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Details

Autor(en) / Beteiligte
Titel
Ancient fables - sour grapes? : new approaches
Auflage
1st ed
Ort / Verlag
Zürich, Switzerland : Georg Olms Verlag,
Erscheinungsjahr
[2022]
Link zum Volltext
Beschreibungen/Notizen
  • Includes bibliographical references and index.
  • Ursula Gärtner, Lukas Spielhofer (Hg.): Ancient Fables - Sour Grapes? New Approaches. 2022. 370 S. (SPUDASMATA, Band 195). -- Table of Contents -- Preface -- Ursula Gärtner, Lukas Spielhofer (University of Graz): Introduction: Ancient Fables - Sour Grapes? New Approaches -- 1. Fables as a (self-)referential genre from Hesiod to Avianus -- 2. Fable in the Second Sophistic -- 3. Fable in Late Antiquity and the reception of fables -- Appendix: Fables in other literary genres -- I. Fables as a (self-)referential genre from Hesiod to Avianus -- Jeremy B. Lefkowitz (Swarthmore College): Aesopica as a Distressed Genre -- 1. Distressed genres -- 2. Hesiod and Archilochus -- 3. Plato -- 4. Horace -- 5. Progymnasmata -- 6. Phaedrus and Babrius -- 7. Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Ursula Gärtner (University of Graz): Lupus in fabulis: Deconstructing Fables in Ancient Fable Collections -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Deconstructing fables: examples -- 2.1. lupus in fabula - Avianus -- 2.2. quantam sub titulis utilitatem reperies! - Phaedrus -- 2.2.1. Phaed. 1,1 (=Z.) -- 2.2.2. Phaed. 2,1 (=Z.) -- 2.2.3. Phaed. 3,1 (=Z.) -- 2.2.4. Phaedrus: Conclusion -- 2.3. καὶ τῶν ἰάμβων τοὺς ὀδόντας οὐ θήγω - Babrius -- 3. Conclusion -- Bibliography -- 1. Sources of texts quoted above -- 2. Secondary literature -- Silvia Mattiacci (University of Siena): Tribades et molles mares: Gender and Genre Interactions in Phaedrus' Fables -- 1. Fabulosa vetustas: the myth of origins -- 2. Examples from everyday life -- 3. Conclusion -- Bibliography -- II. Fable in the Second Sophistic -- Sonia Pertsinidis (Australian National University): Babrius as a Second Sophistic Poet -- 1. Fables and progymnasmata -- 2. Babrius' prologues -- 3. The fable collection -- 3.1. Speeches -- 3.2. Rhetorical questions -- 3.3. Antithesis -- 3.4. Fables useful for invective -- 3.5. Emotion -- 4. Conclusion.
  • Bibliography -- Benjamin Allgaier (University of Heidelberg): Word and Weapon: The Role of Language in Babrius 1 -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The encounter -- 3. πικρός at Babr. 1,15: a pointed echo? -- 4. Arrow-like choliambs: a Hipponactean touch? -- 5. Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Lukas Spielhofer (University of Graz): Nets, Rods, Flutes: The Metapoetics of Fishing in the Mythiambi -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Poetology in the two prologues -- 3. Metapoetics in Babr. 4, 6, and 9 -- 4. Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Marine Glénisson (Sorbonne Université): From One Fiction to Another: The Role of Fables in Novelistic Texts in the Second Sophistic (1st-3rd c. AD) -- 1. Fables, fiction, and rhetoric -- 2. Between biography and legend: Aesop as a character in fiction -- 3. Insertion of fables into fictional narratives -- 4. Constructing new fictional narratives out of pre-existing fables: the example of Lucian of Samosata -- 5. Conclusion -- Bibliography -- 1. Sources of texts quoted above -- 2. Secondary literature -- III. Fable in Late Antiquity and the reception of fables -- Caterina Mordeglia (University of Trento): The Lion King. History of a Fable -- Bibliography -- Federica Scognamiglio (Scuola Normale Superiore, Pisa): Αἴσωπος εὗρε τοῖς μύθοις πρᾶξιν βίου: The Paraphrasis Bodleiana of Babrius as a Moralistic Collection? -- 1. The manuscripts of the Bodleiana (and of Babrius): quot codices tot anthologiae? -- 2. Babrius and epimythia paraphrased -- 3. A collection of the collection: the example of the Vat. Pal. Gr. 367 (Bb) -- 4. Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Christopher Poms (University of Graz): Indignata cito ne stet Fortuna recursu: A Study of the Eighth Fable of Avianus and its Promythium -- 1. Introduction: on the pro- and epimythia in the work of Avianus -- 2. The fable: De Camelo, Avian. 8 -- 2.1. Text, translation, and structure.
