, Lucan's "Bellum Civile": Between Epic Tradition and Aesthetic Innovation, Berlin 2010Homke, N. and Reitz, C. (2010) (eds) Lucan's Bellum Civile: Between Epic Tradition and Aesthetic Innovation. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter.Sannicandro 2010: L. Sannicandro, "Ut generos soceris mediae iu...
Lucan\"s Bellum Civile 来自 Semantic Scholar 喜欢 0 阅读量: 34 作者: Review by: E. J. Kenney 摘要: The first book of Lucan's "Bellum Civile" contains a brief catalog of Gallic deities set within the larger, so-called Gallic catalog. Passage 1.444-46, a direct address to the ...
Lucan invites his audience to recreate and reinvent the traumatic spectacle of past civil discord. Seen as postmemory, Lucan's retelling of the civil war becomes an integral part of the myth of Rome.doi:10.1163/9789004217096_015C. WaldeBrills Companion to Lucan...
Recent work on the reception of the Bellum Civile has brought out Lucan's importance for early modern English poets confronting the effects of civil war in national or cosmic histories. Lucan's relation to Virgil is transgressive in terms of size and scale and also of theme and ideology. ...
Janzen, DarrelVergilius
"Caesar, Lucan's Bellum Civile, and their Reception." In Julius Caesar in Western Culture, edited by Maria Wyke, 45-59. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing, 2006.Walde, C. 2006. "Caesar, Lucan's Bellum Civile, and Their Reception." In Julius Caesar in Western Culture, ed. M. Wyke, 45-61....
doi:10.1163/9789004217096BrillSocial Relations in Lucan’s Bellum Civile
I consider both the appearances of ghosts as actors in the narrative represented through direct mimesis as well as their evocation through the rhetorical figure of eidlopoeia.Neil W. BernsteinBrills Companion to LucanThe Dead and their Ghosts in the Bellum Civile: Lucan's Vision of History', ...
Roller 1996: M.B. Roller, Ethical Contradiction and the Fractured Community in Lucan's Bellum Civile, ClAnt XV 1996, pp. 319-347.Roller, M. B. 1996. `Ethical contradiction and the fractured community in Lucan's Bellum Civile', Classical Antiquity, 15/2: 319-347...
The spectacle of an envious fate (invida fatorum series) responsible for the destruction of the Republic elicits the aggressive resentment of the narrator, which precipitates the departure of the Bellum Civile from the praise-based norms of traditional epic....