The Romance between Greece and the East
Herausgeber: Thomson, Stuart; Whitmarsh, Tim
The Romance between Greece and the East
Herausgeber: Thomson, Stuart; Whitmarsh, Tim
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Twenty essays by renowned scholars explore contact between Greece and the Ancient Near East through the medium of prose fiction.
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Twenty essays by renowned scholars explore contact between Greece and the Ancient Near East through the medium of prose fiction.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 412
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. Februar 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 594g
- ISBN-13: 9781107543003
- ISBN-10: 1107543002
- Artikelnr.: 42793604
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 412
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. Februar 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 594g
- ISBN-13: 9781107543003
- ISBN-10: 1107543002
- Artikelnr.: 42793604
1. The romance between Greece and the East Tim Whitmarsh; Part I.
Egyptians: 2. Greek fiction and Egyptian fiction: are they related, and, if
so, how? Ian Rutherford; 3. Manetho John Dillery; 4. Imitatio Alexandri in
Egyptian literary tradition Kim Ryholt; 5. Divine anger management: the
Greek version of the myth of the sun's eye (P.Lond.Lit. 192) Stephanie
West; 6. Fictions of cultural authority Susan Stephens; Part II.
Mesopotamians and Iranians: 7. Berossus Johannes Haubold; 8. The Greek
novel Ninus and Semiramis: its background in Assyrian and Seleucid history
and monuments Stephanie Dalley; 9. Ctesias, the Achaemenid court, and the
history of the Greek novel Josef Wiesehöfer; 10. Iskander and the idea of
Iran Daniel Selden; Part III. Jews and Phoenicians: 11. Josephus' Esther
and Diaspora Judaism Emily Kneebone; 12. The eastern king in the Hebrew
Bible: novelistic motifs in early Jewish literature Jennie Barbour; 13.
'Lost in translation'? The Phoenician Journal of Dictys of Crete Karen Ní
Mheallaigh; 14. Milesiae Punicae: how Punic was Apuleius? Stephen Harrison;
Part IV. Anatolians: 15. The victory of Greek Ionia in Xenophon's Ephesiaca
Aldo Tagliabue; 16. Milesian tales Ewen Bowie; Part V. Transmission and
Reception: 17. Does triviality translate? The Life of Aesop travels east
Pavlos Avlamis; 18. Mime and the romance Ruth Webb; 19. Orality, folktales,
and the cross-cultural transmission of narrative Larry Kim; 20. History,
empire and the novel: Pierre-Daniel Huet and the origins of the romance
Phiroze Vasunia.
Egyptians: 2. Greek fiction and Egyptian fiction: are they related, and, if
so, how? Ian Rutherford; 3. Manetho John Dillery; 4. Imitatio Alexandri in
Egyptian literary tradition Kim Ryholt; 5. Divine anger management: the
Greek version of the myth of the sun's eye (P.Lond.Lit. 192) Stephanie
West; 6. Fictions of cultural authority Susan Stephens; Part II.
Mesopotamians and Iranians: 7. Berossus Johannes Haubold; 8. The Greek
novel Ninus and Semiramis: its background in Assyrian and Seleucid history
and monuments Stephanie Dalley; 9. Ctesias, the Achaemenid court, and the
history of the Greek novel Josef Wiesehöfer; 10. Iskander and the idea of
Iran Daniel Selden; Part III. Jews and Phoenicians: 11. Josephus' Esther
and Diaspora Judaism Emily Kneebone; 12. The eastern king in the Hebrew
Bible: novelistic motifs in early Jewish literature Jennie Barbour; 13.
'Lost in translation'? The Phoenician Journal of Dictys of Crete Karen Ní
Mheallaigh; 14. Milesiae Punicae: how Punic was Apuleius? Stephen Harrison;
Part IV. Anatolians: 15. The victory of Greek Ionia in Xenophon's Ephesiaca
Aldo Tagliabue; 16. Milesian tales Ewen Bowie; Part V. Transmission and
Reception: 17. Does triviality translate? The Life of Aesop travels east
Pavlos Avlamis; 18. Mime and the romance Ruth Webb; 19. Orality, folktales,
and the cross-cultural transmission of narrative Larry Kim; 20. History,
empire and the novel: Pierre-Daniel Huet and the origins of the romance
Phiroze Vasunia.
