palme kitabevi, akademik kitap, hazırlık kitapları, eğitim yayınları, üniversite kitapları, sınav hazırlık, ders kitapları, akademik kaynak
 
Kapat
0 Ürün
Alışveriş sepetinizde boş.
Kategoriler
    Filtreler
    Preferences
    Ara

    Portraits: Biographical Representation in the Greek and Latin Literature of the Roman Empire

    Yayınevi : OUP Oxford
    Yazarlar : M. J. Edwards , Simon Swain
    ISBN :9780198149378
    Sayfa Sayısı :284
    Baskı Sayısı :1
    Ebatlar :14x21 cm
    Basım Yılı :1997
    Fiyat ve temin süresi için lütfen bize ulaşın

    Bu ürün için iade seçeneği bulunmamaktadır.

    Tükendi

    Tahmini Kargoya Veriliş Zamanı: 6-8 hafta

    Portraits: Biographical Representation in the Greek and Latin Literature of the Roman Empire

    This collection of essays illustrates the growth of interest in the representation of individuals, which resulted from the changed environment within which Greek and Latin authors worked in late antiquity. The writings studied are not confined to biographies in the formal sense, since the aim of the collection is to show how the gamut of literary genres was modified by the presence of a new biographical ingredient. Simon Swain's general survey of the biographical elements in late antique writing is followed by studies of Aulus Gellius, Dio Cassius, Jewish Martyrs, Simon Magus, Constantine, and Daniel the Stylite. The subjects all fall within the period of the Roman empire, and illustrate the importance of individual personality in literature for an age in which few individuals could hope to achieve political significance. Mark Edward's epilogue discusses the possibility of a distinction between `biography' and 'the biographical' in ancient literature.

    Kendi yorumunuzu yazın
    • Sadece kayıtlı kullanıcılar yorum yazabilir.
    • Kötü
    • Mükemmel

    Portraits: Biographical Representation in the Greek and Latin Literature of the Roman Empire

    This collection of essays illustrates the growth of interest in the representation of individuals, which resulted from the changed environment within which Greek and Latin authors worked in late antiquity. The writings studied are not confined to biographies in the formal sense, since the aim of the collection is to show how the gamut of literary genres was modified by the presence of a new biographical ingredient. Simon Swain's general survey of the biographical elements in late antique writing is followed by studies of Aulus Gellius, Dio Cassius, Jewish Martyrs, Simon Magus, Constantine, and Daniel the Stylite. The subjects all fall within the period of the Roman empire, and illustrate the importance of individual personality in literature for an age in which few individuals could hope to achieve political significance. Mark Edward's epilogue discusses the possibility of a distinction between `biography' and 'the biographical' in ancient literature.

    >