A Companion to the Classical TraditionCraig W. Kallendorf John Wiley & Sons, 2008 M04 15 - 512 páginas A Companion to the Classical Tradition accommodates the pressing need for an up-to-date introduction and overview of the growing field of reception studies.
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Página 11
... Vergil, usually) would be read, and read again in the following year – a practice common in antiquity (Cribiore 2001: 241). Exercises in verse composition were set, at first as ''nonsense,'' the meter being all-important, the meaning of ...
... Vergil, usually) would be read, and read again in the following year – a practice common in antiquity (Cribiore 2001: 241). Exercises in verse composition were set, at first as ''nonsense,'' the meter being all-important, the meaning of ...
Página 18
... Vergil, Horace, and others in the first century BC, and down even to Augustine and other Latin-speakers and -writers in the Empire of the fourth and fifth centuries AD. (The preceding is, of course, only a very partial roll call, making ...
... Vergil, Horace, and others in the first century BC, and down even to Augustine and other Latin-speakers and -writers in the Empire of the fourth and fifth centuries AD. (The preceding is, of course, only a very partial roll call, making ...
Página 19
... Vergil in the frequency with which they were written out in scriptoria and in the intensity with which they were perused in the curriculum (Munk Olsen 1991). Medieval scholars found a rough parity among the different authors whose texts ...
... Vergil in the frequency with which they were written out in scriptoria and in the intensity with which they were perused in the curriculum (Munk Olsen 1991). Medieval scholars found a rough parity among the different authors whose texts ...
Página 20
... Vergil's fourth (and so-called ''Messianic'') Eclogue as foretelling the birth of Christ (Benko 1980). Dante Alighieri (1265–1321) maintains (Purgatorio 22.73) that reading this very poem (together with the Aeneid) by Vergil caused ...
... Vergil's fourth (and so-called ''Messianic'') Eclogue as foretelling the birth of Christ (Benko 1980). Dante Alighieri (1265–1321) maintains (Purgatorio 22.73) that reading this very poem (together with the Aeneid) by Vergil caused ...
Página 21
... Vergil's Aeneid opened with verses that do not grace the pages of standard editions today. The 13 poems of the so-called Appendix Vergiliana were believed unreservedly to have been composed by Vergil, and occasional other poems, such as ...
... Vergil's Aeneid opened with verses that do not grace the pages of standard editions today. The 13 poems of the so-called Appendix Vergiliana were believed unreservedly to have been composed by Vergil, and occasional other poems, such as ...
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Aeneid aesthetic African American ancient Antigone architecture Aristotle Aristotle’s artists Baroque became central-eastern Europe Christian Cicero classical antiquity classical authors classical texts classical tradition contemporary critics culture developed drama early Eclogue eighteenth century empire English epic essay Euripides European example figures French Freud genre German Greece Heaney Homer Horace human humanist Iliad imitation important influence inspired interpretation Italian Italian Fascism Italy Jesuit language later Latin learning literary literature Medea medieval Middle Ages modern moral myth mythology neoclassicism nineteenth century novel Oedipus Ovid Ovid’s Oxford pagan painting period Petrarch philosophical Plato play poem poet poetic poetry political postcolonial prose published reception reception theory Renaissance revival role Rome scholars scholarship schools seventeenth century sixteenth century Sophocles Spain Spanish Standard Edition Stoic story style T. S. Eliot theater themes theory tragedy translation twentieth century University Vela´zquez Vergil vernacular verse writing wrote