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Metamorphoses (Paperback): Ovid Metamorphoses (Paperback)
Ovid; Translated by A.D. Melville; Edited by E. J. Kenney
R294 R244 Discovery Miles 2 440 Save R50 (17%) Ships in 9 - 15 working days

The theme of the Metamorphoses is change and transformation, as illustrated in Graeco-Roman myth and legend. On this ostensibly unifying thread Ovid strings together a vast and kaleidoscopic sequence of brilliant narratives, in which the often paradoxical and always arbitrary fates of his human and divine characters reflect the never-ending flux and reflux of the universe itself. ABOUT THE SERIES: For over 100 years Oxford World's Classics has made available the widest range of literature from around the globe. Each affordable volume reflects Oxford's commitment to scholarship, providing the most accurate text plus a wealth of other valuable features, including expert introductions by leading authorities, helpful notes to clarify the text, up-to-date bibliographies for further study, and much more.

Lucretius: De Rerum NaturaBook III (Paperback, 2nd Revised edition): Lucretius Lucretius: De Rerum NaturaBook III (Paperback, 2nd Revised edition)
Lucretius; Edited by E. J. Kenney
R820 Discovery Miles 8 200 Ships in 9 - 15 working days

The third book of Lucretius' great poem on the workings of the universe is devoted entirely to expounding the implications of Epicurus' dictum that death does not matter, 'is nothing to us'. The soul is not immortal: it no more exists after the dissolution of the body than it had done before its birth. Only if this fact is accepted can men rid themselves of irrational fears and achieve the state of ataraxia, freedom from mental disturbance, on which the Epicurean definition of pleasure was based. To present this case Lucretius deploys the full range of poetic and rhetorical registers, soberly prohibitive, artfully decorative or passionately emotive as best suits his argument, reinforcing it with vivid and compelling imagery. This new edition has been completely revised, with a considerably enlarged Commentary and a new supplementary introduction taking account of the great amount of new scholarship of the last forty years.

Lucretius: De Rerum NaturaBook III (Hardcover, 2nd Revised edition): Lucretius Lucretius: De Rerum NaturaBook III (Hardcover, 2nd Revised edition)
Lucretius; Edited by E. J. Kenney
R2,298 Discovery Miles 22 980 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

The third book of Lucretius' great poem on the workings of the universe is devoted entirely to expounding the implications of Epicurus' dictum that death does not matter, 'is nothing to us'. The soul is not immortal: it no more exists after the dissolution of the body than it had done before its birth. Only if this fact is accepted can men rid themselves of irrational fears and achieve the state of ataraxia, freedom from mental disturbance, on which the Epicurean definition of pleasure was based. To present this case Lucretius deploys the full range of poetic and rhetorical registers, soberly prohibitive, artfully decorative or passionately emotive as best suits his argument, reinforcing it with vivid and compelling imagery. This new edition has been completely revised, with a considerably enlarged Commentary and a new supplementary introduction taking account of the great amount of new scholarship of the last forty years.

Ovid: Heroides XVI-XXI (Paperback, Revised): Ovid Ovid: Heroides XVI-XXI (Paperback, Revised)
Ovid; Edited by E. J. Kenney
R1,327 Discovery Miles 13 270 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

This is Ovid's wittily imagined version of the letters exchanged by three famous pairs of lovers. Heroides XVI-XXI constitute an artfully constructed triptych: Hero and Leander's tragedy of high romance and fleeting happiness framed by two ironic comedies, that of Paris and Helen distinctly black, that of Acontius and Cydippe ending the book on a note of tantalising ambiguity. This is the first edition of these poems with commentary in any language since 1898. It provides a substantially improved text, together with all the guidance needed by students for the understanding of Ovid's Latin and the appreciation of his poetic art. The Introduction offers the first adequate discussion ever published of the poet's treatment of his literary sources and models, and deals succinctly but decisively with the question of authorship.

