The articles included in this volume represent some of the finest writing on Horace's satires (Sermones) and epistles (Epistulae) over the past fifty years. Several have previously only been accessible in specialist journals, while five appear here for the first time in English translation. All are remarkable for the way in which they do their work at multiple levels, moving from the basics of grammar, vocabulary, and syntax to issues of genre, socio-politics, and beyond. Collectively, these articles underscore and exemplify the value of close reading, and of paying strict attention to detail.…mehr
The articles included in this volume represent some of the finest writing on Horace's satires (Sermones) and epistles (Epistulae) over the past fifty years. Several have previously only been accessible in specialist journals, while five appear here for the first time in English translation. All are remarkable for the way in which they do their work at multiple levels, moving from the basics of grammar, vocabulary, and syntax to issues of genre, socio-politics, and beyond. Collectively, these articles underscore and exemplify the value of close reading, and of paying strict attention to detail. Starting with the specifics of the poetic page, they lead us into the various complex and overlapping discursive systems that Horace's poems both arise from and seek to address. A specially written Introduction surveys recent scholarship, and the specific impact of each article included.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Kirk Freudenburg is Professor of Latin in the Department of Classics at Yale University.
Inhaltsangabe
* Introduction: The Satires and Letters of Horace in Recent Scholarship * I. Horace's Sermones * 1: James Zetzel: Horace's Liber Sermonum: The Structure of Ambiguity * 2: I. M. Le M. DuQuesnay: Horace and Maecenas: The Propaganda Value of Sermones I * 3: Mario Labate: Horatian Sermo and Genres of Literature * 4: William Turpin: The Epicurean Parasite: Horace, Satires 1.1-3 * 5: Gordon Williams: Libertino Patre Natus: True or False? * 6: Emily Gowers: Horace, Satires 1.5: An Inconsequential Journey * 7: John Henderson: Be Alert (Your Country Needs Lerts): Horace, Satires 1.9 * 8: Ruth Scodel: Horace, Lucilius, and Callimachean Polemic * 9: Jeffrey Tatum: Ultra Legem: Law and Literature in Horace, Satires II.1 * II. Horace's Epistles, Book One * 10: Colin MacCleod: The Poetry of Ethics: Horace Epistles I * 11: Stephen J. Harrison: Poetry, Philosophy and Letter-Writing in Horace Epistles 1 * 12: Alfonso Traina: Horace and Aristippus: the Epistles and the Art of Conuiuere * 13: John Moles: Poetry, Philosophy, Politics and Play: Epistles I * III. Horace's Epistles, Book Two and the Ars Poetica * 14: Friedrich Klingner: Horace's Letter to Augustus * 15: Denis C. Feeney: Una cum Scriptore Meo: Poetry, Principate and the Traditions of Literary History in the Epistle to Augustus * 16: Antonio La Penna: Horace, Augustus, and the Question of the Latin Theater * 17: Elio Pasoli: Towards a Reading of Horace's Epistle to Julius Florus (Epist. 2.2) * 18: Kirk Freudenburg: Writing to/through Florus: Sampling the Addressee in Horace Epistles 2.2 * 19: Ellen Oliensis: The Art of Self-Fashioning in the Ars Poetica
* Introduction: The Satires and Letters of Horace in Recent Scholarship * I. Horace's Sermones * 1: James Zetzel: Horace's Liber Sermonum: The Structure of Ambiguity * 2: I. M. Le M. DuQuesnay: Horace and Maecenas: The Propaganda Value of Sermones I * 3: Mario Labate: Horatian Sermo and Genres of Literature * 4: William Turpin: The Epicurean Parasite: Horace, Satires 1.1-3 * 5: Gordon Williams: Libertino Patre Natus: True or False? * 6: Emily Gowers: Horace, Satires 1.5: An Inconsequential Journey * 7: John Henderson: Be Alert (Your Country Needs Lerts): Horace, Satires 1.9 * 8: Ruth Scodel: Horace, Lucilius, and Callimachean Polemic * 9: Jeffrey Tatum: Ultra Legem: Law and Literature in Horace, Satires II.1 * II. Horace's Epistles, Book One * 10: Colin MacCleod: The Poetry of Ethics: Horace Epistles I * 11: Stephen J. Harrison: Poetry, Philosophy and Letter-Writing in Horace Epistles 1 * 12: Alfonso Traina: Horace and Aristippus: the Epistles and the Art of Conuiuere * 13: John Moles: Poetry, Philosophy, Politics and Play: Epistles I * III. Horace's Epistles, Book Two and the Ars Poetica * 14: Friedrich Klingner: Horace's Letter to Augustus * 15: Denis C. Feeney: Una cum Scriptore Meo: Poetry, Principate and the Traditions of Literary History in the Epistle to Augustus * 16: Antonio La Penna: Horace, Augustus, and the Question of the Latin Theater * 17: Elio Pasoli: Towards a Reading of Horace's Epistle to Julius Florus (Epist. 2.2) * 18: Kirk Freudenburg: Writing to/through Florus: Sampling the Addressee in Horace Epistles 2.2 * 19: Ellen Oliensis: The Art of Self-Fashioning in the Ars Poetica
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