"Mollis and Its Stylistic Resonance in Vergil," Vergilius 65 (2019): 33-41
All of Cliff Weber's academic career was spent at Kenyon College. Until his retirement in 2003, Weber was the department's Latinist and accordingly taught most of the Latin courses offered by the department. Occasionally he taught intermediate Greek (Homer, Plato) and for lay audiences he offered courses in linguistics and in the history and literature of the Augustan age, where his interests as a scholar lie.
Most of Weber's publications have to do with Roman poets of the 1st century B.C., among whom Virgil has perennially been a primary interest. Believing that professors of the liberal arts need to demonstrate by example the worth of the liberal arts, Weber was also engaged as an amateur in several other curricular realms, classical music being foremost among these. He currently resides in Tokyo.
— Doctor of Philosophy from Univ. of California Berkeley
— Bachelor of Arts from Harvard University
"Mollis and Its Stylistic Resonance in Vergil," Vergilius 65 (2019): 33-41
"Present at the Founding," Classical World 111 (2017-18): 120-23.
"Propertius as Cantor Euphorionis in 2.1.12," Classical Philology 111 (2016): 177-84.
"Bureaucratese in Vergil, Aeneid 8.721," Vergilius 60 (2014): 117-25.
"Discrepancy by Design in Vergil, Aeneid 6.562-600," Emerita 80 (2012): 171-78.
"Amor the Great in Propertius 1.19.12," Classical Philology 103 (2008): 184-88.
"The Dionysus in Aeneas," Classical Philology 97 (2002): 322-43; reprinted in Robert J. Forman, ed., Critical Insights: The Aeneid (Pasadena, CA: Salem Press, 2011), pp. 144-76.