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基本説明
This collection of recent articles provides convenient access to some of the best recent writing on Horace's Odes and Epodes. Several classic studies in French, German, and Italian are here translated into English for the first time.
Full Description
This collection of recent articles provides convenient access to some of the best recent writing on Horace's Odes and Epodes. Formalist, structuralist, and historicizing approaches alike offer insight into this complex poet, who reinvented lyric at the transition from the Republic to the Augustan principate. Several classic studies in French, German, and Italian are here translated into English for the first time. A thread linking many of the pieces is the recurring debate over the performance of Horace's Odes. Fiction? Literal reality? A figurative appropriation of Greek tradition within the bookish culture of late Hellenism? Arguments both for and against gain a hearing. Michele Lowrie's introduction surveys the state of current scholarship and offers guidance on the seminal issues confronting the interpretation of Horatian lyric today. Suggestions for further reading and a consolidated bibliography open avenues for more extensive research.
Contents
Introduction ; 1. The Horatian Ode ; 2. The Function of Wine in Horace's Odes ; 3. 'Slender Genre' and 'Slender Table' in Horace ; 4. How to End an Ode? ; 5. Occasion and Levels of Address in Horatian Lyric ; 6. The Maecenas Odes ; 7. Horace's Century Poem - A Processional Song? ; 8. Power and Impotence in Horace's Epodes ; 9. Canidia, Canicula, and the Decorum of Horace's Epodes ; 10. The Languages of Horace Odes 1.24 ; 11. Horace and the Greek Lyric Poets ; 12. Final Difficulties in the Career of an Iambic Poet: Epode 17 ; 13. Horace and the Aesthetics of Politics ; 14. Horace, Odes 4.5: Pro Reditu Imperatoris Caesari Divi Filii Augusti ; 15. A Parade of Lyric Predecessors: Horace C. 1.12-18 ; 16. Horace, a Greek Lyrist without Music ; 17. The Word Order of the Odes ; 18. Horace Talks Rough and Dirty: No Comment (Epodes 8 & 12) ; 19. Rituals in Ink: Horace on the Greek Lyric Tradition