1. The romance between Greece and the East Tim Whitmarsh; Part I.
Egyptians: 2. Greek fiction and Egyptian fiction: are they related, and, if
so, how? Ian Rutherford; 3. Manetho John Dillery; 4. Imitatio Alexandri in
Egyptian literary tradition Kim Ryholt; 5. Divine anger management: the
Greek version of the myth of the sun's eye (P.Lond.Lit. 192) Stephanie
West; 6. Fictions of cultural authority Susan Stephens; Part II.
Mesopotamians and Iranians: 7. Berossus Johannes Haubold; 8. The Greek
novel Ninus and Semiramis: its background in Assyrian and Seleucid history
and monuments Stephanie Dalley; 9. Ctesias, the Achaemenid court, and the
history of the Greek novel Josef Wiesehöfer; 10. Iskander and the idea of
Iran Daniel Selden; Part III. Jews and Phoenicians: 11. Josephus' Esther
and Diaspora Judaism Emily Kneebone; 12. The eastern king in the Hebrew
Bible: novelistic motifs in early Jewish literature Jennie Barbour; 13.
'Lost in translation'? The Phoenician Journal of Dictys of Crete Karen Ní
Mheallaigh; 14. Milesiae Punicae: how Punic was Apuleius? Stephen Harrison;
Part IV. Anatolians: 15. The victory of Greek Ionia in Xenophon's Ephesiaca
Aldo Tagliabue; 16. Milesian tales Ewen Bowie; Part V. Transmission and
Reception: 17. Does triviality translate? The Life of Aesop travels east
Pavlos Avlamis; 18. Mime and the romance Ruth Webb; 19. Orality, folktales,
and the cross-cultural transmission of narrative Larry Kim; 20. History,
empire and the novel: Pierre-Daniel Huet and the origins of the romance
Phiroze Vasunia.
Egyptians: 2. Greek fiction and Egyptian fiction: are they related, and, if
so, how? Ian Rutherford; 3. Manetho John Dillery; 4. Imitatio Alexandri in
Egyptian literary tradition Kim Ryholt; 5. Divine anger management: the
Greek version of the myth of the sun's eye (P.Lond.Lit. 192) Stephanie
West; 6. Fictions of cultural authority Susan Stephens; Part II.
Mesopotamians and Iranians: 7. Berossus Johannes Haubold; 8. The Greek
novel Ninus and Semiramis: its background in Assyrian and Seleucid history
and monuments Stephanie Dalley; 9. Ctesias, the Achaemenid court, and the
history of the Greek novel Josef Wiesehöfer; 10. Iskander and the idea of
Iran Daniel Selden; Part III. Jews and Phoenicians: 11. Josephus' Esther
and Diaspora Judaism Emily Kneebone; 12. The eastern king in the Hebrew
Bible: novelistic motifs in early Jewish literature Jennie Barbour; 13.
'Lost in translation'? The Phoenician Journal of Dictys of Crete Karen Ní
Mheallaigh; 14. Milesiae Punicae: how Punic was Apuleius? Stephen Harrison;
Part IV. Anatolians: 15. The victory of Greek Ionia in Xenophon's Ephesiaca
Aldo Tagliabue; 16. Milesian tales Ewen Bowie; Part V. Transmission and
Reception: 17. Does triviality translate? The Life of Aesop travels east
Pavlos Avlamis; 18. Mime and the romance Ruth Webb; 19. Orality, folktales,
and the cross-cultural transmission of narrative Larry Kim; 20. History,
empire and the novel: Pierre-Daniel Huet and the origins of the romance
Phiroze Vasunia.