Matches in Harvard for { <http://id.lib.harvard.edu/aleph/008834808/catalog> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 34 of
34
with 100 items per page.
- catalog contributor b12392981.
- catalog coverage "Rome In literature.".
- catalog created "2001.".
- catalog date "2001".
- catalog date "2001.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "2001.".
- catalog description "1. Horace. The diatribe satires (Sermones 1.1-1.3): "You're no Lucilius" Sermones book 1 and the problem of genre. Remembered voices: satire made new in Sermones 1.1. The social poetics of Horatian libertas: since when is "enough" a "feast"? Hitting satire's finis: along for the ride in Sermones 1.5. Dogged by ambition: Sermones 1.6-10. Book 2 and the totalitarian squeeze: new rules for a New Age. Panegyric bluster and Ennius' Scipio in Horace, Sermones 2.1. Coming to terms with Scipio: the new look of post-Actian satire. Big friends and bravado in Sermones 2.1. Book 2 and the hissings of compliance. Nasidienus' dinner-party: too much of not enough -- 2. Persius. Of narrative and cosmogony: Persius and the invention of Nero. The Prologue: top-down aesthetics and the making of oneself. Faking it in Nero's orgasmatron: Persius 1 and the death of criticism. The satirist-physician and his out-of-joint world. Satire's lean feast: finding a lost "pile" in P. 2. Teaching and tail-wagging, critique as crutch: P. 4. Left for broke: satire as legacy in P. 6 -- 3. Juvenal. A lost voice found: Juvenal and the poetics of too much, too late. Rememberred monsters: time warp and martyr tales in Trajan's Rome. Ghost-assault in Juv. 1. The poor man's Lucilius. Life on the edge: from exaggeration to self-defeat. Beating a dead fish: the emperor-satirist of Juv. 4. Satires 3 and 5: the poor man's lunch of Umbricius and Trebius.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references (p. 278-284) and index.".
- catalog extent "xviii, 289 p. ;".
- catalog identifier "052100621X (pbk.)".
- catalog identifier "0521803578 (hardback)".
- catalog issued "2001".
- catalog issued "2001.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press,".
- catalog spatial "Rome In literature.".
- catalog subject "871/.0109 21".
- catalog subject "Horace Criticism and interpretation.".
- catalog subject "Horace Critique et interprétation.".
- catalog subject "Juvenal Criticism and interpretation.".
- catalog subject "Juvénal Critique et interprétation.".
- catalog subject "Lucilius, Gaius, approximately 180 B.C.-approximately 102 B.C. Saturae.".
- catalog subject "Lucilius, Gaius, ca 180-ca 102 av. J.-C. Critique et interprétation.".
- catalog subject "Lucilius, Gaius, ca. 180-ca. 102 B.C. Criticism and interpretation.".
- catalog subject "PA6056 .F74 2001".
- catalog subject "Perse (Poète latin) Critique et interprétation.".
- catalog subject "Persius Criticism and interpretation.".
- catalog subject "Poésie satirique latine Histoire et critique.".
- catalog subject "Rome dans la littérature.".
- catalog subject "Verse satire, Latin History and criticism.".
- catalog tableOfContents "1. Horace. The diatribe satires (Sermones 1.1-1.3): "You're no Lucilius" Sermones book 1 and the problem of genre. Remembered voices: satire made new in Sermones 1.1. The social poetics of Horatian libertas: since when is "enough" a "feast"? Hitting satire's finis: along for the ride in Sermones 1.5. Dogged by ambition: Sermones 1.6-10. Book 2 and the totalitarian squeeze: new rules for a New Age. Panegyric bluster and Ennius' Scipio in Horace, Sermones 2.1. Coming to terms with Scipio: the new look of post-Actian satire. Big friends and bravado in Sermones 2.1. Book 2 and the hissings of compliance. Nasidienus' dinner-party: too much of not enough -- 2. Persius. Of narrative and cosmogony: Persius and the invention of Nero. The Prologue: top-down aesthetics and the making of oneself. Faking it in Nero's orgasmatron: Persius 1 and the death of criticism. The satirist-physician and his out-of-joint world. Satire's lean feast: finding a lost "pile" in P. 2. Teaching and tail-wagging, critique as crutch: P. 4. Left for broke: satire as legacy in P. 6 -- 3. Juvenal. A lost voice found: Juvenal and the poetics of too much, too late. Rememberred monsters: time warp and martyr tales in Trajan's Rome. Ghost-assault in Juv. 1. The poor man's Lucilius. Life on the edge: from exaggeration to self-defeat. Beating a dead fish: the emperor-satirist of Juv. 4. Satires 3 and 5: the poor man's lunch of Umbricius and Trebius.".
- catalog title "Satires of Rome : threatening poses from Lucilius to Juvenal / Kirk Freudenburg.".
- catalog type "Criticism, interpretation, etc. fast".
- catalog type "text".