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1. Introduction: C. W. Marshall, University of British Columbia, Canada, and Tom Hawkins, Ohio State University, USA
2. Selectivity and survival: Aristophanes and Menander: Alan Sommerstein, University of Nottingham, UK
3. Understanding Old Comedy in the Roman Empire: Ralph M. Rosen, University of Pennsylvania, USA
4. Comic papyri: Susan A. Stephens, Stanford University, USA
5. Comedies and comic actors in the Greek East: an epigraphical perspective: Fritz Graf, Ohio State University, USA
6. Actors' repertory and 'new' comedies under the Roman Empire: Sebastiana Nervegna, University of Sydney, Australia
7. Natio comoeda est: Juvenal, Menander, and the Revival of Greek New Comedy at Rome: Mathias Hanses, Columbia University, USA
8. Parrhesia and Pudenda: Genital Pathology and Satiric Speech, from Old Comedy to Juvenal: Julia Nelson Hawkins, Ohio State University, USA
9. Lucian and Old Comedy: Ian Storey, Trent University, Canada
10. Comic Eunuchism and the Adultery Plot in the Biographical Tradition of the Eunuch Sophist Favorinus: Ryan Samuels, Harvard University, USA
11. Comedy Repurposed: Evidence for Comic Performances in the Second Sophistic and Aristides' On the Banning of Comedy: Anna Peterson, Loyola University, USA
12. Dio Chrysostom and the Naked Parabasis: Tom Hawkins, Ohio State University, USA
13. New Comic Stock Characters in Alciphron's Letters: Melissa Funke, University of British Columbia, Canada
14. Aelian and Comedy: C. W. Marshall, University of British Columbia, Canada
15. Two Clouded Marriages: Aristainetos' Allusions to Aristophanes' Clouds in Letters 2.3 and 2.12: Emilia A. Barbiero, University of Toronto, Canada
Bibliography
Index.

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