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4. Une Cible de la Satire: Le locus amoenus
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Chapters in this book
- I-IV I
- Acknowledgements 3
- Introduction. Contents 5
- List of Illustrations 11
- Key to special Abbreviations 19
- 1. Mystery Elements in Menander’s Dyscolus 27
- 2. The Ass in the Cult of Dionysus as a Symbol of Toil and Suffering 41
- 3. The Samia of Menander: An Interpretation of its Plot and Theme 71
- 4. Une Cible de la Satire: Le locus amoenus 93
- 5. Skiagraphia once again 107
- 6. Ethos in Menander 145
- 7. The happy Ending: Classical Tragedy and Apulian funerary Art 153
- 8. Aeschylus’ Niobe and Apulian funerary Symbolism 169
- 9. Rhetoric and visual Aids in Greece and Rome 201
- 10. The Hetaera and the Housewife: The Splitting of the female Psyche in Greek Art 217
- 11. The Brink of Death in Classical Greek Painting 245
- 12. Patriotic Propaganda and counter-cultural Protest in Athens as evidenced by Vase Painting 271
- 13. The gentle Satire of the Penthesileia Painter: A new Cup with Dionysiac Motifs 277
- 14. The social Position of Attic Vase Painters and the Birth of Caricature 283
- 15. The Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum, the Lexicon Iconographicum Mythologiae Classicae and the Beazley Archive Project: Different Databases for the Study of Greek Iconography 293
- 16. Clytemnestra and Telephus in Greek Vase-Painting 313
- 17. The feminist View of the Past: A Comment on the ‘Decentering’ of the Poems of Ovid 325
- 18. Rembrandt’s Use of Classical Motifs 331
- 19. The Greek medical Texts and the sexual Ethos of ancient Athens 345
- 20. Scenes from Attic Tragedy on Vases found in Sicily and Lipari 361
- Bibliography of original Publications 371
- Figures 375
Chapters in this book
- I-IV I
- Acknowledgements 3
- Introduction. Contents 5
- List of Illustrations 11
- Key to special Abbreviations 19
- 1. Mystery Elements in Menander’s Dyscolus 27
- 2. The Ass in the Cult of Dionysus as a Symbol of Toil and Suffering 41
- 3. The Samia of Menander: An Interpretation of its Plot and Theme 71
- 4. Une Cible de la Satire: Le locus amoenus 93
- 5. Skiagraphia once again 107
- 6. Ethos in Menander 145
- 7. The happy Ending: Classical Tragedy and Apulian funerary Art 153
- 8. Aeschylus’ Niobe and Apulian funerary Symbolism 169
- 9. Rhetoric and visual Aids in Greece and Rome 201
- 10. The Hetaera and the Housewife: The Splitting of the female Psyche in Greek Art 217
- 11. The Brink of Death in Classical Greek Painting 245
- 12. Patriotic Propaganda and counter-cultural Protest in Athens as evidenced by Vase Painting 271
- 13. The gentle Satire of the Penthesileia Painter: A new Cup with Dionysiac Motifs 277
- 14. The social Position of Attic Vase Painters and the Birth of Caricature 283
- 15. The Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum, the Lexicon Iconographicum Mythologiae Classicae and the Beazley Archive Project: Different Databases for the Study of Greek Iconography 293
- 16. Clytemnestra and Telephus in Greek Vase-Painting 313
- 17. The feminist View of the Past: A Comment on the ‘Decentering’ of the Poems of Ovid 325
- 18. Rembrandt’s Use of Classical Motifs 331
- 19. The Greek medical Texts and the sexual Ethos of ancient Athens 345
- 20. Scenes from Attic Tragedy on Vases found in Sicily and Lipari 361
- Bibliography of original Publications 371
- Figures 375