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        15 Reading and Citing the Epigrams of Callimachus
- 
            
            
        Richard Hunter
        
                                    
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                                            Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter I
- Preface V
- Contents VII
- List of the Original Publication Venues XI
- List of Papers not Included in the Present Collection XIII
- 
                            Part I: Archaic and Classical Greek Literature
- 1 Alcibiades the Laughter-maker 3
- 2 The Songs of Demodocus: Compression and Extension in Greek Narrative Poetry 18
- 3 ‘Where do I begin?’: An Odyssean Narrative Strategy and its Afterlife 46
- 
                            Part II: Ancient Drama
- 4 The Garland of Hippolytus 67
- 5 Apollo and the Ion of Euripides: Nothing to do with Nietzsche? 84
- 6 Comedy and Reperformance 103
- 
                            Part III: Hellenistic Poetry
- 7 Language and Interpretation in Greek Epigram 131
- 8 The Gods of Callimachus 156
- 9 Festivals, Cults and the Construction of Consensus in Hellenistic Poetry 175
- 10 Theocritus and the Style of Hellenistic Poetry 193
- 11 Sweet Stesichorus: Theocritus 18 and the Helen Revisited 214
- 12 A Philosophical Death? 235
- 13 Hellenistic Poetry and the Archaeology of Leisure 245
- 14 Death of a Child: Grief Beyond the Literary? 267
- 15 Reading and Citing the Epigrams of Callimachus 286
- 16 Enkelados: Callimachus fr. 1.36 307
- 17 Sappho and Hellenistic Poetry 314
- 18 Theocritus and the Bucolic Homer 328
- 
                            Part IV: Latin Literature
- 19 Notes on the Ancient Reception of Sappho 349
- 20 One Verse of Mimnermus? Latin Elegy and Archaic Greek Elegy 364
- 21 Horace’s other Ars Poetica: Epistles 1.2 and Ancient Homeric Criticism 376
- 22 Some Dramatic Terminology 399
- 23 Regius urget: Hellenising Thoughts on Latin Intratextuality 411
- 24 The Geographies of Plautus’ Menaechmi 431
- 
                            Part V: The Ancient Novel
- 25 Fictional Anxieties 449
- 26 Rythmical Language and Poetic Citation in Greek Narrative Texts 462
- 
                            Part VI: Ancient Criticism and Scholarship
- 27 The Trojan Oration of Dio Chrysostom and Ancient Homeric Criticism 487
- 28 Plato’s Ion and the Origins of Scholarship 506
- 29 Attic Comedy in the Rhetorical and Moralising Traditions 521
- 30 ‘Clever about Verses’?: Plato and the ‘Scopas Ode’ (PMG 542 = 260 Poltera) 537
- 31 Serpents in the Soul: The ‘Libyan Myth’ of Dio Chrysostom 560
- 32 ‘Palaephatus’, Strabo and the Boundaries of Myth 578
- 33 The Rhetorical Criticism of Homer 598
- 34 The Hippias Minor and the Traditions of Homeric Criticism 633
- 35 Autobiography as Literary History: Dio Chrysostom, On exile 659
- 36 Eustathian Moments: Reading Eustathius’ Commentaries 682
- 37 Dionysius of Halicarnassus and the Idea of the Critic 750
- 38 Dio Chrysostom and the Citation of Tragedy 770
- 39 Some Problems in the ‘Deception of Zeus’ 787
- 
                            Part VII: Miscellaneous
- 40 The Letter of Aristeas 811
- 41 Pulling Apollo Apart 824
- 42 The Poetics of Greek Inscriptions 850
- 43 John Malalas and the Story of the Cyclops 875
- 44 Homer in Origen, Against Celsus 883
- General Index 909
- Index of Passages Discussed 915
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter I
- Preface V
- Contents VII
- List of the Original Publication Venues XI
- List of Papers not Included in the Present Collection XIII
- 
                            Part I: Archaic and Classical Greek Literature
- 1 Alcibiades the Laughter-maker 3
- 2 The Songs of Demodocus: Compression and Extension in Greek Narrative Poetry 18
- 3 ‘Where do I begin?’: An Odyssean Narrative Strategy and its Afterlife 46
- 
                            Part II: Ancient Drama
- 4 The Garland of Hippolytus 67
- 5 Apollo and the Ion of Euripides: Nothing to do with Nietzsche? 84
- 6 Comedy and Reperformance 103
- 
                            Part III: Hellenistic Poetry
- 7 Language and Interpretation in Greek Epigram 131
- 8 The Gods of Callimachus 156
- 9 Festivals, Cults and the Construction of Consensus in Hellenistic Poetry 175
- 10 Theocritus and the Style of Hellenistic Poetry 193
- 11 Sweet Stesichorus: Theocritus 18 and the Helen Revisited 214
- 12 A Philosophical Death? 235
- 13 Hellenistic Poetry and the Archaeology of Leisure 245
- 14 Death of a Child: Grief Beyond the Literary? 267
- 15 Reading and Citing the Epigrams of Callimachus 286
- 16 Enkelados: Callimachus fr. 1.36 307
- 17 Sappho and Hellenistic Poetry 314
- 18 Theocritus and the Bucolic Homer 328
- 
                            Part IV: Latin Literature
- 19 Notes on the Ancient Reception of Sappho 349
- 20 One Verse of Mimnermus? Latin Elegy and Archaic Greek Elegy 364
- 21 Horace’s other Ars Poetica: Epistles 1.2 and Ancient Homeric Criticism 376
- 22 Some Dramatic Terminology 399
- 23 Regius urget: Hellenising Thoughts on Latin Intratextuality 411
- 24 The Geographies of Plautus’ Menaechmi 431
- 
                            Part V: The Ancient Novel
- 25 Fictional Anxieties 449
- 26 Rythmical Language and Poetic Citation in Greek Narrative Texts 462
- 
                            Part VI: Ancient Criticism and Scholarship
- 27 The Trojan Oration of Dio Chrysostom and Ancient Homeric Criticism 487
- 28 Plato’s Ion and the Origins of Scholarship 506
- 29 Attic Comedy in the Rhetorical and Moralising Traditions 521
- 30 ‘Clever about Verses’?: Plato and the ‘Scopas Ode’ (PMG 542 = 260 Poltera) 537
- 31 Serpents in the Soul: The ‘Libyan Myth’ of Dio Chrysostom 560
- 32 ‘Palaephatus’, Strabo and the Boundaries of Myth 578
- 33 The Rhetorical Criticism of Homer 598
- 34 The Hippias Minor and the Traditions of Homeric Criticism 633
- 35 Autobiography as Literary History: Dio Chrysostom, On exile 659
- 36 Eustathian Moments: Reading Eustathius’ Commentaries 682
- 37 Dionysius of Halicarnassus and the Idea of the Critic 750
- 38 Dio Chrysostom and the Citation of Tragedy 770
- 39 Some Problems in the ‘Deception of Zeus’ 787
- 
                            Part VII: Miscellaneous
- 40 The Letter of Aristeas 811
- 41 Pulling Apollo Apart 824
- 42 The Poetics of Greek Inscriptions 850
- 43 John Malalas and the Story of the Cyclops 875
- 44 Homer in Origen, Against Celsus 883
- General Index 909
- Index of Passages Discussed 915