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        53 Flavian Epicists on Virgil’s Epic Technique
- 
            
            
        Philip Hardie
        
 
                                    
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                                            Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter I
 - Preface V
 - Contents IX
 - List of the Original Places of Publication XIII
 - List of Figures XIX
 - 
                            Part I: Virgil
 - 1 Atlas and Axis 1
 - 2 The Sacrifice of Iphigeneia: An Example of ‘Distribution’ of a Lucretian Theme in Virgil 16
 - 3 Cosmological Patterns in the Aeneid 26
 - 4 Aeneas and the Omen of the Swans (Verg. Aen. 1.393–400) 38
 - 5 Ships and Ship-names in the Aeneid 45
 - 6 The Aeneid and the Oresteia 56
 - 7 Virgil: A Paradoxical Poet? 71
 - 8 Another Look at Virgil’s Ganymede 87
 - 9 Political Education in Virgil’s Georgics 117
 - 10 Virgil’s Ptolemaic Relations 142
 - 11 Virgil’s Catullan Plots 166
 - 12 Trojan Palimpsests: The Archaeology of Roman History in Aeneid 2 194
 - 13 Dido and Lucretia 211
 - 14 Virgil and Tragedy 235
 - 
                            Part II: Reception and Translation of the Aeneid
 - 15 In the Steps of the Sibyl: Tradition and Desire in the Epic Underworld 253
 - 16 How Prudentian is the Aeneid? 265
 - 17 Strategies of Praise: The Aeneid and Renaissance Epic 278
 - 18 Virgil’s Fama in Leon Battista Alberti’s Momus 294
 - 19 Wordsworth’s Translation of Aeneid 1–3 and the Earlier Tradition of English Translations of Virgil 307
 - 
                            Part III: Ovid
 - 20 Ovid’s Theban History: The First ‘Anti-Aeneid’? 325
 - 21 The Janus Episode in Ovid’s Fasti 341
 - 22 Questions of Authority: The Invention of Tradition in Ovid Metamorphoses 15 356
 - 23 Ovid: A Poet of Transition? 374
 - 24 The Historian in Ovid: The Roman History of Metamorphoses 14–15 393
 - 25 Approximative Similes in Ovid: Incest and Doubling 411
 - 26 Ovidian Middles 433
 - 27 Lethaeus Amor: The Art of Forgetting 460
 - 28 The Self-Divisions of Scylla 482
 - 
                            Part IV: Reception of Ovid
 - 29 Statius’ Ovidian Poetics and the Tree of Atedius Melior (Silvae 2.3) 511
 - 30 Milton as Reader of Ovid’s Metamorphoses 524
 - 31 Ovidian Incarnations 544
 - 32 The Metamorphoses of Sin: Prudentius, Dante, Milton 571
 - 33 Ovidian Exile, Presence, and Metamorphosis in Late Antique Latin Poetry 588
 - 
                            Part V: Horace
 - 34 Vt pictura poesis? Horace and the Visual Arts 605
 - 35 The Ars Poetica and the Poetics of Didactic 634
 - 36 Horace and the Empedoclean Sublime 645
 - 
                            Part VI: Augustan Poetry and Culture
 - 37 Augustan Poets and the Mutability of Rome 663
 - 38 Paradox and the Marvellous in Augustan Literature and Culture 685
 - 39 Augustan Poetry and the Irrational 700
 - 40 Images of the Persian Wars in Rome 729
 - 41 Contrasts 746
 - 42 Phrygians in Rome/Romans in Phrygia 774
 - 43 Fame – The Last Word? 784
 - Index Locorum 801
 - General Index 805
 - Front Matter 2 813
 - Contents Volume II 817
 - List of Figures and Plates 821
 - 
                            Part VII: Roman Epic
 - 44 Poet, Patrons, Rulers: The Ennian Traditions 825
 - 45 Metamorphosis, Metaphor, and Allegory in Latin Epic 842
 - 46 The Word Personified: Fame and Envy in Virgil, Ovid, Spenser 860
 - 47 Allegorical Absences: Virgil, Ovid, Prudentius and Claudian 873
 - 48 Closure in Latin Εpic 893
 - 49 The Vertical Axis in Classical and Post-classical Epic 919
 - 50 The Hesiodic Catalogue of Women and Latin Poetry 936
 - 51 Crowds and Leaders in Imperial Historiography and in Epic 949
 - 
                            Part VIII: Neronian and Flavian Epic
 - 52 Lucan’s Song of the Earth 969
 - 53 Flavian Epicists on Virgil’s Epic Technique 993
