List of bibliographies of works on Catullus

[3] In the early 1970s, Kenneth Quinn wrote, "Scarcely an issue appears of any of the major classical periodicals without at least one article on Catullus; new translations come out almost yearly".

[6] The main bibliographic reference for classical studies is L'Année philologique,[7] a journal founded by Jules Marouzeau;[8] each volume contains a list of works published on Catullus that year.

[13] R. G. C. Levens's chapter "Catullus" in Fifty Years of Classical Scholarship and Jean Granarolo's article "Où en sont nos connaissances sur Catulle?"

Tertiary sources such as Mauriz Schuster [de]'s entry in Paulys Realencyclopädie der classischen Altertumswissenschaft also have been cited for their review of past scholarship.

Items are added to this list only if other sources have specifically cited them within broader metabibliographic discussion of bibliographies and research surveys of Catullus.

A library bookshelf containing several books on Catullus. Titles include: "Catullus: An Interpretation", "Style and Tradition in Catullus", and "The Lyric Genius of Catullus".
Bibliographies are helpful tools to identify books about Catullus.
Catullus is depicted as a young man with his curly hair falling around his neck and with an incipient beard; he holds a book.
William Blake 's frontispiece to a 1795 edition of Catullus's poetry, depicting the poet
Black and white photograph of Menéndez y Palayo writing at a desk
Marcelino Menéndez y Pelayo 's Bibliografía hispano–latina clásica was later published as part of the series Edición nacional de las obras completas de Menéndez Pelayo .
Black and white portrait photograph of Kroll
C. Valerius Catullus , edited by Wilhelm Kroll (pictured) , includes a bibliography by J. Kroymann in later editions.
Two pages from Achilles Statius's 1566 edition of Catullus, showing the first 46 lines of Catullus 68 in Latin under the title "Ad mallium"
Wolfgang Hering [ de ] 's paper reviews research on Catullus 68 , two pages of which are seen here in Achilles Statius 's 1566 edition of Catullus's poetry.
Heine stands in front of a bookshelf.
Rolf Heine [ de ] edited a collection of papers about Catullus; his introduction to the book explores various trends in Catullan research.
Painting of a young woman playing with a pet sparrow
Juan J. Valverde Abril's bibliography focuses on Lesbia, depicted here as the puella in Catullus 2 , and her likely real-world correspondent, Clodia.
Bust of a woman; she has long braided hair
The online resource Diotíma is named after Diotima of Mantinea . [ 151 ]