|
Showing 1 - 8 of
8 matches in All Departments
This volume comprises a series of studies focusing on the Latin
poetry of the first and second centuries BCE, its relationship to
earlier models both Greek and Latin, and its reception by later
writers. A point of particular focus is the influence of Greek
poetry, including not only Hellenistic writers like Callimachus,
Theocritus, and Lycophron, but also archaic poets like Pindar and
Bacchylides. The volume also includes studies of style, as well as
treatments of the influence of Latin poetry on writers like Marvell
and Dylan. Contributers include J. N. Adams, Barbara Weiden Boyd,
Brian Breed, Sergio Casali, Julia Hejduk, Peter Knox, Leah
Kronenburg, Charles Martindale, Charles McNelis, James O'Hara,
Thomas Palaima, Hayden Pelliccia, David Petrain, David Ross, and
Alexander Sens.
The volumes published in the series Beitrage zur Altertumskunde
comprise monographs, collective volumes, editions, translations and
commentaries on various topics from the fields of Greek and Latin
Philology, Ancient History, Archeology, Ancient Philosophy as well
as Classical Reception Studies. The series thus offers
indispensable research tools for a wide range of disciplines
related to Ancient Studies.
No other ancient poet has had such a hold on the imagination of
readers as Ovid. Through the centuries, artists, writers, and poets
have found in his work inspiration for new creative endeavors. This
anthology of twenty of the most influential papers published in the
last thirty years represents the broad range of critical and
scholarly approaches to Ovid's work. The entire range of his
poetry, from the Amores to the Epistles from the Black Sea, is
discussed by some of the leading scholars of Latin poetry,
employing, critical methods ranging from philology to contemporary
literary theory. In an introductory essay, Peter Knox surveys
Ovidian scholarship over this period and locates the assembled
papers within recent critical trends. Taken together, the articles
in this collection offer the interested reader, whether experienced
scholar or novice, an entree into the current critical discourse on
Ovid, who is at once one of the most accessible authors of
classical antiquity and one of the least understood.
Angelo Poliziano (1454-1494) was one of the great scholar-poets of
the Renaissance and a leading figure in Florence during the Age of
the Medici. His poetry, composed in a variety of meters, includes
epigrams, elegies, and verse epistles, as well as translations of
Hellenistic Greek poets. Among the first Latin poets of the
Renaissance to be inspired by Homer and the poems of Greek
Anthology, Poliziano's verse also reflects his deep study of
Catullus, Martial, and Statius. It ranges from love songs to
funeral odes, from prayers to hymns, from invectives directed
against his rivals to panegyrics of his teachers, artists, fellow
humanists, and his great patron, Lorenzo de' Medici, "il
Magnifico." The present volume includes all of Poliziano's Greek
and Latin poetry (with the exception of the Silvae, published in
2004 as ITRL 14), all translated into English for the first time.
Though the wonders of ancient Roman culture continue to attract
interest across the disciplines, it is difficult to find a lively,
accessible collection of the full range of the era's literature in
English. The Oxford Anthology of Literature in the Roman World
provides a general introduction to the literature of the Roman
empire at its zenith, between the second century BC and the second
century AD. Two features of this extraordinarily fertile period in
literary achievement as evidenced by this anthology are immediately
and repeatedly clear: how similar the Romans' view of the world was
to our own and, perhaps even more obviously, how different it was.
Most of the authors included in the anthology wrote in Latin, but
as the anthology moves forward in time, relevant Greek texts that
reflect the cultural diversity of Roman literary life are also
included, something no other such anthology has done in the past.
Roman literature was wonderfully creative and diverse, and the
texts in this volume were chosen from a broad range of genres:
drama, epic, philosophy, satire, lyric poetry, love poetry. By its
very nature an anthology can abbreviate and thus obscure the most
attractive features of even a masterpiece, so the two editors have
not only selected texts that capture the essence of the respective
authors, but also have included accompanying introductions and
afterwords that will guide the reader in pursuing further reading.
The presentations of the selections are enlivened with
illustrations that locate the works within the contexts of the
world in which they were written and enjoyed. The student and
general reader will come away from this learned yet entertaining
anthology with a fuller appreciation of the place occupied by
literature in the Roman world.
Ovid's Heroides, a collection of twenty-one epistles in elegiac
verse, consists of two groups, the first comprising fourteen poems
addressed by heroines of mythology to their absent lovers or
husbands. In this edition, Professor Knox offers a commentary on
seven of these epistles, addressing problems of language and style,
and focusing on the relationship of the Heroides to the classic
works of Greek and Roman literature on which Ovid bases his
representation of these women. In addition, he has included a
commentary on the Epistula Sapphus, a separate poem of doubtful
authorship which was composed in the manner of Ovid and is believed
by many to be by him. The Introduction provides an account of the
genre, a survey of language, style and metre, and an outline of the
problems concerning the authenticity of parts of the collection.
No other ancient poet has had such a hold on the imagination of
readers as Ovid. Through the centuries, artists, writers, and poets
have found in his work inspiration for new creative endeavors. This
anthology of twenty of the most influential papers published in the
last thirty years represents the broad range of critical and
scholarly approaches to Ovid's work. The entire range of his
poetry, from the Amores to the Epistles from the Black Sea, is
discussed by some of the leading scholars of Latin poetry,
employing, critical methods ranging from philology to contemporary
literary theory. In an introductory essay, Peter Knox surveys
Ovidian scholarship over this period and locates the assembled
papers within recent critical trends. Taken together, the articles
in this collection offer the interested reader, whether experienced
scholar or novice, an entree into the current critical discourse on
Ovid, who is at once one of the most accessible authors of
classical antiquity and one of the least understood.
Though the wonders of ancient Roman culture continue to attract
interest across the disciplines, it is difficult to find a lively,
accessible collection of the full range of the era's literature in
English. The Oxford Anthology of Literature in the Roman World
provides a general introduction to the literature of the Roman
empire at its zenith, between the second century BC and the second
century AD. Two features of this extraordinarily fertile period in
literary achievement as evidenced by this anthology are immediately
and repeatedly clear: how similar the Romans' view of the world was
to our own and, perhaps even more obviously, how different it was.
Most of the authors included in the anthology wrote in Latin, but
as the anthology moves forward in time, relevant Greek texts that
reflect the cultural diversity of Roman literary life are also
included, something no other such anthology has done in the past.
Roman literature was wonderfully creative and diverse, and the
texts in this volume were chosen from a broad range of genres:
drama, epic, philosophy, satire, lyric poetry, love poetry. By its
very nature an anthology can abbreviate and thus obscure the most
attractive features of even a masterpiece, so the two editors have
not only selected texts that capture the essence of the respective
authors, but also have included accompanying introductions and
afterwords that will guide the reader in pursuing further reading.
The presentations of the selections are enlivened with
illustrations that locate the works within the contexts of the
world in which they were written and enjoyed. The student and
general reader will come away from this learned yet entertaining
anthology with a fuller appreciation of the place occupied by
literature in the Roman world.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
|