 - 54 Flavian Epic and the Sublime 1014
 - 55 Tales of Unity and Division in Imperial Latin Epic 1029
 - 
                            Part IX: Lucretius and the Reception of Lucretius
 - 56 Reflections of Lucretius in Late Antique and Early Modern Biblical and Scientific Poetry: Providence and the Sublime 1053
 - 57 Lucretius in Late Antique Poetry: Paulinus of Nola, Claudian, Prudentius 1071
 - 
                            Part X: Later Latin Poetry
 - 58 Polyphony or Babel? Hosidius Geta’s Medea and the Poetics of the Cento 1087
 - 59 Martyrs’ Memorials: Glory, Memory, and Envy in Prudentius Peristephanon 1096
 - 60 Augustan and Late Antique Intratextuality: Virgil’s Aeneid and Prudentius’ Psychomachia 1121
 - 61 Cowherds and Saints: Paulinus of Nola Carmen 18 1132
 - 62 Unity and Disunity in Paulinus of Nola Poem 24 1149
 - 
                            Part XI: Post-classical
 - 63 Renaissance Latin Epic 1163
 - 64 Shepherds’ Songs: Generic Variation in Renaissance Latin Epic 1183
 - 65 Vida’s De Arte Poetica and the Transformation of Models 1192
 - 66 Multiple Allusivity in Girolamo Vida De Arte Poetica 1202
 - 67 Virgilian Imperialism, Original Sin, and Fracastoro’s Syphilis 1220
 - 68 Adamastor and the Epic Poet’s Dark Continent 1231
 - 69 The Augustanism of Ben Jonson’s Poetaster 1241
 - 70 Milton’s Epitaphium Damonis and the Virgilian Career 1251
 - 71 Miltonic Echoes: Fallen and Unfallen Resonances in Paradise Lost 1268
 - 72 Lucan in the English Renaissance 1289
 - 73 Abraham Cowley Davideis, Sacri Poematis Operis Imperfecti Liber Unus 1304
 - 74 Generic Dialogue and the Sublime in Cowley: Epic, Didactic, Pindaric 1321
 - 75 Ovid and Virgil at the North Pole: Marvell’s ‘A Letter to Dr Ingelo’ 1341
 - 
                            Part XII: Greek
 - 76 Imago Mundi: Cosmological and Ideological Aspects of the Shield of Achilles 1359
 - 77 Sign Language in On the Sign of Socrates 1394
 - 78 A Reading of Heliodorus, Aithiopika 3.4.1–5.2 1407
 - 79 Nonnus’ Typhon: The Musical Giant 1431
 - Bibliography 1443
 - Index Locorvm 1513
 - General Index 1517
 
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter I
 - Preface V
 - Contents IX
 - List of the Original Places of Publication XIII
 - List of Figures XIX
 - 
                            Part I: Virgil
 - 1 Atlas and Axis 1
 - 2 The Sacrifice of Iphigeneia: An Example of ‘Distribution’ of a Lucretian Theme in Virgil 16
 - 3 Cosmological Patterns in the Aeneid 26
 - 4 Aeneas and the Omen of the Swans (Verg. Aen. 1.393–400) 38
 - 5 Ships and Ship-names in the Aeneid 45
 - 6 The Aeneid and the Oresteia 56
 - 7 Virgil: A Paradoxical Poet? 71
 - 8 Another Look at Virgil’s Ganymede 87
 - 9 Political Education in Virgil’s Georgics 117
 - 10 Virgil’s Ptolemaic Relations 142
 - 11 Virgil’s Catullan Plots 166
 - 12 Trojan Palimpsests: The Archaeology of Roman History in Aeneid 2 194
 - 13 Dido and Lucretia 211
 - 14 Virgil and Tragedy 235
 - 
                            Part II: Reception and Translation of the Aeneid
 - 15 In the Steps of the Sibyl: Tradition and Desire in the Epic Underworld 253
 - 16 How Prudentian is the Aeneid? 265
 - 17 Strategies of Praise: The Aeneid and Renaissance Epic 278
 - 18 Virgil’s Fama in Leon Battista Alberti’s Momus 294
 - 19 Wordsworth’s Translation of Aeneid 1–3 and the Earlier Tradition of English Translations of Virgil 307
 - 
                            Part III: Ovid
 - 20 Ovid’s Theban History: The First ‘Anti-Aeneid’? 325
 - 21 The Janus Episode in Ovid’s Fasti 341
 - 22 Questions of Authority: The Invention of Tradition in Ovid Metamorphoses 15 356
 - 23 Ovid: A Poet of Transition? 374
 - 24 The Historian in Ovid: The Roman History of Metamorphoses 14–15 393
 - 25 Approximative Similes in Ovid: Incest and Doubling 411
 - 26 Ovidian Middles 433
 - 27 Lethaeus Amor: The Art of Forgetting 460
 - 28 The Self-Divisions of Scylla 482
