2 History and Transmission of the Text 13 J. L. Butrica
3 Authorial Arrangement of the Collection: Debate Past and Present 35 Marilyn B. Skinner
Part II Contexts of Production 55
4 The Valerii Catulli of Verona 57 T. P. Wiseman
5 The Contemporary Political Context 72 David Konstan
6 The Intellectual Climate 92 Andrew Feldherr
7 Gender and Masculinity 111 Elizabeth Manwell
Part III Influences 129
8 Catullus and Sappho 131 Ellen Greene
9 Catullus and Callimachus 151 Peter E. Knox
Part IV Stylistics 173
10 Neoteric Poetics 175 W. R. Johnson
11 Elements of Style in Catullus 190 George A. Sheets
12 Catullus and Elite Republican Social Discourse 212 Brian A. Krostenko
Part V Poems and Groups of Poems 233
13 Catullus and the Programmatic Poem: The Origins, Scope, and Utility of a Concept 235 William W. Batstone
14 The Lesbia Poems 254 Julia T. Dyson Hejduk
15 Sexuality and Ritual: Catullus Wedding Poems 276 Vassiliki Panoussi
16 Catullan Intertextuality: Apollonius and the Allusive Plot of Catullus 64 293 Jeri Blair DeBrohun
17 Poem 68: Love and Death, and the Gifts of Venus and the Muses 314 Elena Theodorakopoulos
18 Social Commentary and Political Invective 333 W. Jeffrey Tatum
Part VI Reception 355
19 Catullus and Horace 357 Randall L. B. McNeill
20 Catullus and Vergil 377 Christopher Nappa
21 Catullus and Roman Love Elegy 399 Paul Allen Miller
22 Catullus and Martial 418 Sven Lorenz
23 Catullus in the Renaissance 439 Julia Haig Gaisser
24 The Modern Reception of Catullus 461 Brian Arkins
Part VII Pedagogy 479
25 Catullus in the Secondary School Curriculum 481 Ronnie Ancona and Judith P. Hallett
26 Catullus in the College Classroom 503 Daniel H. Garrison
Part VIII Translation 521
27 Translating Catullus 523 Elizabeth Vandiver
Consolidated Bibliography 542
General Index 568
Index Locorum 585
Marilyn B. Skinner is professor of classics at the University of Arizona in Tucson. Her previous publications include
Catullus Passer: The Arrangement of the Book of Polymetric Poems (1981),
Catullus in Verona (2003),
Vergil, Philodemus, and the Augustans (co–edited, 2004), and
Sexuality in Greek and Roman Culture (Blackwell, 2005).
A Companion to Catullus addresses the central themes in Catullan studies, providing readers with the fundamental knowledge necessary to appreciate and understand the poet s work.
This significant collection of essays from internationally renowned scholars includes discussions about production, genre, style, and reception, as well as interpretive essays on key poems and groups of poems. Grounding the author firmly in the socio–historical world around him, this companion reflects the most recent trends in the field. Chapters provide convenient surveys of complex issues and challenge received wisdom by presenting original readings of major poems and suggesting new interpretations of biographical evidence.