We have learned a great deal in recent years about reading Horace\u27s satires; there is now widespread agreement that the speaker of the satires is himself a character within them, a persona. Such a persona may be most effective when it has obvious connections with its creator, but that fact does not preclude the exaggeration of reality, or even its complete inversion. For Horace the implications of this approach are exciting: instead of a poet discoursing with cheerful earnestness on morality, on poetry and on his daily life, we have a fictional character, whom we do not have to take seriously at all.The three diatribe satires present us with a character so absurd that they have been taken, I think rightly, as parodies. Although the poems...
grantor: University of TorontoCommencing from a recognition of the ways in which the didac...
Horace’s Sermones have attracted so much critical attention in their lives that another study of th...
Comic satirists such as Aristophanes thrive on the tension that arises from their need to ridicule p...
This is the published version, also available here: http://www.dx.doi.org/10.1353/apa.0.0006.Horace'...
This is the published version, also available here: http://www.dx.doi.org/10.1353/apa.0.0006.Horace'...
Literary scholars use various methods to undermine and reject explicit declarations of the Roman ver...
textScholarship on Roman satire has been dominated for nearly fifty years by a rhetorical approach t...
textScholarship on Roman satire has been dominated for nearly fifty years by a rhetorical approach t...
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 184-210).In the ensuing dissertation I explore the exten...
In Satire 1.3 Horace upholds ‘Stoic’ aequabilitas, ironically aligning it with Epicurean moderation ...
if one goes looking for subversion in ancient literature, there is no more obvious hunting ground th...
By representing Maecenas in eleven of his eighteen satires, Horace introduces political realities. B...
By representing Maecenas in eleven of his eighteen satires, Horace introduces political realities. B...
A cluster of six poems, Odes 3. 7–12, enhanced by their position in the collection of Odes (fo...
This dissertation proposes a new interpretative approach to the theatrical material in Horace’s Serm...
grantor: University of TorontoCommencing from a recognition of the ways in which the didac...
Horace’s Sermones have attracted so much critical attention in their lives that another study of th...
Comic satirists such as Aristophanes thrive on the tension that arises from their need to ridicule p...
This is the published version, also available here: http://www.dx.doi.org/10.1353/apa.0.0006.Horace'...
This is the published version, also available here: http://www.dx.doi.org/10.1353/apa.0.0006.Horace'...
Literary scholars use various methods to undermine and reject explicit declarations of the Roman ver...
textScholarship on Roman satire has been dominated for nearly fifty years by a rhetorical approach t...
textScholarship on Roman satire has been dominated for nearly fifty years by a rhetorical approach t...
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 184-210).In the ensuing dissertation I explore the exten...
In Satire 1.3 Horace upholds ‘Stoic’ aequabilitas, ironically aligning it with Epicurean moderation ...
if one goes looking for subversion in ancient literature, there is no more obvious hunting ground th...
By representing Maecenas in eleven of his eighteen satires, Horace introduces political realities. B...
By representing Maecenas in eleven of his eighteen satires, Horace introduces political realities. B...
A cluster of six poems, Odes 3. 7–12, enhanced by their position in the collection of Odes (fo...
This dissertation proposes a new interpretative approach to the theatrical material in Horace’s Serm...
grantor: University of TorontoCommencing from a recognition of the ways in which the didac...
Horace’s Sermones have attracted so much critical attention in their lives that another study of th...
Comic satirists such as Aristophanes thrive on the tension that arises from their need to ridicule p...