Madness Unchained

Madness Unchained
Title Madness Unchained PDF eBook
Author Lee Fratantuono
Publisher Lexington Books
Pages 452
Release 2007
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 9780739122426

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The book aims at providing a coherent guide to the entirety of Virgil's Aeneid, with analysis of every scene and, in some cases, every line of crucial passages. The book tries to provide a guide to the vast bibliography and scholarly apparatus that has grown around Virgil studies (especially over the past century), and to offer some critical study of what Virgil's purpose and intent may have been in crafting his response to Augustus' political ascendancy in Rome, Rome's history of near-constant civil strife, and the myths of Rome's origins and their conflicting Trojan, Greek, and native Italian origins.

Madness Unchained

Madness Unchained
Title Madness Unchained PDF eBook
Author Lee Fratantuono 2
Publisher Lexington Books
Pages 447
Release 2007-06-07
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 0739157418

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Madness Unchained is a comprehensive introduction to and study of Virgil's Aeneid. The book moves through Virgil's epic scene by scene and offers a detailed explication of not only all the major (and many minor) difficulties of interpretation, but also provides a cohesive argument that explores Virgil's point in writing this epic of Roman mythology and Augustan propaganda: the role of fury or madness in Rome's national identity. There have been other books that have attempted to present a complete guide to the Aeneid, but this is the first to address every episode in the poem, omitting nothing, and aiming itself at an audience that ranges from the Advanced Placement Virgil student in secondary school to the professional Virgilian and everyone in-between, both Latinists and the Latin-less. Individual chapters correspond to the books of the poem; unlike some volumes that prejudice the reader's interpretation of the work by rearranging the order of episodes in order to influence their impact on the audience, this book moves in the order Virgil intended, and also gives rather fuller exposition to the second half of the poem, Virgil's self-proclaimed 'greater work' (maius opus).

Madness Triumphant

Madness Triumphant
Title Madness Triumphant PDF eBook
Author Lee Fratantuono
Publisher Lexington Books
Pages 496
Release 2012-06-28
Genre Philosophy
ISBN 0739173154

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Madness Triumphant: A Reading of Lucan’s Pharsalia offers the most detailed and comprehensive analysis of Lucan’s epic poem of the civil war between Caesar and Pompey to have appeared in English. In the manner of his previous books on Virgil and Ovid, Professor Fratantuono considers the Pharsalia as an epic investigation of the nature of fury and madness in Rome, this time during the increasing insanity of Nero’s reign.

Sporting Cultures, 1650–1850

Sporting Cultures, 1650–1850
Title Sporting Cultures, 1650–1850 PDF eBook
Author Daniel O’Quinn
Publisher University of Toronto Press
Pages 385
Release 2018-01-01
Genre History
ISBN 1487500327

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Sporting Cultures, 1650-1850 is a collection of essays that charts important developments in the study of sport in the eighteenth century.

Aeneid 5

Aeneid 5
Title Aeneid 5 PDF eBook
Author Vergil
Publisher Hackett Publishing
Pages 205
Release 2014-12-01
Genre Foreign Language Study
ISBN 1585107824

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This is the fifth in the series of books of the Aeneid which include the text in Latin, with an introduction and commentary.

The Body of the Combatant in the Ancient Mediterranean

The Body of the Combatant in the Ancient Mediterranean
Title The Body of the Combatant in the Ancient Mediterranean PDF eBook
Author Hannah-Marie Chidwick
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing
Pages 257
Release 2024-07-25
Genre History
ISBN 1350240885

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This volume explores a broad range of perceptions, receptions and constructions of the soldierly body in the ancient world, putting the notion of embodiment at the forefront of its engagement with ancient warfare. The 10 chapters presented here respond directly to the question of how war was embodied in antiquity by drawing on detailed case studies to examine the sensory and bodily experience of combat across wide-ranging time periods and geographies, from classical Greece and Rome to Roman Britain and Persia. Together they illustrate how the body in war is a vital universal element that unites these vastly different contexts. Although the centrality of the human body in war-making was recognized in antiquity, a body-centric approach to combat has yet to be widely adopted in modern Classical Studies. This collection brings together new research in ancient history, classical literature, material culture, bioarchaeology and art history within a theoretical framework drawn from recent developments in War Studies that places the body front and centre. The new perspectives it offers on brutality in battle, the physical expression of warrior identity, and post-combat remembrance and recovery challenge readers to re-assess and expand their existing ideas as part of a broader ongoing 'call to arms' to revolutionize the study of ancient warfare in the 21st century.

Screening the Golden Ages of the Classical Tradition

Screening the Golden Ages of the Classical Tradition
Title Screening the Golden Ages of the Classical Tradition PDF eBook
Author Meredith E. Safran
Publisher Edinburgh University Press
Pages 160
Release 2018-10-24
Genre Performing Arts
ISBN 147444086X

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Analyses of Rancière's philosophy and its potential for understanding the conversation between contemporary politics and art cinema.