The present article examines the concept of a malicious fatum as evolved by the narrator of Lucan's Bellum civile and especially the subjective attitudes adopted by the protagonists Caesar, Pompey and Cato towards this destructive force. Since Lucan's fatum is not benevolent but malicious and hence contrary to the Stoic doctrine, the ethical value of the protagonists is not measured by their readiness to follow fate (as Stoics would have done), but by the degree of their intellectual resistance to fate: Caesar follows fate unhesitatingly; Pompey sometimes seems to believe, mistakenly, in its benevolence, but in crucial and decisive situations he recognizes its malignity; Cato is the only one who, from the very beginning, internalizes the in...
The entire dissertation/thesis text is included in the research.pdf file; the official abstract appe...
This dissertation explores the interaction between the theme of civil war and the epic genre. The fo...
In diesem Artikel werden wir die Exilschicksale, die in Ovids Exilelegien und in Lucans Bellum Civil...
This dissertation examines the thematics of virtus in Lucan's Bellum Civile. By showing how, in the ...
This article comments upon the episode of the dialogue between the Mytileneans and Pompey in Lucan's...
This article analyzes Lucan’s epic poem Pharsalia, which acquired the title of an “anti-epic” becaus...
The battlefield scene in Book 7 of lucan´s Bellum Ciuile clearly shows a redefinition of the traditi...
This article studies Lucan’s ambivalent attitude towards the motif of the violation of the landscape...
Scelerique nefando nomen erit virtus ( Virtue will be the name given to unspeakable crime, 1.667-68...
This dissertation seeks to demonstrate Lucan's profound engagement and conflict with two ancient int...
This thesis presents the case for the influence of Jewish religious thought, especially as transmitt...
The purpose of this study is to investigate and observe the complexity of Lucan’s Bellum Civile 8.56...
This article comments upon the episode of the dialogue between the Mytileneans and Pompey in Lucan’s...
Lucan's Bellum Civile is noted more for the vehemence in what it communicates regarding the civil wa...
In this contribution, I begin by studying the systematic allusions in the proem of Lucan’s Bellum Ci...
The entire dissertation/thesis text is included in the research.pdf file; the official abstract appe...
This dissertation explores the interaction between the theme of civil war and the epic genre. The fo...
In diesem Artikel werden wir die Exilschicksale, die in Ovids Exilelegien und in Lucans Bellum Civil...
This dissertation examines the thematics of virtus in Lucan's Bellum Civile. By showing how, in the ...
This article comments upon the episode of the dialogue between the Mytileneans and Pompey in Lucan's...
This article analyzes Lucan’s epic poem Pharsalia, which acquired the title of an “anti-epic” becaus...
The battlefield scene in Book 7 of lucan´s Bellum Ciuile clearly shows a redefinition of the traditi...
This article studies Lucan’s ambivalent attitude towards the motif of the violation of the landscape...
Scelerique nefando nomen erit virtus ( Virtue will be the name given to unspeakable crime, 1.667-68...
This dissertation seeks to demonstrate Lucan's profound engagement and conflict with two ancient int...
This thesis presents the case for the influence of Jewish religious thought, especially as transmitt...
The purpose of this study is to investigate and observe the complexity of Lucan’s Bellum Civile 8.56...
This article comments upon the episode of the dialogue between the Mytileneans and Pompey in Lucan’s...
Lucan's Bellum Civile is noted more for the vehemence in what it communicates regarding the civil wa...
In this contribution, I begin by studying the systematic allusions in the proem of Lucan’s Bellum Ci...
The entire dissertation/thesis text is included in the research.pdf file; the official abstract appe...
This dissertation explores the interaction between the theme of civil war and the epic genre. The fo...
In diesem Artikel werden wir die Exilschicksale, die in Ovids Exilelegien und in Lucans Bellum Civil...