Building upon the explosion of recent work on mythography, contributions to this volume direct attention to less frequently explored questions of how ancient poets, historians, and philosophers themselves adopted and adapted the work of mythographers. Study of the way that mythographers and their contemporaries take on positions of, alternately, "host" or "parasite" in relation to the other exposes the richness mythographic practice and the roles that mythographers played in the evolving Greco-Roman discourse of myth. From, among others, the seeds of mythographic discourse in Pindar and Plato, to the mythography of the Peripatics, the in-between mythography of Diodorus Siculus, and the "mythographic topography" of Pausanias, this volume invites a reappraisal of the role that mythography played at every stage of Greek thought about myth. Through contributions that explore both mythographers’ distinctive style of studying myth to other contributions that focus primarily on the how and why of non-mythographers’ use of mythographic techniques, what emerges is a picture of mythography that broadens our conception of mythography while at the same time inviting scholars to seek out more such echoes of mythographic discourse in the work of poets, historians, philosophers at large.
John Marincola & Allen J. Romano
Host or Parasite? [PDF ebook]
Mythographers and their Contemporaries in the Classical and Hellenistic Periods
Host or Parasite? [PDF ebook]
Mythographers and their Contemporaries in the Classical and Hellenistic Periods
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Idioma Inglés ● Formato PDF ● Páginas 199 ● ISBN 9783110672824 ● Editor John Marincola & Allen J. Romano ● Editorial De Gruyter ● Publicado 2019 ● Descargable 3 veces ● Divisa EUR ● ID 9434675 ● Protección de copia Adobe DRM
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