Latin Literature: A HistoryJHU Press, 19. nov. 1999 - 827 sider The authoriatative history of Latin literature. This authoritative history of Latin literature offers a comprehensive survey of the thousand-year period from the origins of Latin as a written language to the early Middle Ages. At once a reference work, a bibliographic guide, a literary study, and a reader's handbook, Latin Literature: A History is the first work of its kind to appear in English in nearly four decades. From the first examples of written Latin through Gregory of Tours in the sixth century and the Venerable Bede in the seventh, Latin Literature offers a wide-ranging panorama of all major Latin authors. Including names, dates, edition citations, and detailed summaries, the work combines the virtues of an encyclopedia with the critical intelligence readers have come to expect from Italy's leading Latinist, Gian Biagio Conte. |
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Resultater 1-5 af 83
... Structures of the Plot and the Reception of Plautine Drama 60 5. Literary Success 62 Bibliography 63 Caecilius ... Structure and Composition 78 3. Ennius and the Muse : His Poetics 80 4. Experimentation : Language , Style , Meter 5 ...
... 270 The Augustan Background 272 Structure and Composition 273 The Story of Aristaeus and Orpheus 275 4. From the Georgics to the Aeneid 276 5. The Aeneid 276 Homer and Augustus ( I ) 276 The Legend of. Detailed Contents xiii.
... Works 340 I. A Modern Poetry 341 2. The Amores 343 3. The Didactic Love Poetry 344 4. The Heroides 346 5. The Metamorphoses 350 PART FOUR Composition and Structure 351 Metamorphosis and the World xiv Detailed Contents.
A History Gian Biagio Conte Don P. Fowler. PART FOUR Composition and Structure 351 Metamorphosis and the World of Myth 353 Poetry as Spectacle 354 6. The Fasti 355 7. The Works of Exile 357 8. Literary Success Bibliograpy 364 Livy 367 ...
Denne sides indhold er desværre begrænset..
Indhold
Literary History and Historiography I | 1 |
The Early and Middle Republics | 11 |
PART | 21 |
The Early Roman Theater | 29 |
Livius Andronicus | 39 |
Plautus | 49 |
Caecilius Statius | 65 |
Literature and Culture in the Period of the Conquests | 71 |
From Its Beginnings to the Early Empire | 394 |
The Literature of the Early Empire | 401 |
Seneca | 408 |
The Poetic Genres in the JulioClaudian Period | 426 |
Lucan | 440 |
Petronius | 453 |
Persius and Juvenal | 467 |
Literary Success | 491 |
Cato | 85 |
Terence | 92 |
Lucretius | 155 |
Cicero | 175 |
The Rhetorical Works | 186 |
Language and Style | 199 |
Bibliography | 207 |
Caesar | 225 |
Sallust | 234 |
The Histories and the Crisis of the Republic | 240 |
Characteristics of a Period | 249 |
Virgil | 262 |
Horace | 292 |
The Satires | 298 |
Cultural Project and Philosophical Withdrawal | 312 |
Bibliography | 319 |
Ovid | 340 |
Livy | 367 |
Literary Success | 374 |
Scholarship and Technical Disciplines | 386 |
Pliny the Elder and Specialist Knowledge | 497 |
Martial and the Epigram | 505 |
Quintilian | 512 |
The Age of the Adoptive Emperors | 519 |
Pliny the Younger | 525 |
Suetonius and the Minor Historians | 546 |
Apuleius | 553 |
Philology Rhetoric and Literary Criticism Law | 571 |
The Poetae Novelli | 588 |
From Constantine to the Sack of Rome 306410 | 621 |
The Editing of the Classics | 632 |
The Histories by Subject | 652 |
Bibliography | 671 |
The Apogee of Christian Culture | 678 |
Augustine and the Confessions | 688 |
Other Fathers of the Church | 694 |
Appendixes | 729 |
819 | |