Though stylistics undoubtedly plays a crucial role in the scholarship on Latin poetry – from commentaries to textual criticism, from intertextuality to literary criticism – in recent years, for various reasons, it has not received the attention it deserves. This book, published a generation after Adams and Mayer’s seminal 1999 volume, Aspects of the Language of Latin Poetry, ideally aims to complement and update it on a smaller scale, offering the reader a collection of stimulating papers from international scholars on the style of some of the most significant voices of Latin poetry, from early drama to the Flavian period.
About the author
P. Dainotti, ‘L’Orientale’ Univ. of Napoli, Italy; A. P. Hasegawa, Univ. de São Paulo, Brazil; S. J. Harrison, Univ. of Oxford, UK.