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Index
Cover BLACKWELL COMPANIONS TO THE ANCIENT WORLD Title page Copyright page Notes on Contributors Introduction PART I: Novels and Authors
a. Greek
CHAPTER 1: Chariton: Individuality and Stereotype
Plot and Structure The Story Itself Intrigue and Melodrama The Literary Texture The Arts of Recapitulation Humor Historical Flavor Characterization Sexuality Cultural Norms and Ethos Greek and Barbarian Readership Conclusion
CHAPTER 2: Daphnis and Chloe: Innocence and Experience, Archetypes and Art CHAPTER 3: Xenophon, The Ephesian Tales
Plot The author Date Xenophon, Chariton and the beginnings of the novel Transmission, reception and text-history
CHAPTER 4: Achilles Tatius, Sophistic Master of Novelistic Conventions
Introduction The Author The Text Dating Leucippe and Clitophon Trends in Scholarship Novelistic Motifs Scheintod of the heroine Brief Nachleben
CHAPTER 5: Heliodorus, the Ethiopian Story
The Author and His Work The Novel’s Setting Literary Aesthetics and Rhetoric Composition and Narrative Technique
b. Roman
CHAPTER 6: Petronius, Satyrica
The Work: Text and Transmission The Author: Who Was Petronius? The Satyrica: Title, Contents, Structure The Cena Trimalchionis The Inserted Novellas The Poems Models, Sources, Genre
CHAPTER 7: Apuleius’ The Golden Ass: The Nature of the Beast
The Beginning The Author The Plot The Plot Thickens First Impressions Conspiracy Theories
CHAPTER 8: Historia Apollonii Regis Tyri
An Unconventional Opening Apollonius Tarsia The Textual Tradition of Historia Apollonii Dating A Greek Model? Historia Apollonii and the Ancient Novel
c. Related
CHAPTER 9: The Other Greek Novels CHAPTER 10: Hell-bent, Heaven-sent: From Skyman to Pumpkin CHAPTER 11: The Novel and Christian Narrative
PART II: Genre and Approaches
CHAPTER 12: The Genre of the Novel: A Theoretical Approach CHAPTER 13: The Management of Dialogue in Ancient Fiction
Chariton Achilles Tatius Longus Heliodorus Petronius Beyond the Satyrica The Fragments Conclusions
CHAPTER 14: Characterization in the Ancient Novel
Ambiguity Social Control Development Techniques of Characterization Epilogue
CHAPTER 15: Liaisons Dangereuses: Epistolary Novels in Antiquity
Introduction History of Research Epistolary Novels The Letters of Chion: An Open-Ending, Coming-of-Age Novel The Letters of Euripides: A Counter-story without a Story The Reception of the Ancient Epistolary Novel in Christianity The Apostle Paul Ignatius, Bishop of Antioch Paul and Seneca Aftermath
CHAPTER 16: The Life of Aesop (rec.G): The Composition of the Text
The Tradition of the Text The Structure of the “Life of Aesop” Sequences of the Plot Other Elements of the Text’s Composition The Context of the Work
PART III: Influences and Intertextuality
CHAPTER 17: Reception of Strangers in Apuleius’ Metamorphoses: The Examples of Hypata and Cenchreae CHAPTER 18: From the Epic to the Novelistic Hero: Some Patterns of a Metamorphosis
Cultural Mediation Selection of Features and Gender Shifts Philological Perspective Selection of Secondary Characters Mythomania Parody Conclusions
CHAPTER 19: Roman Elegy and the Roman Novel
Petronius and Latin Love Elegy: Critiques of Latin Love Elegy in Earlier Satire and Invective Satyricon 16–26: Propertius 4.8 and the Quartilla Episode Encolpius’ Impotence in Satyricon 126ff. and Ovid, Amores 3.7 Apuleius and Latin Love Elegy The Beginning of the Novel: Lucius and Photis, Socrates and Meroe The End of the Novel: Lucius and the Corinthian matrona—Lucius and Isis Conclusions
CHAPTER 20: Apuleius’ Metamorphoses: A Hybrid Text?
Personal Reflections The State of Play Back to the Text: Further Adventures of Lucius? Crikey, Psyche: More Divine Encounters Dangerous (Literary) Liaisons Storytelling on Screen Mixed Marriages Hybrid Forms—the Metamorphoses as a Literary Mule
CHAPTER 21: The Magnetic Stone of Love: Greek Novel and Poetry
Eros as Central Theme of the Inserted Tales and of Reflexivity Eros in Generic Evolution, or the Novel as an Echo Chamber for Literature Pirates and Piracy Magnetism of Love
CHAPTER 22: “Respect these Breastsand Pity Me”: Greek Novel and Theater
Theater in Words Romanesque Thread and Theater Plot: the Ideal Novels and New Comedy Theater and Myth Meet in the Novel Theater in the Mind
CHAPTER 23: Poems in Petronius’ Satyrica CHAPTER 24: Various Asses CHAPTER 25: Greek Novel and Greek Archaic Literature CHAPTER 26: Ekphrasis in the Ancient Novel
Ekphrasis in Theory and Practice Readers and Viewers Ekphrasis as Novelistic “Hero”
PART IV: Themes and Topics
CHAPTER 27: Miscellanea Petroniana: A Petronian Enthusiast’s Thoughts and Reviews CHAPTER 28: Love, Myth, and Ritual: The Mythic Dimension and Adolescence in Longus’ Daphnis and Chloe
Longus’ Daphnis and Chloe as Exceptional Test Case Longus’ Myth in Symbolic and Synaesthetic Function Conclusion
CHAPTER 29: Gender in the Ancient Novel
Women and the Greek Novel Sexual Symmetry, Foucault Gender, Chastity, and Christian Novelistic Texts Petronius and Apuleius and the Collapse of Gender Conclusions
CHAPTER 30: Education as Construction of Gender Roles in the Greek Novels
Forever Young Education in the Greek Novel The First Ordeal: Separation Continuing against All Odds: The Liminal Stage A Time for Return: The Incorporation Let’s Make a Man of Him! But What Is a Greek Woman?
CHAPTER 31: Greek Love in the Greek Novel CHAPTER 32: Latin Culture in the Second Century AD
Fronto Fronto’s Letters Fronto’s Moderate Archaism Fronto and Marcus Aurelius Aulus Gellius Apuleius The Speeches Philosophical Works Other Authors
CHAPTER 33: Mimet(h)ic Paideia in Lucian’s True History
Identity and Role-playing Constructions of Paideia and the Pepaideumenos in the Imagines and the Somnium Mimetic Constructions of Paideia and the Pepaideumenos in the True History Conclusion
CHAPTER 34: Reimagining Community in Christian Fictions CHAPTER 35: The Poetics of Old Wives’ Tales, or Apuleius and the Philosophical Novel
Introduction: The Narrative Situation Implications and Difficulties Modern Approaches “Milesian” Platonism
CHAPTER 36: Achilles Tatius and Heliodorus: Between Aristotle and Hitchcock
From Aristotle to Mystery Plots Achilles Tatius: Sudden Death Heliodorus: Sudden Death in a Cave Hitchcock: Sudden Death in the Shower Aristotle Vindicated
CHAPTER 37: Longus’ Daphnis and Chloe: Literary Transmission and Reception
The Re-discovery of the Text in the Renaissance: The “Artistic” Translation From Translation to Emulation Longus and the Pastoral Fashion: A Brief History of a Long Passion How to Green Again a Classic: From Lesbos to a Japanese Island
Index
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