  • 2.2. Greek predecessors and models -- 2.3. Latin fables as intertexts -- 3. The promythium: Avian. 8,1-4 -- 3.1. Analysis of the promythium and considerations regarding its authenticity -- 3.1.1. Fundamental points -- 3.1.2. Fortuna and the motif of the rota Fortunae -- 3.2. Dating the promythium -- 4. Summary and outlook -- Bibliography -- 1. Sources of texts quoted above -- 2. Further editions, commentaries, and secondary literature -- Simona Martorana (University of Kiel / University of Hamburg): Ancient Fables in the Middle Ages: A New Critical Edition of the Romulus Gallicanus -- 1. The new critical edition of RG: some examples and methodological remarks -- 2. Phaedrus and RG: the evolution of classical fables in the Middle Ages -- 3. Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Giovanni Zago (University of Florence): Echoes of Phaedrus -- 1. Latin Authors -- 1.1. Pseudo-Seneca, Octavia -- 1.2. Tacitus -- 1.3. Paulinus of Nola -- 2. Renaissance -- 2.1. Ariosto -- 2.2. Politian -- 2.2.1. -- 2.2.2. -- Bibliography -- Appendix: Fables in other Literary Genres -- Gert-Jan van Dijk (Leiden): Exemplum Fables (and Allusions) in Latin Literature I: Synopsis -- Table of Contents -- Introduction -- I Comedy -- 1A1 Titus Maccius Plautus7, Aulularia 229-235: The Ass, the Farmer, and the Ox -- II Satire -- 2F1 Quintus Ennius8, Satura incerta 2,21-58 Vahlen: ap. Aulum Gellium, Noctes Atticae 2,29: The Chick, the Farmer, the Father / Mother Lark, the Friends and the Harvesters -- 3F1 Gaius Lucilius11 1074-1083 K. (=980-989 M.) -- 4F1 Quintus Horatius Flaccus, Satirae 2,3,314-320: The Ox, the Toad, and the Offspring -- 4F2 Quintus Horatius Flaccus, Satirae 2,6,79-117: The Field Mouse, the Town Mouse, Somebody / Storekeeper -- 4A1 Quintus Horatius Flaccus, Satirae 2,3,298-299: The Men and Prometheus / Zeus.
  • 4A2 Quintus Horatius Flaccus, Satirae 2,5,56-57: The Crow and the Fox -- 5A1 Aulus Persius Flaccus 4,24: The Men and Prometheus / Zeus -- III Lyric -- 6A1 Gaius Valerius Catullus 22,21: The Men and Prometheus / Zeus -- IV Epigram -- 7F1 Decimus Magnus Ausonius, Epigrammata 1429: The Cyclops and the Man -- 8F1 Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum 4,3704,6: The He-Goat and the Vine -- V Epic -- 9A1 Flavius Cresconius Corippus, In Laudem Iustini minoris 2,249-253: The Members and the Stomach -- VI Historiography -- 10F1 Titus Livius 2,32,9-12: The Members and the Stomach -- 11F1 Gnaeus Pompeius Trogus ap. Marcum Iunianum Iustinum 43,4,4: The Bitch, the Bitch, and the Pups -- 12F1 Lucius Annaeus Florus, Epitome 1,17: The Members and the Stomach -- 13F1 Marcus Iunianus Iustinus 43,4,4: The Bitch, the Bitch, and the Pups -- 14F1 Sextus Aurelius Victor, De viris illustribus 18,2-4: The Members and the Stomach -- 15F1 Gregorius Turonensis, Historia Francorum 4,9: The Fox / Snake, the Fox and the Shepherd -- VII Rhetoric &amp -- Oratory -- 16A1 Marcus Fabius Quintilianus, Institutio oratoria 5,11,19: The Hawk and the Nightingale -- 16A2 ibid.: The Animals, the Fox, and the Lion -- 16A3 ib. 20: The Members and the Stomach -- 16A4 ib. 21: The Ass, the Farmer, and the Ox -- VIII Philosophy -- 17A1 Lucius Annaeus Seneca, De Beneficiis 2,19,1: Androclus / Shepherd, the Lion and the Men -- 17A2 Lucius Annaeus Seneca, De ira 2,28,8: The Men and Prome-theus / Zeus -- 18F1 Lucius Apuleius Madaurensis, De deo Socratis. Prologus: The Crow and the Fox -- IX Novel -- 19F1 Gaius Petronius Arbiter, Satyricon 111-112: The Husband, the Oxen, the Ploughman / Soldier, and the Woman -- X Biography -- 20F1 Gaius Suetonius Tranquillus, Domitianus 14: The He-Goat and the Vine -- XI Epistolography -- 21F1 Quintus Horatius Flaccus, Epistulae 1,,1,,72-74: The Ani-mals, the Fox, and the Lion.
