Fathers and Sons in Virgil's Aeneid: Tum Genitor Natum.
Fathers and Sons in Virgil's Aeneid: Tum Genitor Natum.
Metodi di Pagamento
- PayPal
- Carta di Credito
- Bonifico Bancario
- Pubblica amministrazione
- Carta del Docente
Dettagli
- ISBN
- 9780873954020
- Autore
- Lee, M. Owen
- Editori
- State University of New York Press, Albany, 1979.
- Formato
- XI, 200 p. 15,2 x 1,9 x 23,5 cm, Original cloth.
- Sovracoperta
- False
- Lingue
- Inglese
- Copia autografata
- False
- Prima edizione
- False
Descrizione
From the library of Prof. Wolfgang Haase, long-time editor of ANRW and the International Journal of the Classical Tradition (IJCT). - Edges and corners slightly scuffed, otherwise clean. / Schnitt und Ecken leicht besto�n, sonst sauber. - From the Preface: Virgil is a writer the Latinist reads early, lives his life with, and often comes late to love. Through the years I have read him for myself far more than I have read him with or written on him for others. These are in fact the first pages I have ever published on the Aeneid, and the tone throughout them is personal. In the first sentence I speak in the first person. This is unusual and perhaps will be thought unacceptable in a book presented by a university press. But I have not written a work of scholarship. I have used footnotes mainly to support and in some cases to qualify statements which are likely to strike the wissenschaftlich Virgilian as strange if not altogether inappropriate. I have touched on subjects which may appear peripheral to my argument until the final chapters are reached. And I have, throughout, been subjective in my response to a poet we have been taught of late to read for his subjective responses. A recent introduction to the Aeneid makes a distinction between what a commentator may say and what an individual can find and respond to. I want to cross that line. So I have spoken as an individual. ISBN 9780873954020