Candide iudex


Book Description

Inhalt: G. Binder / U. Hamm: Die "Locke der Berenike" und der Ursprung der romischen Liebeselegie - J. Blansdorf: Senecas Kritik am Menschenbild des Horaz - F. Cairns: Tibullus 2.1.57-8: Problems of Text and Interpretation - E. Doblofer: Horazische Ambiguitaten - D. Flach: Properz als Dichter des Maecenaskreises - R. Haualer: Reposian und seine klassischen Helfer - E. Konsgen: Variorum Carminum Liber ad Cancrinam - S. Koster: Descende caelo (Horaz, carmen 3,4) - W. Kullmann: Kallimachos in Alexandrien und Rom - H. Leppin: Zur Selbstdarstellung Messallas - G. Lieberg: Amore elegiaco ed elegia d'amore in Properzio e negli altri elegiaci Augustei - G. Maurach: Zu Horaz, Ep. 1,8 - J. K. Newman: "Saturno Rege". Themes of the Golden Age in Tibullus and other Augustan Poets - E. Pohlmann: Dichterweihe und Gattungswahl - F. Radle: Humanistenlatein und das ubrige Leben oder von der Nachsicht der Gebildeten mit den Frommen - K. Sallmann: Noch einmal zu Vergils 8. Ekloge - E. Schafer: Vergil in Hessen - A. Schmitt: Natur, Dichtung und Eros in der Bukolik Theokrits - O. Schonberger: Angeli politiani sylva cui titulus manto - E. Schutrumpf: Lucretius De Rer.Nat.III (830-1094 ) - W. Suerbaum: Gedanken an alternatives Handeln in Vergils Aeneis - H. P. Syndikus: Horaz und die elegischen Dichter - H. Wieland: Drei Beispiele semantischen Doppelspiels bei Ovid "ein Geschenk fur die Wissenschaft" Anzeiger fur die Altertumswissenschaft "Der vorliegende Band enthalt so viele Anregungen, daa er nicht nur lesenswert, sondern auch in wichtigen Teilen umsetzbar erscheint und daher zur Anschaffung empfohlen werden kann." Mitteilungsblatt des Landesverbandes Hessen im Deutschen Altphilologenverband . (Franz Steiner 1998)







A History of Roman Literature


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Poems without Poets


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The canon of classical Greek and Latin poetry is built around big names, with Homer and Virgil at the center, but many ancient poems survive without a firm ascription to a known author. This negative category, anonymity, ties together texts as different as, for instance, the orally derived Homeric Hymns and the learned interpolation that is the Helen episode in Aeneid 2, but they all have in common that they have been maltreated in various ways, consciously or through neglect, by generations of readers and scholars, ancient as well as modern. These accumulated layers of obliteration, which can manifest, for instance, in textual distortions or aesthetic condemnation, make it all but impossible to access anonymous poems in their pristine shape and context. The essays collected in this volume attempt, each in its own way, to disentangle the bundles of historically accreted uncertainties and misconceptions that affect individual anonymous texts, including pseudepigrapha ascribed to Homer, Manetho, Virgil, and Tibullus, literary and inscribed epigrams, and unattributed fragments. Poems without Poets will be of interest to students and scholars working on any anonymous ancient texts, but also to readers seeking an introduction to classical poetry beyond the limits of the established canon.




Oxford Handbook of Epicurus and Epicureanism


Book Description

The ancient Greek philosopher Epicurus (341-270 BCE), though often despised for his materialism, hedonism, and denial of the immortality of the soul during many periods of history, has at the same time been a source of inspiration to figures as diverse as Vergil, Hobbes, Thomas Jefferson, and Bentham. This volume offers authoritative discussions of all aspects of Epicurus's philosophy and then traces out some of its most important subsequent influences throughout the Western intellectual tradition. Such a detailed and comprehensive study of Epicureanism is especially timely given the tremendous current revival of interest in Epicurus and his rivals, the Stoics. The thirty-one contributions in this volume offer an unmatched resource for all those wishing to deepen their knowledge of Epicurus' powerful arguments about happiness, death, and the nature of the material world and our place in it. At the same time, his arguments are carefully placed in the context of ancient and subsequent disputes, thus offering readers the opportunity of measuring Epicurean arguments against a wide range of opponents--from Platonists, Aristotelians and Stoics, to Hegel and Nietzsche, and finally on to such important contemporary philosophers as Thomas Nagel and Bernard Williams. The volume offers separate and detailed discussions of two fascinating and ongoing sources of Epicurean arguments, the Herculaneum papyri and the inscription of Diogenes of Oenoanda. Our understanding of Epicureanism is continually being enriched by these new sources of evidence and the contributors to this volume have been able to make use of them in presenting the most current understanding of Epicurus's own views. By the same token, the second half of the volume is devoted to the extraordinary influence of Epicurean doctrines, often either neglected or misunderstood, in literature, political thinking, scientific innovation, personal conceptions of freedom and happiness, and in philosophy generally. Taken together, the contributions in this volume offer the most comprehensive and detailed account of Epicurus and Epicureanism available in English.




Afterlives of the Garden


Book Description

The collection of essays in this volume offers fresh insights into varied modalities of reception of Epicurean thought among Roman authors of the late Republican and Imperial eras. Its generic purview encompasses prose as well as poetic texts by both minor and major writers in the Latin literary canon, including the anonymous poems, Ciris and Aetna, and an elegy from the Tibullan corpus by the female poet, Sulpicia. Major figures include the Augustan poets, Vergil and Horace, and the late antique Christian theologian, Augustine. The method of analysis employed in the essays is uniformly interdisciplinary and reveals the depth of the engagement of each ancient author with major preoccupations of Epicurean thought, such as the balanced pursuit of erotic pleasure in the context of human flourishing and the role of the gods in relation to human existence. The ensemble of nuanced interpretations testifies to the immense vitality of the Epicurean philosophical tradition throughout Greco-Roman antiquity and thereby provides a welcome and substantial contribution to the burgeoning field of reception studies.




A History of Roman Lierature


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Horace


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The Roman Way


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"No one in modern times has shown us more vividly than Edith Hamilton 'the glory that was Greece and the grandeur that was Rome.'" —New York Times In this now-classic history of Roman civilization, Edith Hamilton vividly depicts Roman life and spirit as they are revealed by the greatest writers of the age. Among these literary guides are Cicero, who left an incomparable collection of letters; Catullus, who was the quintessential poet of love; Horace, who chronicled a cruel and materialistic Rome; and the Romantics: Virgil, Livy, and Seneca. Hamilton concludes her work by contrasting the high-mindedness of Stoicism with the collapse of values as witnessed by the historian Tacitus and the satirist Juvenal.