Alessandro Garcea
Caesar's de Analogia: Edition, Translation, and Commentary
Alessandro Garcea
Caesar's de Analogia: Edition, Translation, and Commentary
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In this volume, Garcea brings together for the first time the fragments of Caesar's De Analogia with a complete translation and commentary. Contextualising the text and its subsequent translation in Pliny and Romanus, Garcea presents the issues raised by means of comparison with the texts of Caesar's interlocutors.
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In this volume, Garcea brings together for the first time the fragments of Caesar's De Analogia with a complete translation and commentary. Contextualising the text and its subsequent translation in Pliny and Romanus, Garcea presents the issues raised by means of comparison with the texts of Caesar's interlocutors.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Prairie Wind Publishing
- Seitenzahl: 320
- Erscheinungstermin: April 2012
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 218mm x 142mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 522g
- ISBN-13: 9780199603978
- ISBN-10: 0199603979
- Artikelnr.: 35275259
- Verlag: Prairie Wind Publishing
- Seitenzahl: 320
- Erscheinungstermin: April 2012
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 218mm x 142mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 522g
- ISBN-13: 9780199603978
- ISBN-10: 0199603979
- Artikelnr.: 35275259
* Abbreviations
* Part I. INTRODUCTION
* 1: Inter tela uolantia
* A: Caesarian Politics
* B: Linguistic Politics
* C: Eclecticism
* D: Polemics and Debates
* E: Analogy and the Latin Grammatical Tradition
* 2: The Writing of De analogia
* A: Caesars Intellectual Education
* B: Some Chronological Reference Points
* C: The Title of the Treatise
* 3: Caesars Grammatical Stance
* A: Questions De orthographia
* B: Derivation and Inflection
* C: Analogy and Conventionalism
* Appendix: The Grammatical Excursus in Ciceros Orator
* PART II. CICERO, CAESAR, AND THE ORATORES ELEGANTES: RECREATING A
DEBATE AT A DISTANCE
* 4: The Rhetorical Doctrine ofElegantia
* A: The Virtutes orationis
* B: From Theory to History: From Theory to History: De oratore versus
Brutus
* 5: Cicero and Caesars De analogia
* A: Marcellus and Caesar
* B: The Introduction to De analogia
* C: Controlling Language Change
* D: Analogy, Usage, and the Alexandrian Tradition
* E: Caesar the Prose Writer
* 6: Rhetoric and Grammar in Roman Epicureanism
* A: Purity and Clarity
* B: Caesars Supposed Neo-Atticism
* PART III. TEXTS, TRANSLATIONS, AND COMMENTARY
* Chronology (T12)
* Title (T35)
* The Introduction (F1AC)
* Lexical Selection (F2)
* The Alphabet (F3)
* I as Consonans duplex (F4)
* The Sonus medius (F5)
* The Semiuocales (F6)
* The Mutae at the End of a Word (F7)
* Derivation (F8)
* The Criteria of Analogy between Nouns (F9)
* Grammatical Gender (F10)
* Grammatical Number (F11AB)
* Case and the Paradigmatic Role of the Ablative (F12)
* I Stems and Consonant Stems: The Singular (F1321)
* I Stems and Consonant Stems: The Plural (F223)
* Part I. INTRODUCTION
* 1: Inter tela uolantia
* A: Caesarian Politics
* B: Linguistic Politics
* C: Eclecticism
* D: Polemics and Debates
* E: Analogy and the Latin Grammatical Tradition
* 2: The Writing of De analogia
* A: Caesars Intellectual Education
* B: Some Chronological Reference Points
* C: The Title of the Treatise
* 3: Caesars Grammatical Stance
* A: Questions De orthographia
* B: Derivation and Inflection
* C: Analogy and Conventionalism
* Appendix: The Grammatical Excursus in Ciceros Orator
* PART II. CICERO, CAESAR, AND THE ORATORES ELEGANTES: RECREATING A
DEBATE AT A DISTANCE
* 4: The Rhetorical Doctrine ofElegantia
* A: The Virtutes orationis
* B: From Theory to History: From Theory to History: De oratore versus
Brutus
* 5: Cicero and Caesars De analogia
* A: Marcellus and Caesar
* B: The Introduction to De analogia
