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 2
... later authors, helping us to see firsthand how they read and understood the classics. Highet knew that Montaigne had read Lucretius, but the recent discovery of his annotated copy allows us to trace Lucretius' role in the development of ...
... later authors, helping us to see firsthand how they read and understood the classics. Highet knew that Montaigne had read Lucretius, but the recent discovery of his annotated copy allows us to trace Lucretius' role in the development of ...
Página 7
... later writers also became canonized by the scholars of Alexandria as they compared texts and annotated manuscripts. The conquests of Alexander led to the formalization of grammatical rules in the teaching of Greek to non-Greek speakers ...
... later writers also became canonized by the scholars of Alexandria as they compared texts and annotated manuscripts. The conquests of Alexander led to the formalization of grammatical rules in the teaching of Greek to non-Greek speakers ...
Página 8
... later career of grammar is complicated, and this is no place to trace its history through the speculative theories of the Middle Ages and the new learning of the Renaissance (Law 2003) to the flowering of comparative philology in the ...
... later career of grammar is complicated, and this is no place to trace its history through the speculative theories of the Middle Ages and the new learning of the Renaissance (Law 2003) to the flowering of comparative philology in the ...
Página 12
... later on stereotyping reduced the costs of printing even further. Lithography, an invention of the 1790s that spread rapidly in Europe and the Americas, enabled teachers to write short-run textbooks for their own classes. Composing on ...
... later on stereotyping reduced the costs of printing even further. Lithography, an invention of the 1790s that spread rapidly in Europe and the Americas, enabled teachers to write short-run textbooks for their own classes. Composing on ...
Página 13
... later, the poet Carol Rumens wrote ''A Latin primer: for Kelsey'' for her daughter, who was about to start learning Latin (Rumens 1987: 36). The course being used was the Cambridge Latin Course, set in a vividly recalled Pompeii just ...
... later, the poet Carol Rumens wrote ''A Latin primer: for Kelsey'' for her daughter, who was about to start learning Latin (Rumens 1987: 36). The course being used was the Cambridge Latin Course, set in a vividly recalled Pompeii just ...
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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