<p>"Each chapter includes useful discussion of further readings." (<i>CHOICE</i>, September 2009)</p>
- Includes a dozen original essays by a team of leading Petronius and Roman history scholars
- Features the first multi-dimensional approach to Satyricon studies by exploring the novel's literary structure, social and historic contexts, and modern reception
- Supplemented by illustrations, plot outline, glossary, map, bibliography, and suggestions for further reading
List of Illustrations ix
List of Contributors x
Preface and Acknowledgments xiii
Abbreviations xiv
Introduction
Jonathan Prag and Ian Repath 1
Map 15
1 Reading the Satyrica
Niall W. Slater 16
2 Petronius and Greek Literature
J. R. Morgan 32
3 Petronius and the Roman Literary Tradition
Costas Panayotakis 48
4 Letting the Page Run On
Poetics, Rhetoric, and Noise in the Satyrica
Victoria Rimell 65
5 Sex in the Satyrica
Outlaws in Literatureland
Amy Richlin 82
6 The Satyrica and Neronian Culture
Caroline Vout 101
7 Freedmen in the Satyrica
Jean Andreau 114
8 A Funny Thing Happened on My Way to the Market
Reading Petronius to Write Economic History
Koenraad Verboven 125
9 At Home with the Dead
Roman Funeral Traditions and Trimalchio's Tomb
Valerie M. Hope 140
10 Freedmen's Cribs
Domestic Vulgarity on the Bay of Naples
Shelley Hales 161
11 Petronius's Satyrica and the Novel in English
Stephen Harrison 181
12 Fellini-Satyricon
Petronius and Film
Joanna Paul 198
Bibliography 218
Index locorum 234
General Index 244
Of all the literary works to have survived from the ancient world, few have been as celebrated – or as outrageously provocative – as the Satyrica. Traditionally ascribed to the Petronius who lived and died under Nero’s rule, one of the most darkly fascinating periods of Roman history, the Satyrica recounts a bizarre odyssey through contemporary everyday life. With its startling originality, bawdy humor, and vivid characterizations, Petronius's brilliant, but fragmentary, novel has inspired countless writers and artists through the ages, most famously the Italian film director Fellini. The grotesqueries and excesses of the book's most best-known extant section, Trimalchio’s feast, are particularly notorious and influential.
Reflecting the Satyrica's unique stature in world literature, Petronius: A Handbook features a dozen original essays that explore the world portrayed by Petronius. Commissioned from leading scholars specializing in the ancient novel, Julio-Claudian culture, and early Roman imperial history, each essay tackles a specific aspect of the Satyrica – from the novel's literary structure to its social and historic contexts and modern reception in literature and film. Collectively, the essays provide the first comprehensive, multi-dimensional approach to the study of the Satyrica and its relevance to our understanding of the early Roman Empire. Authoritative and insightful, Petronius: A Handbook will unravel the mysteries of one of the greatest literary works that antiquity has bequeathed to the modern world.
"The editors have astutely chosen knowledgeable contributors capable of presenting complex material in an engaging manner to students and the educated public."
Gerald Sandy, Professor Emeritus of Classics, University of British Columbia
"This new handbook skillfully guides the reader through the literary and the real into the afterlife of Petronius's multifaceted masterpiece. The result is an unprecedented success in synthetic interpretation."
John Bodel, Brown University
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
Jonathan Prag is a University Lecturer in Ancient History at the University of Oxford, and a Tutorial Fellow of Merton College. His main areas of research are Hellenistic and Republican Sicily, and the Roman Republic. He has edited a volume (Sicilia nutrix plebis Romanae) on Cicero's Verrines, and is currently co-editing a volume on The Hellenistic West and writing a book on the non-Italian soldiers of the Roman Republican army.
Ian Repath is Lecturer in Classics at Swansea University. His principal research interests are Greek and Latin prose fiction, and literary aspects of Plato. He is the author of the forthcoming article, Plato in Petronius: Petronius in platanona, and co-editor (with John Morgan) of Where the Truth Lies: Fiction and Metafiction in Ancient Narrative. He is a founding member of KYKNOS, the Swansea, Lampeter, and Exeter Centre for Research in Ancient Narrative Literatures.