Displaced Persons: The Literature of Exile from Cicero to BoethiusExile is a political act, involving loss of power. Five authors, all exiled from Rome, are examined in this book, which analyses the literature of exile and takes its consideration through to the virtual end of the Classical era: the author examines the various means of literary sublimation that individual exiles - Cicero, Ovid, Seneca the Younger, Dio Chrysostom and Anicius Manlius Boethius - found for the feeling of social and political isolation that they experienced. |
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Page 64
... reasons for his exile , the ancient historian had no more to go on than the modern researcher . The Consolatio ad Polybium ... reason for Agrippina's choice of the philosopher as mentor to her son . The rest of Seneca's career is not of ...
... reasons for his exile , the ancient historian had no more to go on than the modern researcher . The Consolatio ad Polybium ... reason for Agrippina's choice of the philosopher as mentor to her son . The rest of Seneca's career is not of ...
Page 167
... reason for his exile Dio dismisses in a jocular reference to the practice of enforced quasi - suttee among the Scythians - as they bury ' cupbearers and cooks and concubines ' with their kings , so ' despots throw in several others for ...
... reason for his exile Dio dismisses in a jocular reference to the practice of enforced quasi - suttee among the Scythians - as they bury ' cupbearers and cooks and concubines ' with their kings , so ' despots throw in several others for ...
Page 282
... reason , as long as that reason is not Amor . The joke elicits sympathetic amusement as response . 59. Hellegouarc'h ( 1963 ) passim , Lechi ( 1978 ) , Syme ( 1978 : 152-54 , 172-7 ) , Lyne ( 1980 : 1-41 , 190-234 ) . On Augustan ...
... reason , as long as that reason is not Amor . The joke elicits sympathetic amusement as response . 59. Hellegouarc'h ( 1963 ) passim , Lechi ( 1978 ) , Syme ( 1978 : 152-54 , 172-7 ) , Lyne ( 1980 : 1-41 , 190-234 ) . On Augustan ...
Other editions - View all
Displaced Persons: The Literature of Exile from Cicero to Boethius Jo-Marie Claassen No preview available - 1999 |
Displaced Persons: The Literature of Exile from Cicero to Boethius Jo-Marie Claassen No preview available - 1999 |
Common terms and phrases
addressed allusion Amor ancient appears argument aspects Atticus Augustan Augustus autobiographical banishment Boethius Caesar Chapter Cicero Claassen Clodius coloured comfort Consolatio Consolatio Philosophiae consolation consolatory tradition couplet creative death depiction dialogue Dio Cassius Dio's discussion Doblhofer 1987 elegiac elegy emotional emperor emphasis enemy epic epistolary erotic Euripides Ex Ponto exile's exiled poet exilic literature Favorinus focus Fortuna frequently Gallus genre Getae Getic grammatical persons Greek hero heroic Heroides Ibis imperial Innocenti Pierini intertextual invective involved letters literary Livia Medea mihi misery Muse myth mythical narrative offers ostensible outreach Ovid Ovidian passim pathos perhaps Philiscus philosophical Piso place of exile Plut Plutarch poem poet's poetic political Pont portrayal portrayed praeteritio prose protagonist psychological reader readership recusatio rhetorical Roman Rome Sarmatian Scythia second person Seneca shows Stoic Tiberius tion Tomis topoi topos Tristia verbs Vergil verse wife writing