A Companion to Latin LiteratureStephen Harrison John Wiley & Sons, 15 apr 2008 - 472 pagina's A Companion to Latin Literature gives an authoritative account of Latin literature from its beginnings in the third century BC through to the end of the second century AD.
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Pagina 2
... literary genres and their development across these periods; and the third picks out some topics of particular interest within Roman literature and its backgrounds. Like the stimulating Braund (2002), whose topics in many ways complement ...
... literary genres and their development across these periods; and the third picks out some topics of particular interest within Roman literature and its backgrounds. Like the stimulating Braund (2002), whose topics in many ways complement ...
Pagina 16
... literary history does not offer much help with such questions. It has been too reluctant to shift its gaze from the work of authors to that of readers. Who was reading what, when and why are more difficult questions to address than who ...
... literary history does not offer much help with such questions. It has been too reluctant to shift its gaze from the work of authors to that of readers. Who was reading what, when and why are more difficult questions to address than who ...
Pagina 29
... literary sensibility travelled from its beginning to the last gener— ation of the Republic. Rome's early literary history is of course a story of authors, but it is also a story of the readers who came to value their work. It took the ...
... literary sensibility travelled from its beginning to the last gener— ation of the Republic. Rome's early literary history is of course a story of authors, but it is also a story of the readers who came to value their work. It took the ...
Pagina 33
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Pagina 47
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Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
addressed Aeneas Aeneid ancient Apuleius audience Augustan Augustus Caesar Callimachus Carthaginians Cato Cato’s Catullus century BC CGLC Chapter character Cicero Classical comedy commentary contemporary context culture death defined dialogue didactic drama Eclogues ecphrasis elegiac elegists elite emperor Ennius epic epigram example father figures final find first first century fragments friendship genre Georgics Greek Hellenistic Homeric Horace Horace’s iambic imperial important influence Latin literature letters literary Livy love elegy Lucan Lucilius Lucretius lyric Martial metre mime moral Naevius narrative Nero Odes orator oratory Ovid Ovid’s passions period Persius Petronius philosophical Plautus plays Pliny Pliny’s poem poet poet’s poetic poetry political Propertius prose Punic Quintilian reader reflect Republic rhetorical role Roman Roman literature Rome Rome’s satire second century Seneca significant slave social specific speeches Statius status style surviving Tacitus Terence texts theme Thyestes Tibullus tradition tragedy translation treatise Varro Vergil verse writing written