Sammelwerk
The reception of Greek lyric poetry in the ancient world: transmission, canonization and paratext Currie, Bruno • Rutherford, Ian [Hrsg.]. |
In Reihe: | Mnemosyne. Supplementum / 430 Studies in archaic and classical Greek song / 5 |
Deskriptoren: | |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Permalink:
http://opac.regesta-imperii.de/id/2639980
Alternative Formate:
MARC21 | BibTeX
[ |
Autoren suchen: Currie, Bruno • Rutherford, Ian |
Inhalt
The Reception of Greek Lyric Poetry in the Ancient World: Transmission, Canonization, and Paratext |
New Philology and the Classics: Accounting for Variation in the Textual Transmission of Greek Lyric and Elegiac Poetry |
Tyrtaeus the Lawgiver? Plutarch and Diodorus Siculus on Tyrtaeus fr. 4 |
On the Shaping of the Lyric Canon in Athens |
Melic Poets and Melic Forms in the Comedies of Aristophanes: Poetic Genres and the Creation of a Canon |
Structuring the Genre: The Fifth- and Fourth-Century Authors on Elegy and Elegiac Poets |
The Peripatetics and the Transmission of Lyric |
The Self-Revealing Poet: Lyric Poetry and Cultural History in the Peripatetic School |
Lyric Reception and Sophistic Literarity in Timotheus' "Persae" |
“Total Reception": Stesichorus as Revenant in Plato's "Phaedus" (with a New Stesichorean Fragment?) |
Indirect Tradition on Sappho's "kertomia" |
Alcaeus' "stasiotica": Catullan and Horatian Readings |
Pindar, Paratexts, and Poetry: Architectural Metaphors in Pindar and Roman Poets (Virgil, Horace, Propertius, Ovid, and Statius) |
Sympotic Sappho? The Recontextualization of Sappho's Verses in Athenaeus |
A Sophisticated "hetaira" at Table: Athenaeus' Sappho |
Solon and the Democratic Biographical Tradition |
Strategies of Quoting Solon's Poetry in Plutarch's "Life of Solon" |
Playing with Terpander & Co.: Lyric, Music, and Politics in Aelius Aristides' "To the Rhodians": Concerning Concord |
Historiography and Ancient Pindaric Scholarship |
Poem-Titles in Simonides, Pindar, and Bacchylides |
"Ita dictum accipe": Pomponius Porphyrio on Early Greek Lyric Poetry in Horace |
Pindar and His Commentator Eustathius of Thessalonica |