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Publications

  • G. Wrightson, ed., International Ancient Warfare Conference Proceedings vol. 2. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Press.
  • G. Wrightson, The Third Macedonian War and the failure of Macedonian combined arms. Barnsley: Pen and Sword.
  • G. Wrightson, “The Macedonian heavy infantry of Philip II and Alexander the Great: professionals in a world of amateurs.” In Warfare in the Ancient Mediterranean World, edited by Edward Anson. Leiden: Brill.
  • Sharon Smith, “Elizabeth Gunning, The Farmer’s Boy”; “Elizabeth Gunning, The War-Office”; and “Margaret Minifie or Susannah Gunning, The Union.” The Cambridge Guide to the Eighteenth-Century Novel, 1660-1820, edited by April London. Cambridge University Press.
  • G. Wrightson, ed. Terrorism through the Ages. Leiden: Brill.
  • G. Wrightson, The Battles of Antiochus the Great: the failure of combined arms at Magnesia. Barnsley: Pen and Sword.
  • G. Wrightson, Review: Alexander the Great and Propaganda edited by John Walsh and Elizabeth Baynham. London and New York: Routledge, 2021. 205 pages. Ancient History Bulletin
  • Sharon Smith, "The Pleasures of Satire in the Fables of Anne Finch." In British Women Satirists in the Long Eighteenth Century, 98-112. Edited by Amanda Hiner and Elizabeth Tasker-Davis. Cambridge University Press.
  • George Tsakiridis, “Meditate, Mediation,” In the Encyclopedia of the Bible and its Reception, DeGruyter.
  • G. Wrightson, “Aeneas Tacticus, Philon of Byzantium, Onasander and the Good Siege: A Case-Study of Demetrius at Rhodes.” In Greek and Roman Military Manuals: Genre and History Edited by James T. Chlup and Conor Whately, 99-120. London and New York: Routledge.
  • A. James Murphy, "Children in Mark: A Deconstructive Approach." In Listening to and Learning from Children in the Biblical World, 196-216. Eds. Kristine Henriksen Garroway and John W. Martens. Leiden: Brill.
  • G. Wrightson, “Chariots and combined arms - Impact vehicle.” Ancient Warfare XIII.4: 44-47.
  • M. Nagy, “The Wisdom of Friendship in Háamál.” In Literary Speech Acts of the Medieval North, 81-95. Eds. Eric Shane Bryan and Alexander Vaughan Ames. Tempe: Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies.
  • Sharon Smith, and Jason McEntee, “Of Partners and Posses: Masculine Camaraderie in the Modern Western/Action Film.” The Twenty-First-Century Western: New Riders of the Cinematic Stage, 171-184. Edited by Douglas Brode and Shea T. Brode. Lexington.
  • G. Wrightson, Combined Arms warfare in Ancient Greece: from Homer to Alexander the Great and his Successors. London and New York: Routledge.
  • A. James Murphy, "Children and the Sayings Source Q - What the Double Tradition Reveals about Q's Attitude toward Children, Part B: Q 11:19-20; 12:53; 14:26; and 17:1-2," Biblical Interpretation 27, no. 1.
  • G. Wrightson, “Combined Arms and Integrated Warfare - All together now.” Ancient Warfare XIII.1: 18-21.
  • G. Wrightson, “Combined arms in ancient Greece - Beginnings of integrated warfare.” Ancient Warfare XIII.2: 12-15.
  • G. Wrightson, “Combined arms in Macedonia - The peak of integrated warfare.” Ancient Warfare XIII.3: 16-19.
  • A. James Murphy, "The 'Lost Boys' (and Girls) of Q's 'Neverland.'" In T&T Clark Handbook to Children and Childhood in the Biblical World, 291-310. Eds. Sharon Betsworth and Julie Faith Parker. London, New York, Oxford, New Delhi, Sydney: Bloomsbury/T&T Clark.
  • A. James Murphy, Review of For Theirs is the Kingdom: Inclusion and Participation of Children in the Gospel According to Luke by Amy Lindeman Allen. Lexington/Fortress Press, 2019, in Review of Biblical Literature.
  • George Tsakiridis, “Addressing Guilt within the Religious Community: Cyprian of Carthage, Reconciliation, and the Science of Emotion,” Theology and Science. Volume 15, No.1, pp. 92-106
  • George Tsakiridis, “Addressing Guilt within the Religious Community: Cyprian of Carthage, Reconciliation, and the Science of Emotion,” Theology and Science. Volume 15, No.1, pp. 92-106
  • G. Wrightson, "La batalla de Gaugamela y el empleo de 'armas combinadas' (The battle of Gaugamela and Integrated Warfare).” Desperta Ferro Historia antigua y medieval 47 (May): 14-22.
  • A. James Murphy, "Contrasting Portrayals of Children in 1 Samuel." Point of View Publishing. 
  • A. James Murphy, "Focusing on the Child Next to Jesus in Mark 9:33-37." Point of View Publishing. 
  • M. Nagy. “Ásmundar saga kappabana: Some Inconsistencies Explored.” ANQ: A Quarterly Journal of Short Articles, Notes, and Reviews 31.1 (2018): 1-8.
