Hans-Peter Stahl - Böcker
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5 produkter
5 produkter
932 kr
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Propertius: ‘Love’ and ‘War’: Individual and State Under Augustus presents a nuanced exploration of the poetry of Propertius, addressing the apparent contradictions within his work and their implications for understanding the interplay between personal identity and political allegiance in Augustan Rome. Rather than accepting a simplistic trajectory from youthful love elegies to mature, state-centered poetry, this study challenges traditional views by considering the poet's recurring conflicts as indicators of a lasting internal struggle. It questions whether Propertius' work should be seen as a straightforward reflection of personal development or as a literary construction that resists such linear interpretations.This volume not only reevaluates Propertius' literary contributions but also critiques long-standing methodological approaches to his poetry, particularly the reliance on historicist interpretations that have sought to extract autobiographical truth from his elegies. By emphasizing the structural and thematic coherence of individual poems, the study highlights the poet’s ability to merge personal and political tensions within carefully crafted literary forms. With its deep engagement with textual criticism, linguistic analysis, and poetic structure, Propertius: ‘Love’ and ‘War’ offers fresh insight into the complexities of Roman elegy, making it essential reading for scholars of Latin poetry, Augustan literature, and the broader relationship between art and ideology in ancient Rome.This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1985.
1 690 kr
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Propertius: ‘Love’ and ‘War’: Individual and State Under Augustus presents a nuanced exploration of the poetry of Propertius, addressing the apparent contradictions within his work and their implications for understanding the interplay between personal identity and political allegiance in Augustan Rome. Rather than accepting a simplistic trajectory from youthful love elegies to mature, state-centered poetry, this study challenges traditional views by considering the poet's recurring conflicts as indicators of a lasting internal struggle. It questions whether Propertius' work should be seen as a straightforward reflection of personal development or as a literary construction that resists such linear interpretations.This volume not only reevaluates Propertius' literary contributions but also critiques long-standing methodological approaches to his poetry, particularly the reliance on historicist interpretations that have sought to extract autobiographical truth from his elegies. By emphasizing the structural and thematic coherence of individual poems, the study highlights the poet’s ability to merge personal and political tensions within carefully crafted literary forms. With its deep engagement with textual criticism, linguistic analysis, and poetic structure, Propertius: ‘Love’ and ‘War’ offers fresh insight into the complexities of Roman elegy, making it essential reading for scholars of Latin poetry, Augustan literature, and the broader relationship between art and ideology in ancient Rome.This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1985.
425 kr
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Stahl's classic book on Thucydides, here in English for the first time, penetrates as few others to the Greek writer's deepest interests. Stahl reveals Thucydides' work as a study in the fallibility of human projections. Above all, Thucydides is shown as interested in tracking how optimistic plans lead to irremediable suffering in the field of foreign policy. For this new edition, the original has been revised and enlarged by two chapters which reflect the author's subsequent work.
535 kr
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The Aeneid may be considered a test case for diverging modern methods of criticism. Does the epic stand for the subordination of the individual in a hierarchically structured state, or is there below the imperial surface a cross-current of wider human appeal? Does the poet skillfully channel his readers' sympathies in directions helpful to the political authorities of his time, or did he devise human messages which are all-embracing and non-partisan? Is it misguided even to seek to discover the intentions of the poet in his work? The contributors to this volume were chosen both for their scholarship and as representing diverse critical methods. Each has selected a passage of the Aeneid to demonstrate his or her general approach. The examination of political references is to the fore. And each contributor uses their chosen passage to address the question of the Aeneid's message.
1 213 kr
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In recent decades, international research on Virgil has been marked, if not dominated, by the ideas of the 'Harvard school' and similar trends, according to which the poet was engaged in an elaborate work of subtle subversion, directed against the new ruler of the Roman world, Octavian-Augustus. Much of Virgil's oeuvre consists prima facie of eulogy of the ruler, and of emphatic prediction of his enduring success: this is explained by numerous modern critics as generic convention, or as studied ambiguity, or as irony.This paradoxical position, which runs against ancient - as well as much modern - interpretation of the poet, continues to create widespread unease. Stahl's new monograph is the most thorough study so far to question modern Virgilian criticism on philological grounds. He bases himself on the internal logic and rhetoric of the Aeneid, and considers also political, historical, archaeological and philosophical subjects addressed by the poem.