 - 
                            Part IV: Reception of Ovid
 - 29 Statius’ Ovidian Poetics and the Tree of Atedius Melior (Silvae 2.3) 511
 - 30 Milton as Reader of Ovid’s Metamorphoses 524
 - 31 Ovidian Incarnations 544
 - 32 The Metamorphoses of Sin: Prudentius, Dante, Milton 571
 - 33 Ovidian Exile, Presence, and Metamorphosis in Late Antique Latin Poetry 588
 - 
                            Part V: Horace
 - 34 Vt pictura poesis? Horace and the Visual Arts 605
 - 35 The Ars Poetica and the Poetics of Didactic 634
 - 36 Horace and the Empedoclean Sublime 645
 - 
                            Part VI: Augustan Poetry and Culture
 - 37 Augustan Poets and the Mutability of Rome 663
 - 38 Paradox and the Marvellous in Augustan Literature and Culture 685
 - 39 Augustan Poetry and the Irrational 700
 - 40 Images of the Persian Wars in Rome 729
 - 41 Contrasts 746
 - 42 Phrygians in Rome/Romans in Phrygia 774
 - 43 Fame – The Last Word? 784
 - Index Locorum 801
 - General Index 805
 - Front Matter 2 813
 - Contents Volume II 817
 - List of Figures and Plates 821
 - 
                            Part VII: Roman Epic
 - 44 Poet, Patrons, Rulers: The Ennian Traditions 825
 - 45 Metamorphosis, Metaphor, and Allegory in Latin Epic 842
 - 46 The Word Personified: Fame and Envy in Virgil, Ovid, Spenser 860
 - 47 Allegorical Absences: Virgil, Ovid, Prudentius and Claudian 873
 - 48 Closure in Latin Εpic 893
 - 49 The Vertical Axis in Classical and Post-classical Epic 919
 - 50 The Hesiodic Catalogue of Women and Latin Poetry 936
 - 51 Crowds and Leaders in Imperial Historiography and in Epic 949
 - 
                            Part VIII: Neronian and Flavian Epic
 - 52 Lucan’s Song of the Earth 969
 - 53 Flavian Epicists on Virgil’s Epic Technique 993
 - 54 Flavian Epic and the Sublime 1014
 - 55 Tales of Unity and Division in Imperial Latin Epic 1029
 - 
                            Part IX: Lucretius and the Reception of Lucretius
 - 56 Reflections of Lucretius in Late Antique and Early Modern Biblical and Scientific Poetry: Providence and the Sublime 1053
 - 57 Lucretius in Late Antique Poetry: Paulinus of Nola, Claudian, Prudentius 1071
 - 
                            Part X: Later Latin Poetry
 - 58 Polyphony or Babel? Hosidius Geta’s Medea and the Poetics of the Cento 1087
 - 59 Martyrs’ Memorials: Glory, Memory, and Envy in Prudentius Peristephanon 1096
 - 60 Augustan and Late Antique Intratextuality: Virgil’s Aeneid and Prudentius’ Psychomachia 1121
 - 61 Cowherds and Saints: Paulinus of Nola Carmen 18 1132
 - 62 Unity and Disunity in Paulinus of Nola Poem 24 1149
 - 
                            Part XI: Post-classical
 - 63 Renaissance Latin Epic 1163
 - 64 Shepherds’ Songs: Generic Variation in Renaissance Latin Epic 1183
 - 65 Vida’s De Arte Poetica and the Transformation of Models 1192
 - 66 Multiple Allusivity in Girolamo Vida De Arte Poetica 1202
 - 67 Virgilian Imperialism, Original Sin, and Fracastoro’s Syphilis 1220
 - 68 Adamastor and the Epic Poet’s Dark Continent 1231
 - 69 The Augustanism of Ben Jonson’s Poetaster 1241
 - 70 Milton’s Epitaphium Damonis and the Virgilian Career 1251
 - 71 Miltonic Echoes: Fallen and Unfallen Resonances in Paradise Lost 1268
 - 72 Lucan in the English Renaissance 1289
 - 73 Abraham Cowley Davideis, Sacri Poematis Operis Imperfecti Liber Unus 1304
 - 74 Generic Dialogue and the Sublime in Cowley: Epic, Didactic, Pindaric 1321
 - 75 Ovid and Virgil at the North Pole: Marvell’s ‘A Letter to Dr Ingelo’ 1341
 - 
                            Part XII: Greek
 - 76 Imago Mundi: Cosmological and Ideological Aspects of the Shield of Achilles 1359
 - 77 Sign Language in On the Sign of Socrates 1394
 - 78 A Reading of Heliodorus, Aithiopika 3.4.1–5.2 1407
 - 79 Nonnus’ Typhon: The Musical Giant 1431
 - Bibliography 1443
 - Index Locorvm 1513
 - General Index 1517