* C: Controlling Language Change
* D: Analogy, Usage, and the Alexandrian Tradition
* E: Caesar the Prose Writer
* 6: Rhetoric and Grammar in Roman Epicureanism
* A: Purity and Clarity
* B: Caesars Supposed Neo-Atticism
* PART III. TEXTS, TRANSLATIONS, AND COMMENTARY
* Chronology (T12)
* Title (T35)
* The Introduction (F1AC)
* Lexical Selection (F2)
* The Alphabet (F3)
* I as Consonans duplex (F4)
* The Sonus medius (F5)
* The Semiuocales (F6)
* The Mutae at the End of a Word (F7)
* Derivation (F8)
* The Criteria of Analogy between Nouns (F9)
* Grammatical Gender (F10)
* Grammatical Number (F11AB)
* Case and the Paradigmatic Role of the Ablative (F12)
* I Stems and Consonant Stems: The Singular (F1321)
* I Stems and Consonant Stems: The Plural (F223)
* Abbreviations
* Part I. INTRODUCTION
* 1: Inter tela uolantia
* A: Caesarian Politics
* B: Linguistic Politics
* C: Eclecticism
* D: Polemics and Debates
* E: Analogy and the Latin Grammatical Tradition
* 2: The Writing of De analogia
* A: Caesars Intellectual Education
* B: Some Chronological Reference Points
* C: The Title of the Treatise
* 3: Caesars Grammatical Stance
* A: Questions De orthographia
* B: Derivation and Inflection
* C: Analogy and Conventionalism
* Appendix: The Grammatical Excursus in Ciceros Orator
* PART II. CICERO, CAESAR, AND THE ORATORES ELEGANTES: RECREATING A
DEBATE AT A DISTANCE
* 4: The Rhetorical Doctrine ofElegantia
* A: The Virtutes orationis
* B: From Theory to History: From Theory to History: De oratore versus
Brutus
* 5: Cicero and Caesars De analogia
* A: Marcellus and Caesar
* B: The Introduction to De analogia
* C: Controlling Language Change
* D: Analogy, Usage, and the Alexandrian Tradition
* E: Caesar the Prose Writer
* 6: Rhetoric and Grammar in Roman Epicureanism
* A: Purity and Clarity
* B: Caesars Supposed Neo-Atticism
* PART III. TEXTS, TRANSLATIONS, AND COMMENTARY
* Chronology (T12)
* Title (T35)
* The Introduction (F1AC)
* Lexical Selection (F2)
* The Alphabet (F3)
* I as Consonans duplex (F4)
* The Sonus medius (F5)
* The Semiuocales (F6)
* The Mutae at the End of a Word (F7)
* Derivation (F8)
* The Criteria of Analogy between Nouns (F9)
* Grammatical Gender (F10)
* Grammatical Number (F11AB)
* Case and the Paradigmatic Role of the Ablative (F12)
* I Stems and Consonant Stems: The Singular (F1321)
* I Stems and Consonant Stems: The Plural (F223)
* Part I. INTRODUCTION
* 1: Inter tela uolantia
* A: Caesarian Politics
* B: Linguistic Politics
* C: Eclecticism
* D: Polemics and Debates
* E: Analogy and the Latin Grammatical Tradition
* 2: The Writing of De analogia
* A: Caesars Intellectual Education
* B: Some Chronological Reference Points
* C: The Title of the Treatise
* 3: Caesars Grammatical Stance
* A: Questions De orthographia
* B: Derivation and Inflection
* C: Analogy and Conventionalism
* Appendix: The Grammatical Excursus in Ciceros Orator
* PART II. CICERO, CAESAR, AND THE ORATORES ELEGANTES: RECREATING A
DEBATE AT A DISTANCE
* 4: The Rhetorical Doctrine ofElegantia
* A: The Virtutes orationis
* B: From Theory to History: From Theory to History: De oratore versus
Brutus
* 5: Cicero and Caesars De analogia
* A: Marcellus and Caesar
* B: The Introduction to De analogia
* C: Controlling Language Change
* D: Analogy, Usage, and the Alexandrian Tradition
* E: Caesar the Prose Writer
* 6: Rhetoric and Grammar in Roman Epicureanism
* A: Purity and Clarity
* B: Caesars Supposed Neo-Atticism
* PART III. TEXTS, TRANSLATIONS, AND COMMENTARY
* Chronology (T12)
* Title (T35)
* The Introduction (F1AC)
* Lexical Selection (F2)
* The Alphabet (F3)
* I as Consonans duplex (F4)
* The Sonus medius (F5)
* The Semiuocales (F6)
* The Mutae at the End of a Word (F7)
* Derivation (F8)
* The Criteria of Analogy between Nouns (F9)
* Grammatical Gender (F10)
* Grammatical Number (F11AB)
* Case and the Paradigmatic Role of the Ablative (F12)
* I Stems and Consonant Stems: The Singular (F1321)
* I Stems and Consonant Stems: The Plural (F223)