Sorrows of an Exile (Tristia) (Hardcover): Ovid Sorrows of an Exile (Tristia) (Hardcover)
Ovid; Translated by A.D. Melville; Introduction by E. J. Kenney
R1,459 Discovery Miles 14 590 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

In AD 8 Ovid's brilliant career was abruptly blasted when the Emperor Augustus banished him, for reasons never satisfactorily explained, to Tomis (Constanta) on the Black Sea. The five books of Tristia (Sorrows) express his reaction to this savage and, as he clearly regarded it, unjust sentence. Their title belies them. Though their ostensible theme is the misery and loneliness of exile, their real message, if they are read with the care they deserve, is one of affirmation. Both directly and, as befitted the Roman Callimachus, allusively, Ovid repeatedly asserts, often with a wit and irony that borders on defiance, his conviction of the injustice of his sentence and of the pre-eminence of the eternal values of poetry over the ephemeral dictates of an earthly power. These elegies are throughout informed by Ovid's awareness of a continuing pride in his poetic identity and mission. In technical skill and inventiveness, they rank with the Art of Love or the Fasti. This is poetry as accomplished as anything he had written in happier days and demands no less critical respect. For this new translation of Ovid's poems, all of which are in elegiacs, Alan Melville has used the same system of rhyming stanzas that he evolved so successfully for Ovid's Love Poems. Here again he has reproduced the virtuosity, elegance, and wit of the original, and presents a collection of poems in which the reader will find continual interest and pleasure.

The Cambridge History of Classical Literature: Volume 2, Latin Literature, Part 5, The Later Principate (Paperback, 1st pbk.... The Cambridge History of Classical Literature: Volume 2, Latin Literature, Part 5, The Later Principate (Paperback, 1st pbk. ed)
E. J. Kenney, W.V. Clausen
R1,296 Discovery Miles 12 960 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

In the two centuries covered by this volume, from about AD 250 to 450, the Roman Empire suffered a period of chaos followed by drastic administrative and military reorganization. Simultaneously Christianity emerged as a new religious force, to be first recognized by Constantine and then eventually to become the official religion of the Roman state. The old pagan culture continued to provide the basis for education and the staple literary diet of the leisured classes; but it now had perforce to coexist and indeed to compete with a new, specifically Christian-oriented literature. These and associated developments are reflected in the Latin books of the period. Of the traditional forms and genres, some atrophied, some were transformed and invigorated; and yet others, such as autobiography in something like the modern sense, emerged in response to the pressures of the times. Professor Browning's masterly and comprehensive survey is mostly concerned with pagan literature, but takes into account Christian texts written in classical forms and directed at classically educated readers. The volume ends with a chapter on Apuleius by Professor Walsh, followed by a brief Epilogue from the same hand, sketching the part played by classical studies in the formation of the Latin literature of the Middle Ages.

The Cambridge History of Classical Literature: Volume 2, Latin Literature, Part 4, The Early Principate (Paperback, 1st pbk.... The Cambridge History of Classical Literature: Volume 2, Latin Literature, Part 4, The Early Principate (Paperback, 1st pbk. ed)
E. J. Kenney, W.V. Clausen
R1,751 Discovery Miles 17 510 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

'Perfection is finality; finality is death'. The poets and prose writers of the first and early second centuries AD were not deterred by the towering stature of their Augustan predecessors from attempting new and often brilliant variations on the now traditional themes and genres. The so-called 'Silver' Age of Latin literature has tended to be characterized in terms of dismissive or question- begging stereotypes - 'decadent', 'rhetorical', 'baroque', 'mannerist' - as a substitute for close critical argument. From the sympathetic but searching appraisals in this volume the best writers of the age - Lucan, Seneca, Statius, Juvenal, Tacitus - emerge as men having something important to say and not merely technicians preoccupied with the most extravagant or paradoxical way of saying it. Complementary to these central figures as giving the age its special character and atmosphere are the minor poets, the satirists, the scholars and rhetoricians, the lesser historians, epistolographers and technical writers, whose varied activity provides the background to the main developments. The whole offers a detailed portrait of the literary interests of an age that was of necessity becoming increasingly more conscious of the past and of the problems of coping with its cultural heritage.

