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Full Description
Quintus Ennius (239-169 BCE) was Latin literature's extraordinary founding father: he composed a striking array of texts in a striking array of genres (tragedy, satire, philosophy, epigram, epic, and more), many of which he in fact introduced to, or invented at, Rome. Modern scholarship, however, has focused overwhelmingly on just one Ennian poem: his epic, the Annales. Assembling an international team of literary critics and philologists, Ennius Beyond Epic provides the first assessment of Ennius' corpus in all of its unruly totality. Its thirteen chapters range widely: some examine themes throughout the poet's fragmentary output; others offer analyses of particular non-epic texts (e.g., Andromacha, Sacra historia, Saturae); still others study the Roman reception of Ennius' corpus from Pacuvius to Catullus to Apuleius and beyond. The picture that emerges is of a New Ennius: a daring, experimental, and multiform author.
Contents
Part I. Multiform Ennius: 1. Romeing across Genres Thomas Biggs; 2. Generic (Non-) Distinctions in Ennius Gesine Manuwald; 3. Scipio Invicte! Ennius and the Poetry of Praise Sander M. Goldberg; 4. The Reception of Ennius' Saturae and Varia in Antiquity Alessandro Russo; 5. Varro's Menippean Ennius Jesse Hill; Part II. Tragic Ennius: 6. Anatomizing the Ennian Corpus: Medical Theory and the Body in the Tragedies Robert Cowan; 7. Ennian Tragedy as Musical Theatre Timothy J. Moore; 8. Staging Orbitas in Ennius' Andromacha Lauren Donovan Ginsberg; 9. Ennius Tragicus from Pacuvius to Lucretius Jason Nethercut; Part III. Personal Ennius: 10. Euhemeristic Translations: Ennius as Interpres in the Sacra historia Stephen Blair; 11. Ennius' Saturae and the Registers of Personal Poetry Anna Chahoud; 12. Fish Fiddle-de-Dee: The Hedyphagetica and the Poetics of Seafood at Rome Ian Goh; 13. Ille Ego: Ennian First Persons in Epic and Beyond Jackie Elliott.