Showing papers in "Classical World in 2004"
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a list of illustrations for the modern novel Bibliography index of modern authors Index of passages discussed General index.List of illustrations Acknowledgements 1. Introduction 2. Impossible objects of desire 3. Death, desire and monuments 4. The Heroides 5. Narcissus: the mirror of the text 6. Pygmalion: art and illusion 7. Conjugal conjurings 8. The exile poetry 10.
Abstract: List of illustrations Acknowledgements 1. Introduction 2. Impossible objects of desire 3. Death, desire and monuments 4. The Heroides 5. Narcissus: the mirror of the text 6. Pygmalion: art and illusion 7. Absent presences of language 8. Conjugal conjurings 9. The exile poetry 10. Ovid recalled in the modern novel Bibliography Index of modern authors Index of passages discussed General index.
140 citations
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TL;DR: Maltby as discussed by the authors presents a new edition of the Augustan poet, Albius Tibullus and a major commentary by Robert Maltby, the first in English since K F Smith (1913) to treat Tibullu' entire oeuvre within a single cover.
Abstract: This is a new edition of the Augustan poet, Albius Tibullus and a major commentary by Robert Maltby, the first in English since K F Smith (1913) to treat Tibullus' entire oeuvre within a single cover. It takes full account of up-to-date scholarship on this learned, elegant and, until recently, much underestimated poet. The text is based on that of A G Lee (1990), variations from which are listed at the end and discussed in the notes. The Introduction includes a short history of the text and an assessment of recent Tibullan scholarship with a complete alphabetical listing of bibliography on the Corpus Tibullianum for the years 1970-2000. The ancient testimonia are quoted in full and there are sections on Tibullus' life and times, his relations with his patron, and Augustan themes in his work. The literary significance of Tibullus' mistresses and the other characters in his elegies, together with the structure, style and metre of Books I and II and their links with contemporary literature, are all clearly and succinctly reviewed. The detailed comment on each poem is preceded by an introductory essay.
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TL;DR: The Ancient Commentaries on Demosthenes as discussed by the authors 1.Preface Abbreviations Introduction Part One.2.Didymus Fragments in Harpocration 3.
Abstract: Preface Abbreviations Introduction Part One. The Ancient Commentaries on Demosthenes 1. Form and Transmission 2. Sources, Agenda, and Readership 3. Didymus Part Two. Texts, Translations, and Notes 1. Commentary on Dem. 9--11 and 13 (P.Berol.inv. 9780) 2. Didymus Fragments in Harpocration 3. Lexicon to Dem. 23 (P.Berol.inv. 5008) 4. Commentary on Dem. 5 (P.Berol.inv. 21188) 5. Commentary on Dem. 22 (P.Stras.inv. 84) 6. Lexicon to Dem. 21 (P.Rain.inv. 7) Appendix: Rhetorical Prologue and Commentary on Dem. 21 (P.Lond.Lit. 179) Bibliography General Index Index Verborum Index Locorum
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