The Best of the Grammarians : Aristarchus of Samothrace on the Iliad /
This book will be valuable to classicists and philologists interested in scholarship on Aristarchus, Homer and Homeric criticism in antiquity, the history of Greek culture, Hellenistic scholarship, and ancient literary criticism.
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Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Ann Arbor :
University of Michigan Press,
[2018]
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Colección: | Book collections on Project MUSE.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Preface. Main Sources and Method Followed in This Study ; Other Primary Sources and Secondary Literature Used in This Study ; Content, Goals, and Limitations of This Study
- Part 1. Aristarchus: Contexts and Sources
- Part 2. Aristarchus at Work
- Part 3. The Six Parts of Grammar
- Part 4. Aristarchus and his Colleagues
- Part 5. Aristarchus' Homer.
- Intro; Contents; Preface; 1. Main Sources and Method Followed in This Study; 2. Other Primary Sources and Secondary Literature Used in This Study; 3. Content, Goals, and Limitations of This Study; Part 1. Aristarchus: Contexts and Sources; 1.1. Aristarchus: Life, Sources, and Selection of Fragments; 1. Aristarchus at Alexandria; 2. The Aristarchean Tradition and the Venetus A; 3. The Scholia Maiora to the Iliad and Erbse's Edition; 4. Aristarchus in the Scholia; 4.1. Aristonicus at Work; 4.2. Didymus at Work; 4.3. Aristonicus versus Didymus; 5. Selecting Aristarchus' Fragments for This Study
- 2. Ekdosis, Hypomnema, and Critical Signs3. Homeric Hypomnemata on Papyrus and Critical Signs; 4. Homeric Ekdoseis on Papyrus and Critical Signs; 5. Conclusions; 2.2. Aristarchus and Manuscript Evidence; 1. Evidence from Didymus; 2. Evidence from Aristonicus; 3. Conclusions; 2.3. Paraphrase: A Ubiquitous Interpretative Tool; 1. Aristarchus' Direct Quotations: Lecturing with Paraphrases; 2. Close and Loose Paraphrases; 3. Close Paraphrases: Homer 'Translated' into Koine; 4. Loose Paraphrases: Discussing Homeric Content; 5. Other Uses of Paraphrases; 6. Conclusions
- Part 3. The Six Parts of Grammar3.0. The Six Parts of Grammar; 3.1. Reading Aloud: The Interpretative Effort of Reading; 1. The Philologist and the Manuscript; 2. Reading according to the Right Vowel Quantities; 3. A Question of Division: Interpreting the Scriptio Continua; 4. A Method for Clarifying Things: Adding Accents; 4.1. Accents and Analogy; 4.2. Accents and Homographs; 4.3. Accents, Scriptio Continua, and Syntax; 5. Between Reading and Semantics: Choosing the Breathing; 6. Reading Aloud: Syntax and Punctuation; 7. Posidonius, the 'Reader' of Aristarchus; 8. Conclusions