Notice bibliographique
- Notice
Type(s) de contenu et mode(s) de consultation : Texte noté : électronique
Titre(s) : A companion to ancient epigram [Texte électronique] / edited by Christer Henriksén
Publication : Hoboken (N.J.) : John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2019
Description matérielle : 1 online resource (xxvii, 704 pages)
Collection : Blackwell companions to the ancient world
Lien à la collection : Blackwell companions to the Ancient world (Online)
Note(s) : Includes bibliographical references and index
La pagination de l'édition imprimée correspondante est de : XXVII-704 p.
Autre(s) auteur(s) : Henriksén, Christer. Éditeur scientifique
Sujet(s) : Épigrammes grecques
Épigrammes latines
Indice(s) Dewey :
888.02 (23e éd.) = Écrits divers grecs classiques - 0500-1599 [critique]
Identifiants, prix et caractéristiques : ISBN 111884162X. - ISBN 9781118841730. - ISBN 1118841735. - ISBN 9781118841624. -
ISBN 9781118841709. - ISBN 1118841700. - ISBN 9781118841723 (erroné)
Identifiant de la notice : ark:/12148/cb45830903p
Notice n° :
FRBNF45830903
(notice reprise d'un réservoir extérieur)
Table des matières : Intro; Title Page; Copyright Page; Contents; Notes on Contributors; Abbreviations;
Introduction; PART I Epigram: Features and Definitions; Chapter One What Is an Epigram?:
Defining a Genre; 1.1 The Problem; 1.2 Ideas of Greek Epigram Through Time; 1.3 Ideas
of Latin Epigram Through Time; 1.4 Modern Theories; 1.5 Towards an Identikit; Note;
References; Chapter Two A Gallery of Characters: Real Persons and Fictitious Types
in Epigram; 2.1 Real Persons in Epigram; 2.2 Fictitious Characters in Epigram; 2.3
Suggestions for Further Research; Notes; References
Chapter Three Epigram, Society, and Political Power3.1 Introduction; 3.2 Panegyric
and Patriotism; 3.3 Scoptic; 3.4 Context and Convention; 3.5 Coda: Late Antiquity;
Notes; References; Further Reading; Chapter Four Hidden Figures: The Women Who Wrote
Epigrams; 4.1 Introduction; 4.2 Erinna; 4.3 Moero; 4.4 Anyte; 4.5 Nossis; 4.6 Survival;
4.7 Conclusion; Notes; References; Chapter Five The Masculine and the Feminine in
Epigram; 5.1 Introduction; 5.2 Femininity in Epigram; 5.3 Masculinity in Epigram;
Notes; References; Chapter Six Obscenity in Epigram; 6.1 Obscenity in Ancient Greece
and Rome
6.2 Hellenistic Epigram6.3 Catullus; 6.4 Martial; 6.5 Later Greek and Latin Epigram;
Notes; References; Chapter Seven The Meters of Epigram: Elegy and Its Rivals; 7.1
Beginnings; 7.2 Elegiacs and Alternatives; 7.3 Elegiacs, the Default Norm; 7.4 Rome;
7.5 Some Roman Alternatives to Elegiacs; References; Chapter Eight Epigram in Epic
and Greek Tragedy: Generic Interactions; 8.1 Epi(c)gram; 8.2 Tragedy and Epigram;
Notes; References; Further Reading; Chapter Nine Epigram and Satire; 9.1 Greek Precedents
for Satire: The Definition of the Genre in Horace: Uncertainties and Limits
9.2 Martial's Satirical Epigram: Proximity and Borders between Epigram and Satire9.3
Martial in Juvenal; References; Chapter Ten Immanent Genre Theory in Greek and Roman
Epigram; 10.1 Epigrammatic Brevity; 10.2 Faking Inscriptions; 10.3 Reading, Interpreting,
and Construing an Epigrammatic Tradition; 10.4 Everyday Life and the Art of Mocking;
10.5 Epigram and the Literary Canon; Notes; References; Chapter Eleven Epigram and
Rhetoric; 11.1 Epigrams in Speeches and Cultivated by Orators; 11.2 Rhetoric Virtues
of Epigrams; 11.3 Wit and Urbanitas
11.4 Sententia and Ridiculum Dictum ; by Orators, Rhetoricians, and Epigrammatists11.5
The Use of Rhetorical Figures in the Epigrammatic Tradition; 11.6 Epigrams About Rhetors
and Rhetoricians; Notes; References; Further Reading; Chapter Twelve Greek Anthologies
from the Hellenistic Age to the Byzantine Era: A Survey; 12.1 The Earliest Collections;
12.2 The Vienna Incipits, the Σωρóς, and Other Hellenistic Collections; 12.3 The Garlands
of Meleager and Philip; 12.4 Collections between Philip and Agathias; 12.5 The Cycle
of Agathias and the Anthology of Cephalas