The Cambridge History of Classical Literature: Volume 2, Latin Literature, Part 3, The Age of Augustus (Paperback, 1st pbk.... The Cambridge History of Classical Literature: Volume 2, Latin Literature, Part 3, The Age of Augustus (Paperback, 1st pbk. ed)
E. J. Kenney, W.V. Clausen
R1,777 Discovery Miles 17 770 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

The sixty years between 43 BC, when Cicero was assassinated, and AD 17, when Ovid died in exile and disgrace, saw an unexampled explosion of literary creativity in Rome. Fresh ground was broken in almost every existing genre, and a new kind of specifically Roman poetry, the personal love-elegy, was born, flourished, and succumbed to its own success. Latin literature now became, in the familiar modern sense of the word, classical: a balanced fusion of what was best and most stimulating in earlier Greek and Roman writing, charged with new and original life by the individual genius of, most particularly, Virgil, Horace and Ovid. Augustan literature, conventionally viewed as the expression in writing of the age itself - political and social stability reflected in artistic equilibrium - turns out on a close and critical reading to have been subject to the same stresses and strains as the society in and for which it was produced. In appraising the monumental literary achievements of the age the underlying tensions and contradictions are not ignored. The critical discussions in this volume do full justice to the complexity and subtlety of the literature itself.

The Cambridge History of Classical Literature: Volume 2, Latin Literature, Part 2, The Late Republic (Paperback, New Ed): E. J.... The Cambridge History of Classical Literature: Volume 2, Latin Literature, Part 2, The Late Republic (Paperback, New Ed)
E. J. Kenney, W.V. Clausen
R1,576 Discovery Miles 15 760 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

This volume covers a relatively short span of time, rather less than the first three-quarters of the first century BC; but it was an age of profoundly important developments, with enduring consequences for the subsequent history of Latin literature. Original and innovative in widely differing ways as was the work of Lucretius, Sallust and Caesar in particular, the scene is dominated, historically, by two figures: Cicero and Catullus. Cicero was a politician and a man of affairs as well as a man of latters, whose vast literary output reflects a range of intellectual interests unparalleled among surviving Roman writers; creator of a prose style the Quintilian regarded as synonymous with eloquence itself; and better known to us, from his letters, as a human being, than any other figure from classical antiquity. Catullus was a poet, single-mindedly devoted to fostering the tradition of learned Alexandrian poetry at Rome; the author of one slender volume of verse that has attracted more critical attention in proportion to its size than any other ancient poetry-book; and the lover of Lesbia. In these chapters it is shown how these, and other, Roman writers of genius continued the process of transforming their traditional Greek models into new and vigorous Latin forms, with lasting effects for oratory, historiography, and the higher genres of poetry.

The Cambridge History of Classical Literature: Volume 2, Latin Literature, Part 1, The Early Republic (Paperback, New Ed): E.... The Cambridge History of Classical Literature: Volume 2, Latin Literature, Part 1, The Early Republic (Paperback, New Ed)
E. J. Kenney, W.V. Clausen
R1,495 Discovery Miles 14 950 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

A collaborative critical history of Latin literature from its beginnings until the breakup of the Roman Empire in the fifth century A.D. The paperback edition has been divided into five chronological volumes. Each includes the relevant sections of the appendix of authors and works, metrical appendix and its own bibliography and index.

Ovid Amores, Medicamina Faciei Femineae, Ars Amatoria, Remedia Amoris (Hardcover, 2nd Revised edition): E. J. Kenney Ovid Amores, Medicamina Faciei Femineae, Ars Amatoria, Remedia Amoris (Hardcover, 2nd Revised edition)
E. J. Kenney
R739 Discovery Miles 7 390 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

This is a thoroughly revised new edition of the standard text of these poems, reflecting the progress of Ovidian scholarship during the last thirty years and the further thoughts of the editor. Presentation has been improved, with students particularly in mind, to make the book more accessible and `reader-friendly'.

Apuleius: Cupid and Psyche (Paperback): Apuleius Apuleius: Cupid and Psyche (Paperback)
Apuleius; Edited by E. J. Kenney
R1,160 Discovery Miles 11 600 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

The story of Cupid and Psyche is part of The Golden Ass or Metamorphoses, a Latin novel by Apuleius (second century A.D.). It is both a charming fairytale and an allegory of the search of the Soul for happiness and fulfillment. This edition, the first with a full commentary in English to appear for eighty years, comprises a Latin text with facing translation, making the edition more accessible to students of comparative literature. An introduction and a commentary provide help with interpretation and up-to-date guidance to scholarship in the field.

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