Front cover image for Tibullus : a commentary

Tibullus : a commentary

Michael C. J. Putnam (Author)
The work of the Latin elegiac poet Tibullus (c. 55-19 b.c.) is characterized by an artful, witty "simplicity," and it relies on repetition, ambiguity, irony, and paradox for its effect. His poetry appealed to his countrymen in his own time, as it still does to students today, and this textbook is designed to explain and enhance that appeal. The commentary presented here is limited to the sixteen poems which comprise the first two books of the corpus Tibullianum, that is, to poems authentically by Tibullus. The notes focus on the needs of students approaching Latin elegy for the first time, but they will also prove useful to the more experienced student of Latin or to scholars in other languages. The editor has tried to balance matters of fact with occasional fresh interpretations. One introduction records what is known of the poet life and discusses the rise of Latin elegy. The meter of the poems is explained, and Tibullus style is examined
Print Book, English, 1973
University of Oklahoma Press, in co-operation with the American Philological Association, Norman, 1973
Criticism, interpretation, etc
xi, 210 pages ; 19 cm.
9780806110615, 9780806115603, 0806110619, 0806115602
571986
"Commentary is limited to the sixteen poems which comprise the first two books of the Corpus Tibullianum"; with the Latin text of books 1-2
The Cushing Library/Women & Gender Studies copy was acquired as part of The Don Kelly Research Collection of Gay Literature and Culture