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Introduction : Roman satire | 1 | |
1 | Rome's first "satirists" : themes and genre in Ennius and Lucilius | 33 |
2 | The restless companion : Horace, Satires 1 and 2 | 48 |
3 | Speaking from silence : the stoic paradoxes of Persius | 62 |
4 | The poor man's feast : Juvenal | 81 |
5 | Citation and authority in Seneca's Apocolocyntosis | 95 |
6 | Late arrivals : Julian and Boethius | 109 |
7 | Epic allusion in Roman satire | 123 |
8 | Sleeping with the enemy : satire and philosophy | 146 |
9 | The satiric maze : Petronius, satire, and the novel | 160 |
10 | Satire as aristocratic play | 177 |
11 | Satire in a ritual context | 192 |
12 | Satire and the poet : the body as self-referential symbol | 207 |
13 | The libidinal rhetoric of satire | 224 |
14 | Roman satire in the sixteenth century | 243 |
15 | Alluding to satire : Rochester, Dryden, and others | 261 |
16 | The Horatian and the Juvenalesque in English letters | 284 |
17 | The "presence" of Roman satire : modern receptions and their interpretative implications | 299 |
Conclusion : the turnaround : a volume retrospect on Roman satires | 309 |
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Add The Cambridge Companion to Roman Satire, Satire as a distinct genre of writing was first developed by the Romans in the second century B.C.E. Regarded by them as uniquely their own, satire held a special place in the Roman imagination as the one genre that could address the problems of city li, The Cambridge Companion to Roman Satire to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add The Cambridge Companion to Roman Satire, Satire as a distinct genre of writing was first developed by the Romans in the second century B.C.E. Regarded by them as uniquely their own, satire held a special place in the Roman imagination as the one genre that could address the problems of city li, The Cambridge Companion to Roman Satire to your collection on WonderClub |