Thomas Habinek / Alessandro Schiesaro (eds.)
The Roman Cultural Revolution
Herausgeber: Habinek, Thomas N.; Schiesaro, Alessandro
Thomas Habinek / Alessandro Schiesaro (eds.)
The Roman Cultural Revolution
Herausgeber: Habinek, Thomas N.; Schiesaro, Alessandro
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Multi-disciplinary exploration of the Roman Revolution as a cultural phenomenon.
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Multi-disciplinary exploration of the Roman Revolution as a cultural phenomenon.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 264
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. November 2007
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 19mm
- Gewicht: 566g
- ISBN-13: 9780521580922
- ISBN-10: 0521580927
- Artikelnr.: 23438377
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 264
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. November 2007
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 19mm
- Gewicht: 566g
- ISBN-13: 9780521580922
- ISBN-10: 0521580927
- Artikelnr.: 23438377
Introduction; Part I. The Transformation of Cultural Systems: 1. Mutatio
morum: the idea of a cultural revolution Andrew Wallace-Hadrill; 2. The
invention of sexuality in the world-city of Rome Thomas Habinek; 3.
Recitatio and the reorganization of the space of public discourse Florence
Dupont; Part II. Texts and Contexts: 4. The boundaries of knowledge in
Virgil's Georgics Alessandro Schiesaro; 5. Ut arte emendaturus fortunam,
Horace, Nasidienus and the art of satire Ellen Oliensis; 6. Horace and the
material culture of Augustan Rome: a revisionary reading Eleanor Winsor
Leach; 7. Images of the city: Propertius' new-old Rome Elaine Fantham; 8.
Livy's revolution: civic identity and the creation of the Res publica
Andrew Feldherr; 9. Concealing/revealing: gender and the play of meaning in
the monuments of Augustan Rome Barbara Kellum; 10. Questions of authority:
the invention of tradition in Ovid's Metamorphoses 15 Philip Hardie; 11. A
preface to the history of declamation: whose speech? whose history? Martin
Bloomer.
morum: the idea of a cultural revolution Andrew Wallace-Hadrill; 2. The
invention of sexuality in the world-city of Rome Thomas Habinek; 3.
Recitatio and the reorganization of the space of public discourse Florence
Dupont; Part II. Texts and Contexts: 4. The boundaries of knowledge in
Virgil's Georgics Alessandro Schiesaro; 5. Ut arte emendaturus fortunam,
Horace, Nasidienus and the art of satire Ellen Oliensis; 6. Horace and the
material culture of Augustan Rome: a revisionary reading Eleanor Winsor
Leach; 7. Images of the city: Propertius' new-old Rome Elaine Fantham; 8.
Livy's revolution: civic identity and the creation of the Res publica
Andrew Feldherr; 9. Concealing/revealing: gender and the play of meaning in
the monuments of Augustan Rome Barbara Kellum; 10. Questions of authority:
the invention of tradition in Ovid's Metamorphoses 15 Philip Hardie; 11. A
preface to the history of declamation: whose speech? whose history? Martin
Bloomer.
Introduction; Part I. The Transformation of Cultural Systems: 1. Mutatio
morum: the idea of a cultural revolution Andrew Wallace-Hadrill; 2. The
invention of sexuality in the world-city of Rome Thomas Habinek; 3.
Recitatio and the reorganization of the space of public discourse Florence
Dupont; Part II. Texts and Contexts: 4. The boundaries of knowledge in
Virgil's Georgics Alessandro Schiesaro; 5. Ut arte emendaturus fortunam,
Horace, Nasidienus and the art of satire Ellen Oliensis; 6. Horace and the
material culture of Augustan Rome: a revisionary reading Eleanor Winsor
Leach; 7. Images of the city: Propertius' new-old Rome Elaine Fantham; 8.
Livy's revolution: civic identity and the creation of the Res publica
Andrew Feldherr; 9. Concealing/revealing: gender and the play of meaning in
the monuments of Augustan Rome Barbara Kellum; 10. Questions of authority:
the invention of tradition in Ovid's Metamorphoses 15 Philip Hardie; 11. A
preface to the history of declamation: whose speech? whose history? Martin
Bloomer.
morum: the idea of a cultural revolution Andrew Wallace-Hadrill; 2. The
invention of sexuality in the world-city of Rome Thomas Habinek; 3.
Recitatio and the reorganization of the space of public discourse Florence
Dupont; Part II. Texts and Contexts: 4. The boundaries of knowledge in
Virgil's Georgics Alessandro Schiesaro; 5. Ut arte emendaturus fortunam,
Horace, Nasidienus and the art of satire Ellen Oliensis; 6. Horace and the
material culture of Augustan Rome: a revisionary reading Eleanor Winsor
Leach; 7. Images of the city: Propertius' new-old Rome Elaine Fantham; 8.
Livy's revolution: civic identity and the creation of the Res publica
Andrew Feldherr; 9. Concealing/revealing: gender and the play of meaning in
the monuments of Augustan Rome Barbara Kellum; 10. Questions of authority:
the invention of tradition in Ovid's Metamorphoses 15 Philip Hardie; 11. A
preface to the history of declamation: whose speech? whose history? Martin
Bloomer.