Sallust

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NOTE EDITORE
The Roman historian Sallust emerges from recent scholarship as one of the most innovative and original writers of the ancient world. His works describe the political and moral crises of Rome's civil wars in the first century BCE and raise questions about the possibilities for narrating the past that matter profoundly to historians today. This volume provides a substantial introduction to scholarship on Sallust, bringing together some of the best and most important studies from the last decades and setting them within the context of a rich and continuing scholarly tradition that includes influential works by Eduard Schwartz (1897) and Kurt Latte (1935). Each contribution presents a distinctive vision of the historian and together they reveal different aspects of his complexity and surprising modernity. Substantial attention is given to all three of Sallust's works: the monographs on the Catilinarian conspiracy and the war with Jugurtha, as well as the fragmentary Histories. Translations of important contributions by German and Italian scholars as well as a survey of the early modern reception of Sallust offer unprecedented access to the scope of Sallust studies. This volume will be an important resource for students of ancient history and Latin literature at all levels and also introduce a wider scholarly audience to Sallust's importance and interest.

SOMMARIO
1 - Introduction2 - Sallust: Diction and Sentence Structure, Narrative Style and Composition, Personality and Times3 - The Moral Crisis in Sallust's View4 - A Traditional Pattern of Imitation in Sallust and his Sources5 - The Accounts of the Catilinarian Conspiracy6 - Intellectual Conflict and Mimesis in Sallust's Bellum Catilinae7 - The History of Mind and the Philosophy of History in Sallust's Bellum Catilinae8 - Sallust's Catiline and Cato the Censor9 - Jugurthine Disorder10 - Sallust's Jugurtha: An 'Historical Fragment'11 - Sallust's Jugurtha: Concord, Discord, and the Digressions12 - Non sunt composita verba mea: Reflected Narratology in Sallust's Speech of Marius13 - On the Introduction to Sallust's Histories14 - The Histories: The Crisis of the Res Publica15 - The Faces of Discord in Sallust's Histories16 - Princeps Historiae Romanae: Sallust in Renaissance Political Thought

AUTORE
William W. Batstone, Ph.D. Berkeley, works on literature and theory with a focus on the Latin literature of the Republic and triumviral period. He has published on both authors (Plautus, Cicero, Catullus, Caesar, Vergil, and Sulpicia) and theory (lyric, pastoral, Bakhtin, didactic, postmodernism, reception, and reader response), and is currently working on a web-based text and commentary on Cicero's Catilinarian Orations for Dickinson College Commentaries and a monograph on Sallust's Bellum Catilinae. Andrew Feldherr received his Ph. D. from Berkeley and has taught at Princeton University since 1997. His research interests focus on Roman historiography and Augustan poetry and he is the author of books on Livy and Ovid as well as articles on Catullus, Horace, Vergil, Sallust, Cicero, and Tacitus. His current project is a monograph on Sallust entitled After the Past: Sallust on History and Writing History.

ALTRE INFORMAZIONI
  • Condizione: Nuovo
  • ISBN: 9780198790983
  • Collana: Oxford Readings in Classical Studies
  • Dimensioni: 223 x 32.4 x 144 mm Ø 748 gr
  • Formato: Copertina rigida
  • Pagine Arabe: 508