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    A Companion to the Aeneid in Translation: Volume 1: Introduction and Indices

    A Companion to the Aeneid in Translation: Volume 1 by Tanfield, Christopher;

    Introduction and Indices

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    Long description:

    With this three-volume companion, students can access the literary and historical significance of the Aeneid in English through an accessible yet authoritative introduction and line-by-line commentary. Written by a teacher who has taught the Aeneid in both English and Latin for more than twenty years, this guide unpicks Virgil's literary techniques, structures and historical resonances.

    Volume 1 gives you a broad introduction to the historical and philosophical background of the epic; to Virgil's life and works; to the central human and divine characters met in the poem; to how the epic reflects Roman society and its values; to Virgil's literary allusions and stylistic techniques; and to the reception and translation of the epic in later periods.

    This book also features maps and a family tree so you can trace the travels and lineage of the characters and grasp the geography of the Aeneid's Italy. Plus, the general index to the companion is a valuable reference tool. It can be used with any edition of the Aeneid in Latin or English, as entries are pegged to line numbers.

    Volumes 2 and 3 present a line-by-line commentary on the poem, with tables and box features illustrating key narrative arcs and structural patterns.

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    Table of Contents:

    Foreword
    Preface

    1. Historical background
    1.1: Rome's Origins - Rival Traditions
    1.2: Rome's Origins - Archaeology
    1.3: From Aeneas to Romulus - the Alban Kings (to 753 BCE)
    1.4: The Roman Kings (to 509 BCE)
    1.5: The Early Republic (to 133 BCE)
    1.6: The Late Republic (from 133 BCE onwards)
    1.7: Augustus in the Aeneid
    1.8: Literary Sources for Roman History

    2. Virgil's Life and Works
    2.1: Life
    2.2: Virgilian Appendix.
    2.3: Eclogues (or 'Bucolics')
    2.4: Georgics6
    2.5: A Planned Career?

    3. Main characters
    3.1: Characterisation in the Aeneid
    3.2: Aeneas
    3.3: Turnus
    3.4: Dido
    3.5: Ascanius
    3.6: Anchises
    3.7: Latinus and Evander
    3.8: Amata
    3.9: Lavinia
    3.10: Camilla

    4. The Gods and Fate
    4.1: Greek Versus Roman Gods
    4.2: Olympian Gods in Homer
    4.3: Olympian Gods in the Aeneid
    4.4: Fate
    4.5: Gods in Particular
    4.6: Gigantomachy
    4.7: Orphism and Pythagoreanism

    5. Philosophical background
    5.1: Plato and the Academy (First Half of the Fourth Century BCE)
    5.2: Aristotle and the Peripatetics (from the Late Fourth Century BCE)
    5.3: Epicureanism - History
    5.4: Stoicism - History
    5.5: Stoicism, Epicureanism and the Aeneid
    5.6: Cicero's Philosophical Writings

    6. Society
    6.1: Romanness
    6.2: Family
    6.3: Women - at Rome and in the Aeneid
    6.4: Religion
    6.5: Battles

    7. Literary aspects
    7.1: Structure
    7.2: The Hero
    7.3: Narratology
    7.4: Ekphrasis
    7.5: Similes
    7.6: Speeches
    7.7: Diction
    7.8: Metre

    8. Reading the Aeneid
    8.1: Intratextuality - Self-Allusion
    8.2: Intertextuality, Narrow Sense - External Allusion
    8.3: Allusion and Subjectivity
    8.4: Epic and other Literary Antecedents

    9. Reception
    9.1: The First 150 Years after Virgil
    9.2: The Second to Fifth Centuries - Servius and Macrobius
    9.3: The Middle Ages and Renaissance - Survival
    9.4: 16th to 19th Centuries - Resurgence and Eclipse
    9.5: 20th and 21st Centuries - Re-evaluation
    9.6: Literary Theory

    10. Translating the Aeneid (into English)

    11. Maps

    12. Family Tree of the Royal Houses of Greece and Troy

    Notes
    Select Bibliography
    Index to the Introduction
    Index to the Commentaries in Volumes 2 and 3

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    A Companion to the Aeneid in Translation: Volume 1: Introduction and Indices

    A Companion to the Aeneid in Translation: Volume 1: Introduction and Indices

    Tanfield, Christopher;

    10 116 HUF

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