Startseite Altertumswissenschaften & Ägyptologie 29. Statius’ Thebaid and the Genesis of Hatred
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29. Statius’ Thebaid and the Genesis of Hatred

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Roman Readings
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  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Content V
  3. Introduction VII
  4. I Comedy and Sexuality
  5. 1. Act 4 of the Menaechmi: Plautus and His Original 3
  6. 2. The Madman and the Doctor 15
  7. 3. Philemon’s Thesauros as a Dramatization of Peripatetic Ethics 32
  8. 4. Heautontimoroumenos and Adelphoe : A Study of Fatherhood in Terence and Menander 51
  9. 5. Sex, Status and Survival in Hellenistic Athens: A Study of Women in New Comedy 79
  10. 6. Stuprum: Public Attitudes and Penalties for Sexual Offences in Republican Rome 115
  11. 7a. Domina-tricks, or How to Construct a Good Whore from a Bad One 144
  12. 7b. Women of the Demi-Monde and Sisterly Solidarity in the Cistellaria 157
  13. 7c. Maidens in Other-Land, or Broads Abroad: Plautus’ Poenulae 176
  14. 8. Terence and the Familiarization of Comedy 195
  15. 9. Roman Experience of Menander in the Late Republic and Early Empire 215
  16. 10. Mime: The Missing Link in Roman Literary History 228
  17. II Rhetoric and Literary culture
  18. 11. Imitation and Evolution: The Discussion of Rhetorical Imitation in Cicero De oratore 2.87–97 and Some Related Problems in Ciceronian Theory 243
  19. 12. Imitation and Decline: Rhetorical Theory and Practice in the First Century AD 265
  20. 13. Orator and/et Actor 285
  21. 14. Disowning and Dysfunction in the Declamatory Family 302
  22. 15. Quintilian on the Uses and Methods of Declamation 320
  23. 16. The Concept of Nature and Human Nature in Quintilian’s Psychology and Theory of Instruction 331
  24. 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
  25. III Ovid’s Narrative Poem, the Fasti
  26. 18. Sexual Comedy in Ovid’s Fasti : Sources and Motivation 359
  27. 19. The role of Evander in Ovid’s Fasti 393
  28. 20. Ceres, Liber and Flora: Georgic and Anti-Georgic Elements in Ovid’s Fasti 409
  29. 21. The Fasti as a Source for Women’s Participation in Roman Cult 430
  30. IV Passion and Civil War in Roman Tragedy and Epic: Seneca, Lucan and Statius
  31. 22. Andromache’s Child in Euripides and Seneca 457
  32. 23. Statius’ Achilles, and His Trojan Model 475
  33. 24. Incest and Fratricide in Seneca’s Phoenissae 482
  34. 25. Caesar and the Mutiny: Lucan’s Reshaping of the Historical Tradition in De Bello Civili 5.237–373 502
  35. 26. Religio … dira loci : Two Passages in Lucan De Bello Civili 3 and Their Relation to Virgil’s Rome and Latium 519
  36. 27. The Angry Poet and the Angry Gods: Problems of Theodicy in Lucan’s Epic of Defeat 535
  37. 28. Discordia fratrum : Aspects of Lucan’s Conception of Civil War 559
  38. 29. Statius’ Thebaid and the Genesis of Hatred 577
  39. 30. The Perils of Prophecy: Statius’ Amphiaraus and His Literary Antecedents 607
  40. 31. Chironis exemplum : On Teachers and Surrogate Fathers in Achilleid and Silvae 624
Heruntergeladen am 8.9.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110229349.577/html
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