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This accessible one-volume survey of the literature of Greece and Rome covers the period between Homer around 700 BC and Augustine around AD 410.
Highlights what is important historically and of continuing interest and value in classical literature.
An introduction by the editor presents essential information in a concise, accessible way.
Each chapter focuses on a particular genre or area of literature.
This structure allows readers to see continuities between different periods and to move easily between the Greek and Roman worlds.
Includes extensive quotations in English.
A timeline and an index of authors help to make the material as accessible as possible.
List of contents
Preface.
Acknowledgements.
Abbreviations.
Maps.
Introduction.
1. Epic.
2. Drama.
3. Rhetoric.
4. History, Biography, Fiction.
5. Erotic Literature.
6. Literature and Power.
7. Aspects of Wit.
8. Thinkers.
9. Believers.
Appendix 1 Translations of Four Longer Passages.
Appendix 2 Timeline.
Appendix 3 List of Roman Emperors.
Appendix 4 Major Greek and Roman Gods.
Notes.
Further Reading.
Index
About the author
Richard Rutherford is Tutor in Greek and Latin Literature at Christ Church, Oxford, and a University Lecturer at Oxford. His previous publications include
The Meditations of Marcus Aurelius: A Study (1989),
The Art of Plato (1995) and
Homer (1996).
Summary
* A accessible one--volume survey of the literature of Greece and Rome. * Covers the period between Homer around 700 BC and Augustine around AD 410. * Highlights what is important historically and of continuing interest and value in classical literature.
Report
"The book is a tour de force ... Rutherford speaks directly to his readers, telling them what they need to know to set a work into its historical and social context ... Even scholars who are completely familiar with all the texts Rutherford discusses will profit from consulting this book." Times Literary Supplement
Rutherford s book provides an accessible, affordable, and concise introduction to its topic. Bryn Mawr Classical Review
"As well as Rutherford s broader constituency, this book should make particularly invaluable reading for undergraduates, sixth-formers who are looking to pursue Classics at university (and it should be a must for school libraries)." Greece and Rome