Hellenistic Epigram: Contexts of Exploration

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Cambridge University Press, 20.10.2016
This book offers scholars and students of Hellenistic and Roman literature an overview of Hellenistic epigram, a field closely related to other Hellenistic poetry and highly influential upon Roman poetry. In fourteen themed chapters, it foregrounds the literary, linguistic, historical, epigraphic, social, political, ethnic, cultic, onomastic, local, topographical and patronage contexts within which Hellenistic epigrams were composed. Many epigrams are analysed in detail and new interpretations of them proposed. Throughout, the question is asked whether epigrams are literary jeux d'esprit (as is often assumed without proper discussion) or whether they relate to real people and real events and have a function in the real world. That function may be epigraphic, for example an epigram can be the epitymbion for inscription at someone's grave, or the anathematikon for inscription on or beside a dedicated object, or a picture-label - an ekphrasis to accompany a painting or mosaic.
 

Inhalt

01Ch1ContextsZX
1
02Ch2AfterlivesZX
32
03Ch3PhilMattersZX
66
04Ch4Temples and ShrinesZX
95
05Ch5Literary PolemicsZX
125
06Ch6Literary Polemics continueZX
160
07Ch7Poetry and SexZX
187
08Ch8Medical ConnectionsZX
216
10Ch10Local InterestsZX
276
11Ch11SpeakersetcZX
314
12Ch12Erotic InnovationZX
351
13Ch13GenresZX
389
14Ch14LearningZX
426
Blank Page
460
Bibliography for HE FINALZX
461
Urheberrecht

09Ch9Deaths from WineZX
243

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Autoren-Profil (2016)

Francis Cairns held the Chairs of Latin at the University of Liverpool and of Latin Language and Literature at the University of Leeds before moving in 2000 to his present position as Professor of Classical Languages at Florida State University. His earlier books are Generic Composition in Greek and Roman Poetry (1972), Tibullus: A Hellenistic Poet at Rome (Cambridge, 1979), Virgil's Augustan Epic (Cambridge, 1989), Sextus Propertius: The Augustan Elegist (Cambridge, 2006), Papers on Roman Elegy (1969–2003) (2007) and Roman Lyric (2012).

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