Virgil: The AeneidPhilip R. Hardie Taylor & Francis, 1999 - 399 pagina's |
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Inhoudsopgave
Heinze Ninety Years On P R Hardie | 1 |
Descent into Hell Reading Ambiguity or Virgil and the Critics C Martindale | 14 |
The Two Voices of Virgils Aeneid A Parry | 49 |
An Interpretation of the Aeneid W Clausen | 65 |
Vergils Second Iliad W S Anderson | 74 |
Achilles as Model for Aeneas L A MacKay | 87 |
Vergils Aeneid and Homer G N Knauer | 93 |
Virgils Aeneid in the Light of Its Own Time E Norden | 114 |
On Allegorical Interpretation A Wlosok | 244 |
Roman Generalship in an Epic Context R G M Nisbet | 254 |
The AeneasLegend and the Aeneid N Horsfall | 265 |
Virgil and the Poetry of Explanations N Horsfall | 278 |
The Creation of Characters in the Aeneid J Griffin | 287 |
Deviant Focalisation in Virgils Aeneid D Fowler | 302 |
Representations of Suffering and Interpretation in the Aeneid A Barchiesi | 324 |
The Imagery of the Second Book of the Aeneid B M W Knox | 345 |
Sociological Approaches to the Interpretation of the Aeneid A La Penna | 173 |
The Taciturnity of Aeneas D Feeney | 183 |
Aeneas and the Stoic Ideal C M Bowra | 204 |
Virgil and the Spirit of Endurance P McGushin | 218 |
Parallelism of Theme and Imagery in Aeneid II and IV | 363 |
MultipleCorrespondence Similes in the Aeneid D West | 384 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
Achilles Aeneas Aeneid allegorical already Amata ambiguity Anchises ancient Ascanius Augustan Augustus Caesar Carthage character Cicero compared context correspondences Creusa criticism Dardanus death described destiny Dido Dido's divine Drances ecphrasis emotional Ennius epic Evander example fact fate father feel flames focalisation Georgics gods Greek Hector Heracles Hercules hero Homeric Horace Horsfall human Iliad imitation interpretation Italian Italy Iulus Juno Jupiter Laocoon Latin Latium Lavinia Lavinium literary meaning metaphor narrative narrator Odes Odysseus Ovid Oxford Pallas parallel Paris passage Patroclus perhaps poem poet poetic poetry political Priam Propertius Pyrrhus quae reader reading reference rhetorical role Roman Rome Romulus says scene sense serpent Servius significance simile speech Stoic story suggest temple tion tradition tragedy Trojan War Trojans Troy Turnus Varro Venus Vergil's Aeneid Vergilius Virgil Virgilian words Zeus καὶ