Description

Book Synopsis
This edition includes a new preface and an updated bibliography.

Trade Review
Fantham offers a succinct but generous guide to recent scholarship in Latin literature. I heartily recommend her book to scholars of Latin literature, to instructors seeking a textbook for History of Latin Literature courses and to graduate students studying for exams. -- T. Keith Dix Sharp News

Table of Contents

Preface to the Second Edition
Preface to the First Edition
Introduction
Toward a Social History of Latin Literature
Author, Audience, and Medium
Ennius and Cato, Two Early Writers
New Genres of Literature, from Lucilius to Apuleius
Generic Preoccupations
Chapter One
Starting from Scratch
Drama—The First Literary Genre
Comedy: Naevius, Plautus, and Terence
The Tragic Tradition
Patriotism and History in Poetry and Prose
The First Latin History: Cato's Origines
From the Gracchi to Sulla: Lucilian Satire and the New Individualism
Catullus and Lucretius
Chapter Two
Rome at the End of the Republic
Roman Education, for Better or Worse
Literature and Nationalism
Literature and the Amateur
Literary Studies and the Recreation of Literary History
Literature and Scholarship: Cicero's Evidence for the Studies of Caesar and Varro
Chapter Three
The Coming of the Principate: "Augustan" Literary Culture
The Survivors: The New Poets Gallus and Virgil
The Roman Poetry Book, a New Literary Form
Private and Public Patronage
The Emperor as Theme and Patron
The Best of Patrons, and the Patron's Greater Friend
Performance and Readership
Spoken and Written Prose in Augustan Society: Rhetoric as Training and Display
The First Real Histories
Chapter Four
Un-Augustan Activities
The Literature of Youth
Love and Elegy
Ovid the Scapegoat, and the Sorrows of Augustus
Innocence and Power of the Book
Chapter Five
An Inhibited Generation: Suppression and Survival
Permissible Literature: Prose
Moral Treatises and Letters
Didactic and Descriptive Poetry
The Tastes and Prejudices of Augustus's Imperial Successors
The Divergence of Theater and Drama
Chapter Six
Between Nero and Domitian: The Challenge to Poetry
The Neronian Revival
Poetry and Parody in a New Setting
Vicissitudes of the Epic Muse
Professional Poets in the Time of Domitian
Chapter Seven
Literature and the Governing Classes: From the Accession of Vespasian to the Death of Trajan
Equestrian and Senatorial Writers: A Changing Elite
Choices of Literary Career: Fame or Survival?
Pliny's Letters and His Literary World
The Public World of the Senator and Orator
The World of the Auditorium
Chapter Eight
Literary Culture in Decline: The Antonine Years
Hadrian, the Philhellene
The Traveling Sophists
The Provinces and Latin Culture
Marcus Aurelius and His Teachers
Aulus Gellius, the Eternal Student in Rome and Greece
Apuleius, the Ultimate Word Artist
Chapter Nine
Classical Literary Culture and the Impact of Christianity
Tertullian and His Successors
Diocletian and a Generation of Political Change
Ausonius
The Controversy over the Altar of Victory: Symmachus and Prudentius
Claudian
The Maturity of Christian Prose: Jerome and Augustine
Macrobius: The Last Celebrant of Secular Literary Culture
Notes
Bibliography
Index

Roman Literary Culture

Product form

£33.64

Includes FREE delivery

Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Fri 16 Jan 2026.

A Paperback / softback by Elaine Fantham

15 in stock


    View other formats and editions of Roman Literary Culture by Elaine Fantham

    Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
    Publication Date: 12/09/2013
    ISBN13: 9781421408361, 978-1421408361
    ISBN10: 1421408368

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    This edition includes a new preface and an updated bibliography.

    Trade Review
    Fantham offers a succinct but generous guide to recent scholarship in Latin literature. I heartily recommend her book to scholars of Latin literature, to instructors seeking a textbook for History of Latin Literature courses and to graduate students studying for exams. -- T. Keith Dix Sharp News

    Table of Contents

    Preface to the Second Edition
    Preface to the First Edition
    Introduction
    Toward a Social History of Latin Literature
    Author, Audience, and Medium
    Ennius and Cato, Two Early Writers
    New Genres of Literature, from Lucilius to Apuleius
    Generic Preoccupations
    Chapter One
    Starting from Scratch
    Drama—The First Literary Genre
    Comedy: Naevius, Plautus, and Terence
    The Tragic Tradition
    Patriotism and History in Poetry and Prose
    The First Latin History: Cato's Origines
    From the Gracchi to Sulla: Lucilian Satire and the New Individualism
    Catullus and Lucretius
    Chapter Two
    Rome at the End of the Republic
    Roman Education, for Better or Worse
    Literature and Nationalism
    Literature and the Amateur
    Literary Studies and the Recreation of Literary History
    Literature and Scholarship: Cicero's Evidence for the Studies of Caesar and Varro
    Chapter Three
    The Coming of the Principate: "Augustan" Literary Culture
    The Survivors: The New Poets Gallus and Virgil
    The Roman Poetry Book, a New Literary Form
    Private and Public Patronage
    The Emperor as Theme and Patron
    The Best of Patrons, and the Patron's Greater Friend
    Performance and Readership
    Spoken and Written Prose in Augustan Society: Rhetoric as Training and Display
    The First Real Histories
    Chapter Four
    Un-Augustan Activities
    The Literature of Youth
    Love and Elegy
    Ovid the Scapegoat, and the Sorrows of Augustus
    Innocence and Power of the Book
    Chapter Five
    An Inhibited Generation: Suppression and Survival
    Permissible Literature: Prose
    Moral Treatises and Letters
    Didactic and Descriptive Poetry
    The Tastes and Prejudices of Augustus's Imperial Successors
    The Divergence of Theater and Drama
    Chapter Six
    Between Nero and Domitian: The Challenge to Poetry
    The Neronian Revival
    Poetry and Parody in a New Setting
    Vicissitudes of the Epic Muse
    Professional Poets in the Time of Domitian
    Chapter Seven
    Literature and the Governing Classes: From the Accession of Vespasian to the Death of Trajan
    Equestrian and Senatorial Writers: A Changing Elite
    Choices of Literary Career: Fame or Survival?
    Pliny's Letters and His Literary World
    The Public World of the Senator and Orator
    The World of the Auditorium
    Chapter Eight
    Literary Culture in Decline: The Antonine Years
    Hadrian, the Philhellene
    The Traveling Sophists
    The Provinces and Latin Culture
    Marcus Aurelius and His Teachers
    Aulus Gellius, the Eternal Student in Rome and Greece
    Apuleius, the Ultimate Word Artist
    Chapter Nine
    Classical Literary Culture and the Impact of Christianity
    Tertullian and His Successors
    Diocletian and a Generation of Political Change
    Ausonius
    The Controversy over the Altar of Victory: Symmachus and Prudentius
    Claudian
    The Maturity of Christian Prose: Jerome and Augustine
    Macrobius: The Last Celebrant of Secular Literary Culture
    Notes
    Bibliography
    Index

    Recently viewed products

    © 2025 Book Curl

      • American Express
      • Apple Pay
      • Diners Club
      • Discover
      • Google Pay
      • Maestro
      • Mastercard
      • PayPal
      • Shop Pay
      • Union Pay
      • Visa

      Login

      Forgot your password?

      Don't have an account yet?
      Create account