Julia Haig Gaisser (ed.)Catullus
Oxford Readings in Classical Studies
Catullus
Herausgeber: Gaisser, Julia Haig
Julia Haig Gaisser (ed.)Catullus
Oxford Readings in Classical Studies
Catullus
Herausgeber: Gaisser, Julia Haig
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A collection of the most interesting and important articles on Catullus from around 1950 to 2000, together with three short pieces from the Renaissance. The readings demonstrate a number of approaches and challenges readers to look at Catullus in different ways. An introduction by Julia Haig Gaisser traces recent themes in Catullan criticism.
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A collection of the most interesting and important articles on Catullus from around 1950 to 2000, together with three short pieces from the Renaissance. The readings demonstrate a number of approaches and challenges readers to look at Catullus in different ways. An introduction by Julia Haig Gaisser traces recent themes in Catullan criticism.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: OUP Oxford
- Seitenzahl: 618
- Erscheinungstermin: 13. September 2007
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 222mm x 145mm x 40mm
- Gewicht: 992g
- ISBN-13: 9780199280346
- ISBN-10: 0199280347
- Artikelnr.: 23576524
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: OUP Oxford
- Seitenzahl: 618
- Erscheinungstermin: 13. September 2007
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 222mm x 145mm x 40mm
- Gewicht: 992g
- ISBN-13: 9780199280346
- ISBN-10: 0199280347
- Artikelnr.: 23576524
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Julia Haig Gaisser is Research Professor in the Humanities, Bryn Mawr College.
* Introduction: Themes in Catullan Criticism (c.1950-2000)
* Catullus and his Books
* Catullus, c. 1
* Catullus 116
* Metrical Variations and Some Textual Problems in Catullus
* Catulli Veronensis Liber
* The Collection
* New Criticism and Catullus' Sapphics
* Catullan `Otiosi': The Lover and the Poet
* Catullus 11: The Ironies of Integrity
* Neoteric Poetics
* The Neoteric Poets
* The Neoteric Elegiacs and the Epigrams Proper
* Allusion and Intertext
* Poetic Memory and the Art of Allusion
* Poem 101
* Catullus, Ennius, and the Poetics of Allusion
* Threads in the Labyrinth: Competing Views and Voices in Catullus 64
* Obscenity and Invective
* Obscenity in Catullus
* Catullus and the Art of Crudity
* Debating the Sparrow
* How the Sparrow of Catullus is to be Understood, and a Passage
Pointed out in Martial
* The Flea and the Sparrow
* O factum male! O miselle passer!
* Animal Imagery and the Sparrow
* In Defence of Catullus' Dirty Sparrow
* Roman Realities
* A World Not Ours
* Catullus XLII
* Friendship, Politics, and Literature in Catullus: Poems 1, 65 and 66,
116
* Non inter nota sepulchra: Catullus 101 and Roman Funerary Ritual
* The Lens of Theory
* `Shall I compare thee . . .?': Catullus 68B and the Limits of Analogy
* Ego mulier: The Construction of Male Sexuality in Catullus
* Sappho 31 and Catullus 51: The Dialogism of Lyric
* Ceveat lector: Catullus and the Rhetoric of Performance
* Catullus and his Books
* Catullus, c. 1
* Catullus 116
* Metrical Variations and Some Textual Problems in Catullus
* Catulli Veronensis Liber
* The Collection
* New Criticism and Catullus' Sapphics
* Catullan `Otiosi': The Lover and the Poet
* Catullus 11: The Ironies of Integrity
* Neoteric Poetics
* The Neoteric Poets
* The Neoteric Elegiacs and the Epigrams Proper
* Allusion and Intertext
* Poetic Memory and the Art of Allusion
* Poem 101
* Catullus, Ennius, and the Poetics of Allusion
* Threads in the Labyrinth: Competing Views and Voices in Catullus 64
* Obscenity and Invective
* Obscenity in Catullus
* Catullus and the Art of Crudity
* Debating the Sparrow
* How the Sparrow of Catullus is to be Understood, and a Passage
Pointed out in Martial
* The Flea and the Sparrow
* O factum male! O miselle passer!
