The three major Roman love poets Tibullus, Propertius, and Ovid are celebrated for the ways in which they used social and historical contexts, as well as a highly developed sense of place and landscape, to inform their explorations of passion and desire. These writers pursued both men and women, and expressed romantic attachments to the bucolic countryside as well as to the city of Rome. At the same time, they initiated a vibrant exchange with other genres and authors, and explored the art of writing as much as the experience of love itself. This new and attractive survey of a genre that is...
The three major Roman love poets Tibullus, Propertius, and Ovid are celebrated for the ways in which they used social and historical contexts, as well...
What reader could fail to be enthralled by the Iliad and the Odyssey, those greatest heroic epics of antiquity? Yet the author of these immortal texts remains, in the end, an enigma. The central paradox of 'Homer' is that - while recognized as producing poetry of incomparable genius - even in the ancient world nobody knew who he was. As a result, the mythmaker became the subject of myth. For the satirist Lucian (c 125 - c 180 CE) he was a captive Babylonian. Other traditions have Homer born on Smyrna or the island of Chios, or portray him as a blind and wandering minstrel. In his new and...
What reader could fail to be enthralled by the Iliad and the Odyssey, those greatest heroic epics of antiquity? Yet the author of these immortal texts...
Lindsay C and Patricia Watson provide an attractive overview for students of classics and ancient history, as well as comparative literature of the chief themes of Marcus Valerius Martialias' (or Martial s) sardonic writings."
Lindsay C and Patricia Watson provide an attractive overview for students of classics and ancient history, as well as comparative literature of the ch...
Lindsay C. and Patricia Watson provide an attractive overview for students of classics and ancient history, as well as comparative literature of the chief themes of Marcus Valerius Martialias' (or Martial s) sardonic writings."
Lindsay C. and Patricia Watson provide an attractive overview for students of classics and ancient history, as well as comparative literature of the c...
Sophocles, Aeschylus and Euripides are often described as the greatest tragedians of the ancient world. Of these three pivotal founders of modern drama, Euripides is characterized as the interloper and the innovator: the man who put tragic verse into the mouths of slaves, women and the socially inferior in order to address vital social issues such as sex, class and gender relations. It is perhaps little wonder that his work should find such resonance in the modern day. In this concise introduction, Isabelle Torrance engages with the thematic, cultural and scholarly difficulties that...
Sophocles, Aeschylus and Euripides are often described as the greatest tragedians of the ancient world. Of these three pivotal founders of modern dram...