This paper is devoted to the humour in Plutarch’s speech De Vitando Aere Alieno (That One Ought Not to Borrow). Although the problem raised in this work appears to be serious, Plutarch included humorous elements. Among the ancient Greeks and Romans, not only was usury a grave issue, but also one which gave rise to humour. Plutarch used the tradition of comedy and Cynic-Stoic diatribe in a rhetorical purpose. His aim was to persuade the listener or the reader to adopt a moral attitude towards usury
Balty Janine. John R. Clarke, Looking at Laughter. Humor, Power, and Transgression in Roman Visual C...
International audienceOur Greek sources on Socrates place the philosopher in two types of contact wi...
In Horace’s epistle to Augustus the motif of the laughing Democritus takes a striking shape. The Rom...
Plutarch, a Greek biographer of the imperial period (1st and 2nd centuries A.D.), finds support on d...
Maria Plaza sets out to analyze the function of humor in the Roman satirists Horace, Persius, and Ju...
Throughout his life, Solon intervened at different times in the Athenian political scene, usually ag...
International audienceAmong Latin authors, Cicero is our most important source on the top-ic of laug...
Plutarch quotes Attic comedy as evidence, but he also uses both invective and stereotypes from comed...
This dissertation examines Roman comedy (comoedia palliata) and its influence from the stage onto th...
The article analyses and compares different passages of Cicero’s dialogue De oratore and Quintilian’...
This project analyzes the functions of dark humor in Latin literature of the Flavian period and imme...
In the present article I discuss the comic elements engaged by Herodotus in the verbal stratum and c...
Plato explicitly theorises about laughter in three dialogues: Republic (388a-389a, 605c-607a); Phile...
Platón y Aristóteles diferencian entre un humor hostil y un humor moderado. En particular, Aristótel...
This essay argues that a full understanding of Shaftesbury’s notions of humour and laughter requires...
Balty Janine. John R. Clarke, Looking at Laughter. Humor, Power, and Transgression in Roman Visual C...
International audienceOur Greek sources on Socrates place the philosopher in two types of contact wi...
In Horace’s epistle to Augustus the motif of the laughing Democritus takes a striking shape. The Rom...
Plutarch, a Greek biographer of the imperial period (1st and 2nd centuries A.D.), finds support on d...
Maria Plaza sets out to analyze the function of humor in the Roman satirists Horace, Persius, and Ju...
Throughout his life, Solon intervened at different times in the Athenian political scene, usually ag...
International audienceAmong Latin authors, Cicero is our most important source on the top-ic of laug...
Plutarch quotes Attic comedy as evidence, but he also uses both invective and stereotypes from comed...
This dissertation examines Roman comedy (comoedia palliata) and its influence from the stage onto th...
The article analyses and compares different passages of Cicero’s dialogue De oratore and Quintilian’...
This project analyzes the functions of dark humor in Latin literature of the Flavian period and imme...
In the present article I discuss the comic elements engaged by Herodotus in the verbal stratum and c...
Plato explicitly theorises about laughter in three dialogues: Republic (388a-389a, 605c-607a); Phile...
Platón y Aristóteles diferencian entre un humor hostil y un humor moderado. En particular, Aristótel...
This essay argues that a full understanding of Shaftesbury’s notions of humour and laughter requires...
Balty Janine. John R. Clarke, Looking at Laughter. Humor, Power, and Transgression in Roman Visual C...
International audienceOur Greek sources on Socrates place the philosopher in two types of contact wi...
In Horace’s epistle to Augustus the motif of the laughing Democritus takes a striking shape. The Rom...