11. Peter E. Knox - Ovid's Metamorphoses and the Traditions of Augustan Poetry (Cambridge Classical Journal Supplements, Book 11) (1986) [Retail].pdf

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Supplementary Volume no. 11
O V I D ’S
M E T A M O R P H O S E S
A N D THE T R A D I T I O N S
OF A U G U S T A N POETRY
P E T E R E. K N O X
T H E C A M B R ID G E P H I L O L O G I C A L S O C IE T Y
1986
C A M B R I D G E P H I L O L O G I C A L S O C IE T Y
ISBN 0 906014 07 7
D.M .S.
W IL L IA M C. K N O X , JR.
Printed in G reat Britain by the University Press, Cambridge
CONTENTS
page
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS.....................................................................................
ABBREVIATIONS....................................................................................................
I
THE BACKGROUND.....................................................................................
II THE TRANSFORMATION OF E LEG Y ....................................................
III STYLE AND VARIATION............................................................................
IV THE SONG OF ORPHEUS............................................................................
V THE ROMAN CALLIMACHUS...................................................................
APPENDIX 1: HERMANN’S B RID G E...............................................................
APPENDIX 2: POSTPOSITION OF NON-ENCLITIC PARTICLES.............
WORKS C IT E D .......................................................................................................
INDEX RERU M .......................................................................................................
INDEX LOCORUM .................................................................................................
iv
v
1
9
27
48
65
84
88
91
95
96
iii
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This study is based on a doctoral dissertation submitted in 1982 at Harvard
University. Much of the original research for the thesis was conducted while
holding a fellowship from the Mrs Giles M. Whiting Foundation; the work of
revision was aided by a grant from the Columbia University Council for
Research in the Humanities.
I remain grateful to Professor Wendell Clausen, who supervised the original
dissertation and has continued to be a source of encouragement and advice. At
various stages I have benefited from the comments of scholars to whom I can
give only inadequate thanks here: Professors Alan Cameron, Albert Henrichs,
and Zeph Stewart. I am also grateful to Dr Richard Hunter, the editor of this
series, for many practical suggestions. To Professor Richard Thomas I owe a
special debt of gratitude for helpful criticism and enduring friendship.
Publication was made possible by the financial assistance of the Stanwood
Cockey Lodge Foundation.
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