This thesis examines the narrative strategies of one of the longest and most complex Late Antique prose fictional narratives, Heliodorus’ Aithiopika, through the lens of modern detective narrative. It argues that the various kinds of lying by the characters of the former parallel the conventions, aspirations, and narrative strategies of the latter in order to establish a precedent for the backwards construction of meaning and reading for clues in antiquity. To this end, I look at the puzzling blood-bath of the introductory scene (Chapter 2), as well as the narrative arcs of three of the novel’s characters, Knemon, a seeming buffoon who turns into an unexpected murderer (Chapters 3 and 4), Kalasiris, an overeager religious interpreter of ora...
This thesis is a study on the use of works of art in Greek novels, based on the idea that the noveli...
Scores of messengers, heralds, and other emissaries fill the pages of Herodotus’ Histories. Neverth...
This dissertation explores how Greek and Roman authors use board games and games of chance to answer...
This thesis examines the narrative strategies of one of the longest and most complex Late Antique pr...
This PhD thesis explores the conflicting narratological momenta at play in Heliodorus’s Aethiopica (...
Heliodorus, the 4th century AD novelist, incorporated thematic elements from the Odyssey into his ow...
This thesis consists of four individual studies, divided into two sections; "Narrative Structure" an...
This thesis proposes that the ancient Greek novels theorize their readers from within themselves. Th...
Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Natal, Durban, 1998.The thesis consists of an introduction to and comme...
The philosopher Aristotle appears in seven detective novels by the academic Margaret Doody in which ...
The thesis comprises, in roughly equal proportions, a commentary on the first book of Heliodoros Ai...
Despite the long debate over whether it was composed in the third or fourth century C.E., Heliodorus...
This thesis proposes that the ancient Greek novels theorize their readers from within themselves. Th...
This dissertation examines the representation of the body-text in the ‘Big Five’ Greek novels of the...
This article demonstrates that Cnemon’s story in Heliodorus’ Aethiopica intertexts with the novella...
This thesis is a study on the use of works of art in Greek novels, based on the idea that the noveli...
Scores of messengers, heralds, and other emissaries fill the pages of Herodotus’ Histories. Neverth...
This dissertation explores how Greek and Roman authors use board games and games of chance to answer...
This thesis examines the narrative strategies of one of the longest and most complex Late Antique pr...
This PhD thesis explores the conflicting narratological momenta at play in Heliodorus’s Aethiopica (...
Heliodorus, the 4th century AD novelist, incorporated thematic elements from the Odyssey into his ow...
This thesis consists of four individual studies, divided into two sections; "Narrative Structure" an...
This thesis proposes that the ancient Greek novels theorize their readers from within themselves. Th...
Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Natal, Durban, 1998.The thesis consists of an introduction to and comme...
The philosopher Aristotle appears in seven detective novels by the academic Margaret Doody in which ...
The thesis comprises, in roughly equal proportions, a commentary on the first book of Heliodoros Ai...
Despite the long debate over whether it was composed in the third or fourth century C.E., Heliodorus...
This thesis proposes that the ancient Greek novels theorize their readers from within themselves. Th...
This dissertation examines the representation of the body-text in the ‘Big Five’ Greek novels of the...
This article demonstrates that Cnemon’s story in Heliodorus’ Aethiopica intertexts with the novella...
This thesis is a study on the use of works of art in Greek novels, based on the idea that the noveli...
Scores of messengers, heralds, and other emissaries fill the pages of Herodotus’ Histories. Neverth...
This dissertation explores how Greek and Roman authors use board games and games of chance to answer...