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8. Terence and the Familiarization of Comedy
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Content V
- Introduction VII
-
I Comedy and Sexuality
- 1. Act 4 of the Menaechmi: Plautus and His Original 3
- 2. The Madman and the Doctor 15
- 3. Philemon’s Thesauros as a Dramatization of Peripatetic Ethics 32
- 4. Heautontimoroumenos and Adelphoe : A Study of Fatherhood in Terence and Menander 51
- 5. Sex, Status and Survival in Hellenistic Athens: A Study of Women in New Comedy 79
- 6. Stuprum: Public Attitudes and Penalties for Sexual Offences in Republican Rome 115
- 7a. Domina-tricks, or How to Construct a Good Whore from a Bad One 144
- 7b. Women of the Demi-Monde and Sisterly Solidarity in the Cistellaria 157
- 7c. Maidens in Other-Land, or Broads Abroad: Plautus’ Poenulae 176
- 8. Terence and the Familiarization of Comedy 195
- 9. Roman Experience of Menander in the Late Republic and Early Empire 215
- 10. Mime: The Missing Link in Roman Literary History 228
-
II Rhetoric and Literary culture
- 11. Imitation and Evolution: The Discussion of Rhetorical Imitation in Cicero De oratore 2.87–97 and Some Related Problems in Ciceronian Theory 243
- 12. Imitation and Decline: Rhetorical Theory and Practice in the First Century AD 265
- 13. Orator and/et Actor 285
- 14. Disowning and Dysfunction in the Declamatory Family 302
- 15. Quintilian on the Uses and Methods of Declamation 320
- 16. The Concept of Nature and Human Nature in Quintilian’s Psychology and Theory of Instruction 331
- 17. The Synchronistic Chapter of Gellius (N.A. 17.21) and Some Aspects of Roman Chronology and Cultural History Between 60 and 50 BCE 343
-
III Ovid’s Narrative Poem, the Fasti
- 18. Sexual Comedy in Ovid’s Fasti : Sources and Motivation 359
- 19. The role of Evander in Ovid’s Fasti 393
- 20. Ceres, Liber and Flora: Georgic and Anti-Georgic Elements in Ovid’s Fasti 409
- 21. The Fasti as a Source for Women’s Participation in Roman Cult 430
-
IV Passion and Civil War in Roman Tragedy and Epic: Seneca, Lucan and Statius
- 22. Andromache’s Child in Euripides and Seneca 457
- 23. Statius’ Achilles, and His Trojan Model 475
- 24. Incest and Fratricide in Seneca’s Phoenissae 482
- 25. Caesar and the Mutiny: Lucan’s Reshaping of the Historical Tradition in De Bello Civili 5.237–373 502
- 26. Religio … dira loci : Two Passages in Lucan De Bello Civili 3 and Their Relation to Virgil’s Rome and Latium 519
- 27. The Angry Poet and the Angry Gods: Problems of Theodicy in Lucan’s Epic of Defeat 535
- 28. Discordia fratrum : Aspects of Lucan’s Conception of Civil War 559
- 29. Statius’ Thebaid and the Genesis of Hatred 577
- 30. The Perils of Prophecy: Statius’ Amphiaraus and His Literary Antecedents 607
- 31. Chironis exemplum : On Teachers and Surrogate Fathers in Achilleid and Silvae 624
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Content V
- Introduction VII
-
I Comedy and Sexuality
- 1. Act 4 of the Menaechmi: Plautus and His Original 3
- 2. The Madman and the Doctor 15
- 3. Philemon’s Thesauros as a Dramatization of Peripatetic Ethics 32
- 4. Heautontimoroumenos and Adelphoe : A Study of Fatherhood in Terence and Menander 51
- 5. Sex, Status and Survival in Hellenistic Athens: A Study of Women in New Comedy 79
- 6. Stuprum: Public Attitudes and Penalties for Sexual Offences in Republican Rome 115
- 7a. Domina-tricks, or How to Construct a Good Whore from a Bad One 144
- 7b. Women of the Demi-Monde and Sisterly Solidarity in the Cistellaria 157
- 7c. Maidens in Other-Land, or Broads Abroad: Plautus’ Poenulae 176
- 8. Terence and the Familiarization of Comedy 195
- 9. Roman Experience of Menander in the Late Republic and Early Empire 215
- 10. Mime: The Missing Link in Roman Literary History 228
-
II Rhetoric and Literary culture
- 11. Imitation and Evolution: The Discussion of Rhetorical Imitation in Cicero De oratore 2.87–97 and Some Related Problems in Ciceronian Theory 243
- 12. Imitation and Decline: Rhetorical Theory and Practice in the First Century AD 265
- 13. Orator and/et Actor 285
- 14. Disowning and Dysfunction in the Declamatory Family 302
- 15. Quintilian on the Uses and Methods of Declamation 320
- 16. The Concept of Nature and Human Nature in Quintilian’s Psychology and Theory of Instruction 331
- 17. The Synchronistic Chapter of Gellius (N.A. 17.21) and Some Aspects of Roman Chronology and Cultural History Between 60 and 50 BCE 343
-
III Ovid’s Narrative Poem, the Fasti
- 18. Sexual Comedy in Ovid’s Fasti : Sources and Motivation 359
- 19. The role of Evander in Ovid’s Fasti 393
- 20. Ceres, Liber and Flora: Georgic and Anti-Georgic Elements in Ovid’s Fasti 409
- 21. The Fasti as a Source for Women’s Participation in Roman Cult 430
-
IV Passion and Civil War in Roman Tragedy and Epic: Seneca, Lucan and Statius
- 22. Andromache’s Child in Euripides and Seneca 457
- 23. Statius’ Achilles, and His Trojan Model 475
- 24. Incest and Fratricide in Seneca’s Phoenissae 482
- 25. Caesar and the Mutiny: Lucan’s Reshaping of the Historical Tradition in De Bello Civili 5.237–373 502
- 26. Religio … dira loci : Two Passages in Lucan De Bello Civili 3 and Their Relation to Virgil’s Rome and Latium 519
- 27. The Angry Poet and the Angry Gods: Problems of Theodicy in Lucan’s Epic of Defeat 535
- 28. Discordia fratrum : Aspects of Lucan’s Conception of Civil War 559
- 29. Statius’ Thebaid and the Genesis of Hatred 577
- 30. The Perils of Prophecy: Statius’ Amphiaraus and His Literary Antecedents 607
- 31. Chironis exemplum : On Teachers and Surrogate Fathers in Achilleid and Silvae 624