The Cambridge Companion to Roman SatireKirk Freudenburg Cambridge University Press, 12.05.2005 - 352 Seiten Satire as a distinct genre of writing was first developed by the Romans in the second century BCE. Regarded by them as uniquely 'their own', satire held a special place in the Roman imagination as the one genre that could address the problems of city life from the perspective of a 'real Roman'. In this Cambridge Companion an international team of scholars provides a stimulating introduction to Roman satire's core practitioners and practices, placing them within the contexts of Greco-Roman literary and political history. Besides addressing basic questions of authors, content, and form, the volume looks to the question of what satire 'does' within the world of Greco-Roman social exchanges, and goes on to treat the genre's further development, reception, and translation in Elizabethan England and beyond. Included are studies of the prosimetric, 'Menippean' satires that would become the models of Rabelais, Erasmus, More, and (narrative satire's crowning jewel) Swift. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 95
Seite 1
... Horace , writing more than one hundred years before Quintilian , was aware of both extremes . Perhaps to goad those in ... Horace's critics ; see Freudenburg ( 2001 ) 18-19 . That such Actually , when Quintilian makes his famous claim ...
... Horace , writing more than one hundred years before Quintilian , was aware of both extremes . Perhaps to goad those in ... Horace's critics ; see Freudenburg ( 2001 ) 18-19 . That such Actually , when Quintilian makes his famous claim ...
Seite 2
... Horace's day . And clearly there were critics in Quintilian's day , too , who took the basic gist of this assertion ... Horace , not Virgil : Lucilius ! Failing to make Quintilian's list in the late first century CE is Quintus Ennius ...
... Horace's day . And clearly there were critics in Quintilian's day , too , who took the basic gist of this assertion ... Horace , not Virgil : Lucilius ! Failing to make Quintilian's list in the late first century CE is Quintus Ennius ...
Seite 7
... Horace , Persius , and others Like Lucilius , Horace was a south Italian , by reputation independent and rough ... ( Horace's own invention ) from those of a Late Republican political lampooner in the traditions of Pitholaos , Calvus ...
... Horace , Persius , and others Like Lucilius , Horace was a south Italian , by reputation independent and rough ... ( Horace's own invention ) from those of a Late Republican political lampooner in the traditions of Pitholaos , Calvus ...
Seite 8
... Horace's introduction of bad characters ( drunken , belligerent , malicious ) into the theorizing of good satire draws heavily on Greek rhetorical theories that treat criticism and jest as matters of gentlemanly comportment . 16 These ...
... Horace's introduction of bad characters ( drunken , belligerent , malicious ) into the theorizing of good satire draws heavily on Greek rhetorical theories that treat criticism and jest as matters of gentlemanly comportment . 16 These ...
Seite 10
... Horace , in turn , targets type - characters , unnamed fools , and persons of no particular account.20 Much closer to the ... Horace's father , see Leach ( 1971 ) . that political luxury , so he introduces an aesthetic refinement IO KIRK ...
... Horace , in turn , targets type - characters , unnamed fools , and persons of no particular account.20 Much closer to the ... Horace's father , see Leach ( 1971 ) . that political luxury , so he introduces an aesthetic refinement IO KIRK ...
Inhalt
Romes first satirists themes and genre in Ennius and Lucilius | 33 |
The restless companion Horace Satires 1 and 2 | 48 |
Speaking from silence the Stoic paradoxes of Persius | 62 |
The poor mans feast Juvenal | 81 |
Citation and authority in Senecas Apocolocyntosis | 95 |
Late arrivals Julian and Boethius | 109 |
Epic allusion in Romance satire | 123 |
Sleeping with the enemy satire and philosophy | 146 |
Satire and the poet the body as selfreferential symbol | 207 |
The libidinal rhetoric of satire | 224 |
Roman satire in the sixteenth century | 243 |
Alluding to satire Rochester Dryden and others | 261 |
The Horatian and the Juvenalesque in English letters | 284 |
The presence of Roman satire modern receptions and their interpretative implications | 299 |
a volume retrospect on Roman satires | 309 |
Key dates for the study of Roman satire | 319 |
The satiric maze Petronius satire and the novel | 160 |
Satire as aristocratic play | 177 |
Satire in a ritual context | 192 |
323 | |
342 | |
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
allusion ancient Annales Apocolocyntosis Archestratus attack audience Augustus Bakhtin body Boethius Braund Callimachus Cambridge Companion carnival century Choliambs Cicero classical Claudius comic context critical Cucchiarelli culture dialogue discourse Dryden edited élite Elizabethan emperor English Ennius epic Epistles especially Eumolpus Fescennini Freudenburg 1993 Freudenburg 2001 genre genre's Greek Henderson hexameter Homer Horace Horace's Horatian Horatian satire iambic imitation Jonson Juvenal Juvenal's Juvenalian Latin literary literature look Lucian Lucilian Lucilius Lupus Maecenas means Menippean satire Menippus meter modern moral Naevolus narrator novel Old Comedy parody Persius Petronius philosophy play pleasure poem poet poet's poetic poetry political Pope Quintilian quotation readers Relihan rhetoric Rochester Rochester's Roman satire Rome Rome's Romulus satire's satirist satura Satyricon satyrs scurra Seneca Sermones sexual social speak speech Stoic Stoicism Suetonius Tacitus themes tradition translation Varro verse satire Virgil words write satire