  • 21F2 Quintus Horatius Flaccus, Epistulae 1,3,18-20: The Birds, the Rook, and Zeus -- 21F3 Quintus Horatius Flaccus, Epistulae 1,10,34-38: The Horse / Boar and the Hunter -- 21F4 Quintus Horatius Flaccus, Epistulae 1,7,29-33: The Fox / Snake, the Fox and the Shepherd -- 22A1 Hieronymus, Epistulae 29,7: The Dog and the Piece of Meat -- XII Law -- 23A1 Domitius Ulpianus 17,2,29,2: The Cow, the Goat, the Lion and the Sheep -- 24A1 Aristo on Ulpianus 17,2,29,2: The Cow, the Goat, the Lion and the Sheep -- 25A1 Cassianus on Ulpianus 17,2,29,2: The Cow, the Goat, the Lion and the Sheep -- XIII Grammar &amp -- Scholia -- 26F1 Pomponius Porphyrio on Quintus Horatius Flaccus, Satirae 2,3,299: The Men and Prometheus / Zeus -- 26F2 Pomponius Porphyrio on Quintus Horatius Flaccus, Satirae 2,5,56: The Crow and the Fox -- 27F1 Marius Servius Honoratus on Virgil, Georgica 1,378: The Eel / Frogs, the Log, (Mercury), the Snake, and Zeus -- 28A1 Pseudacro on Quintus Horatius Flaccus, Epistulae 2,3 (Ars Poetica), 437: The Crow and the Fox -- 28A2 Pseudacro on Quintus Horatius Flaccus, Satirae 2,3,298-299: The Men and Prometheus / Zeus -- 28A3 Pseudacro on Quintus Horatius Flaccus, Satirae 2,3,314-320: The Ox, the Toad, and the Offspring -- 28A4 Pseudacro on Quintus Horatius Flaccus, Satirae 2,6,80-117: The Field Mouse, the Town Mouse, Somebody / Storekeeper -- 28A5 Pseudacro on Quintus Horatius Flaccus, Satirae 2,5,56: The Crow and the Fox -- 29F1a Priscianus Caesariensis, Praeexercitamina 1: The Men, the Monkeys, and the Monkey -- 29F1b ibid.: The Men, the Monkeys, and the Monkey -- 29A1 Priscianus Caesariensis, Praeexercitamina 1: The Hawk and the Nightingale -- 29A2 ibid.: The Animals, the Fox, and the Monkey -- 29A3 ibid. -- 29A4 ibid.: The Fox / Snake, the Fox (Weasel) and the Shepherd -- XIV Collectanea -- 30F1 Aulus Gellius, Noctes Atticae 2,29.
  • 30F2 Aulus Gellius, Noctes Atticae 5,14.
  • Description based on print version record.
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Identifikatoren
ISBN: 3-487-42339-1
Titel-ID: 9925177431906463
Format
1 online resource (370 pages)
Schlagworte
Intertextuality