  • George Tsakiridis, “Habit as a Spiritual Discipline in Early Christianity,” pp. 77-88. Habits in Mind: Ethics, Religion, and the Science of Virtue. Brill.
  • G. Wrightson, Becoming Civilized? A History of Western Civilization to 1600. First edition. Minneapolis: Cognella
  • Sharon Smith, “‘I Cannot Harm Thee Now’: The Ethic of Satire in Anna Barbauld’s Mock-Heroic Poetry.” European Romantic Review 26, no. 5: 551-573.
  • G. Wrightson, “‘Surprise, surprise:’ The tactical response of Alexander to guerilla warfare and fighting in difficult terrain.” The Ancient World 46, No. 2: 162-179.
  • T. Howe, E. Garvin, and G. Wrightson, eds., Greece, Macedon and Persia: Studies in the Social, Political and Military Consequences of Conquest Societies in honour of Waldemar Heckel. Oxford: Oxbow.
  • Sharon Smith, “Defoe’s The Complete English Tradesman and the Prostitute Narrative: Minding the Shop in Mrs. Elizabeth Wisebourn, Sally Salisbury, and Roxana.” Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies 15, no. 2: 27-57.
  • G. Wrightson, “Macedonian armies and the perfection of Combined Arms.” In Greece, Macedon and Persia: Studies in the Social, Political and Military Consequences of Conquest Societies in honour of Waldemar Heckel, edited by T. Howe, E. Garvin, & G. Wrightson, 59-68. Oxford: Oxbow.
  • W. Heckel, S. Mueller, and G. Wrightson, eds., The Many Faces of War in the Ancient World. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Press.
  • Sharon Smith, Michael Keller, Jason McEntee, and Steven Wingate, “Reading Spike Jonze’s Her: A Discursion.” Reading Popular Culture: An Anthology for Writers, 3rd ed., edited by Michael Keller, Kendall Hunt.
  • G. Lee, H. Whittaker, & G. Wrightson eds. Ancient Warfare: Introducing Current Research (International Ancient Warfare Conference vol. 1). Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Press.
  • G. Wrightson, “To use or not to use: The practical and historical reliability of Asclepiodotus’ ‘philosophical’ tactical manual.” In Ancient Warfare: Introducing Current Research (IAWC vol. 1) edited by G. Lee, H. Whittaker, & G. Wrightson, 65-93. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Press.
  • A. James Murphy, "Undesired Offspring and Child Endangerment in Jewish Antiquity," Journal of Childhood and Religion 5.
  • George Tsakiridis, “Guilt and the Science of Emotion: How Does Prayer Fit?” Zygon: Journal of Religion and Science. Volume 48, No.4, pp. 890-907.
  • A. James Murphy, Kids and Kingdom: the Precarious Presence of Children in the Synoptic Gospels. Eugene, OR: Pickwick Publications.
  • Sharon Smith, “Juba’s ‘Black Face’/Lady Delacour’s ‘Mask’: Plotting Domesticity in Maria Edgeworth’s Belinda.” The Eighteenth Century: Theory and Interpretation 54, no. 1: 71-90.
  • A. James Murphy, "Children in Deuteronomy: the Partisan Nature of Divine Justice," Biblical Interpretation 20, no. 1: 1-15.
  • M. Nagy, The Alliterative Tradition in Early Middle English Poetry: Political Complaint and Social Analysis in the “Song of the Husbandman” and Beyond. Lewiston: Edwin Mellen Press.
  • George Tsakiridis, Evagrius Ponticus and Cognitive Science: A Look at Moral Evil and the Thoughts. Eugene, OR: Pickwick.
  • G. Wrightson, “The nature of command in the Macedonian sarissa phalanx.” AHB 24: 71-92.
  • G. Wrightson, “The Naval Battles of 323/2 BCE.” In The Age of the Successors (323-276 BC) (Studia Hellenistica), edited by H. Hauben & A. Meeus, 517-535. Leuven: Peeters.
  • W. Heckel, G. Wrightson and C. Willekes. “Scythed Chariots at Gaugamela.” In Philip II and Alexander the Great: Father and Son, Lives and Afterlives, edited by E. Carney & D. Ogden, 103-113. Oxford: OUP.
  • Review of The Child in the Bible, eds. Marcia J. Bunge, et al. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2008, in the Journal of Childhood and Religion. 
  • Sharon Smith. Review of Scott Paul Gordon’s The Practice of Quixotism: Postmodern Theory and Eighteenth-Century Women’s Writing, in Eighteenth-Century Women: Studies in Their Lives, Work, and Culture, vol. 5. AMS Press.
  • Sharon Smith, “The Good Effects of a Whimsical Study: Romance and Women’s Learning in Charlotte Lennox’s The Female Quixote.” Eighteenth-Century Fiction 18, no. 2: 203-228.
  • M. Nagy, “Heroic Humor in The Battle of Maldon.” Proceedings of the Conference on Earlier British Literature 14: 116-128.
  • M. Nagy, "St. Æþelberht of East Anglia in the South English Legendary." Chaucer Review 37.2: 159-172.
  •  M. Nagy, "A Reassessment of Unferð's Fratricide in Beowulf." Proceedings of the Medieval Association of the Midwest 3 (Spring):15-30.