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 xiii
... Early Modern Culture (Oxford, forthcoming). He is working on a bibliography of the early printed editions of Virgil. Thomas Kaminski teaches in the English Department at Loyola University in Chicago. He is the author of The Early Career ...
... Early Modern Culture (Oxford, forthcoming). He is working on a bibliography of the early printed editions of Virgil. Thomas Kaminski teaches in the English Department at Loyola University in Chicago. He is the author of The Early Career ...
Página 10
... early nineteenth century in France and Germany, the end of that century in Britain. Education in classical Greece lacked our modern apparatus of dedicated buildings, educational stages, and common syllabuses. The ideas of ''curriculum ...
... early nineteenth century in France and Germany, the end of that century in Britain. Education in classical Greece lacked our modern apparatus of dedicated buildings, educational stages, and common syllabuses. The ideas of ''curriculum ...
Página 17
... Early Romans were reportedly subsumed into five classes by their sixth king, Servius Tullius (conventionally dated 578–35 BC). A citizen of the highest class qualified as classicus, while any of the four lower ones fell infra classem ...
... Early Romans were reportedly subsumed into five classes by their sixth king, Servius Tullius (conventionally dated 578–35 BC). A citizen of the highest class qualified as classicus, while any of the four lower ones fell infra classem ...
Página 18
... early and late ends of the spectrum and would be restricted to the stretch from fifth-century Athens to late Republican and Augustan Rome. If classical antiquity covers a long expanse, so, too, do late antiquity and the Middle Ages ...
... early and late ends of the spectrum and would be restricted to the stretch from fifth-century Athens to late Republican and Augustan Rome. If classical antiquity covers a long expanse, so, too, do late antiquity and the Middle Ages ...
Página 21
... early Middle Ages, from the sixth through the eighth centuries. Although Latin ceased to be a mother tongue, it lived on in the Middle Ages as both the written language of record par excellence and the spoken language of religion ...
... early Middle Ages, from the sixth through the eighth centuries. Although Latin ceased to be a mother tongue, it lived on in the Middle Ages as both the written language of record par excellence and the spoken language of religion ...
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Términos y frases comunes
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