Seeks to transform our understanding of the beloved Latin poet by confronting centuries-old problems about his surviving text and the relationship between his poetry and his depicted life circumstances. Argues that Catullus produced three books of poems, whose design explains the notoriously jarring shifts in his work.
Seeks to transform our understanding of the beloved Latin poet by confronting centuries-old problems about his surviving text and the relationship between his poetry and his depicted life circumstances. Argues that Catullus produced three books of poems, whose design explains the notoriously jarring shifts in his work.
John Schafer is a Visiting Assistant Professor at Wake Forest University, North Carolina. He specialises in Republican and Imperial Latin literature, and is the author of numerous articles on Seneca, Vergil and Horace, as well as the monograph Ars Didactica: Seneca's 94th and 95th Letters (2009).
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction Prolegomenon to the Catullus problem 1. Ax (Poems 52-60) 2. A (Poems 1-51) 3. B (Poems 61-64) and C1 (65-68b) 4. C2 (Poems 69-116) Conclusion: two interpretive applications Bibliography Index Index Locorum.
Introduction Prolegomenon to the Catullus problem 1. Ax (Poems 52-60) 2. A (Poems 1-51) 3. B (Poems 61-64) and C1 (65-68b) 4. C2 (Poems 69-116) Conclusion: two interpretive applications Bibliography Index Index Locorum.
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