any attempt to reconstruct ... -
Thinking comparatively about Greek mythology V, Reconstructing Hēraklēs forward in time
(Harvard University, Center for Hellenic Studies, 2019-08-22)Previously, in “Thinking comparatively about Greek mythology IV,” hereafter abbreviated as TC IV, I was reconstructing the mythological persona of the Greek hero Hēraklēs by tracing him backward in time, back to the earliest ... -
Thinking comparatively about Greek mythology VI, A Mycenaean phase in the reception of myths about Hēraklēs
(Harvard University, Center for Hellenic Studies, 2019-08-30)I have already commented on a set of myths known as the twelve Labors of Hēraklēs, and also on a multitude of further myths that I describe as the sub-Labors of the hero. In my posting for 2019.08.15, abbreviated here ... -
Thinking comparatively about Greek mythology VII, Greek mythological models for prototyping Hēraklēs
(Harvard University, Center for Hellenic Studies, 2019-09-06)While analyzing the myths about the Labors and sub-Labors of Hēraklēs in essays TC I–VI, I have up to now focused on those heroic feats where our Strong Man has clearly been acting alone. Here in TC VII, I will analyze two ...