* Animal Imagery and the Sparrow
* In Defence of Catullus' Dirty Sparrow
* Roman Realities
* A World Not Ours
* Catullus XLII
* Friendship, Politics, and Literature in Catullus: Poems 1, 65 and 66,
116
* Non inter nota sepulchra: Catullus 101 and Roman Funerary Ritual
* The Lens of Theory
* `Shall I compare thee . . .?': Catullus 68B and the Limits of Analogy
* Ego mulier: The Construction of Male Sexuality in Catullus
* Sappho 31 and Catullus 51: The Dialogism of Lyric
* Ceveat lector: Catullus and the Rhetoric of Performance
* Introduction: Themes in Catullan Criticism (c.1950-2000)
* Catullus and his Books
* Catullus, c. 1
* Catullus 116
* Metrical Variations and Some Textual Problems in Catullus
* Catulli Veronensis Liber
* The Collection
* New Criticism and Catullus' Sapphics
* Catullan `Otiosi': The Lover and the Poet
* Catullus 11: The Ironies of Integrity
* Neoteric Poetics
* The Neoteric Poets
* The Neoteric Elegiacs and the Epigrams Proper
* Allusion and Intertext
* Poetic Memory and the Art of Allusion
* Poem 101
* Catullus, Ennius, and the Poetics of Allusion
* Threads in the Labyrinth: Competing Views and Voices in Catullus 64
* Obscenity and Invective
* Obscenity in Catullus
* Catullus and the Art of Crudity
* Debating the Sparrow
* How the Sparrow of Catullus is to be Understood, and a Passage
Pointed out in Martial
* The Flea and the Sparrow
* O factum male! O miselle passer!
* Animal Imagery and the Sparrow
* In Defence of Catullus' Dirty Sparrow
* Roman Realities
* A World Not Ours
* Catullus XLII
* Friendship, Politics, and Literature in Catullus: Poems 1, 65 and 66,
116
* Non inter nota sepulchra: Catullus 101 and Roman Funerary Ritual
* The Lens of Theory
* `Shall I compare thee . . .?': Catullus 68B and the Limits of Analogy
* Ego mulier: The Construction of Male Sexuality in Catullus
* Sappho 31 and Catullus 51: The Dialogism of Lyric
* Ceveat lector: Catullus and the Rhetoric of Performance
* Catullus and his Books
* Catullus, c. 1
* Catullus 116
* Metrical Variations and Some Textual Problems in Catullus
* Catulli Veronensis Liber
* The Collection
* New Criticism and Catullus' Sapphics
* Catullan `Otiosi': The Lover and the Poet
* Catullus 11: The Ironies of Integrity
* Neoteric Poetics
* The Neoteric Poets
* The Neoteric Elegiacs and the Epigrams Proper
* Allusion and Intertext
* Poetic Memory and the Art of Allusion
* Poem 101
* Catullus, Ennius, and the Poetics of Allusion
* Threads in the Labyrinth: Competing Views and Voices in Catullus 64
* Obscenity and Invective
* Obscenity in Catullus
* Catullus and the Art of Crudity
* Debating the Sparrow
* How the Sparrow of Catullus is to be Understood, and a Passage
Pointed out in Martial
* The Flea and the Sparrow
* O factum male! O miselle passer!
* Animal Imagery and the Sparrow
* In Defence of Catullus' Dirty Sparrow
* Roman Realities
* A World Not Ours
* Catullus XLII
* Friendship, Politics, and Literature in Catullus: Poems 1, 65 and 66,
116
* Non inter nota sepulchra: Catullus 101 and Roman Funerary Ritual
* The Lens of Theory
* `Shall I compare thee . . .?': Catullus 68B and the Limits of Analogy
* Ego mulier: The Construction of Male Sexuality in Catullus
* Sappho 31 and Catullus 51: The Dialogism of Lyric
* Ceveat lector: Catullus and the Rhetoric of Performance







