The Roman Alexander: Reading a Cultural MythUniversity of Exeter Press, 2002 - 277 Seiten This book seizes on one of the eternal objects of widespread attention in Ancient History and turns the tables on the scholarship that has shaped and dominated the field. Instead of scrutinising the documents in order to reconstruct the biography and assess the historical significance, Diana Spencer traces the deployment and development of the mythical figure of Alexander. She explores and synthesises a selection of Latin texts, from the Late Republic to Hadrian, to form a series of themed discussions which investigate the cultural significance of Alexander for Rome. The selected texts - drawn from verse and prose, history, epic and oratory - are presented alongside their English translation, and provide an insight into a world where to think about Alexander was to engage with the burning ideological issues of Rome during a period of intense and often violent political and cultural change. The book makes clear how particular texts and issues may be readily accessed, providing a valuable resource for teachers and their students, whilst also offering a new approach to cultural histories of Rome and Alexander. |
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Seite xv
Reading a Cultural Myth Diana Spencer. inextricably texts of and about the Roman world that produced them , and therefore texts engaged with a man and a myth that were historical even in their own eras . More importantly , these texts ...
Reading a Cultural Myth Diana Spencer. inextricably texts of and about the Roman world that produced them , and therefore texts engaged with a man and a myth that were historical even in their own eras . More importantly , these texts ...
Seite xvii
... texts do offer . These strategies are based in contex- tualization — both for composition and for the textual Alexander— and on an investigation of the implicit or explicit commentary offered by the author / narrator . Awareness of a ...
... texts do offer . These strategies are based in contex- tualization — both for composition and for the textual Alexander— and on an investigation of the implicit or explicit commentary offered by the author / narrator . Awareness of a ...
Seite xix
... texts in a manner approaching the complexity of nuance and evocation within which they have been successively read . The main texts that form the basis for our understanding of the differ- ent meanings of ' Alexander the Great ' are texts ...
... texts in a manner approaching the complexity of nuance and evocation within which they have been successively read . The main texts that form the basis for our understanding of the differ- ent meanings of ' Alexander the Great ' are texts ...
Inhalt
History into Story | 1 |
ReadingsAlexander Rex | 39 |
ReadingsLiving Fast Dying Young | 83 |
Urheberrecht | |
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