Lupa
Cargador

D. H. Berry 
Cicero’s Catilinarians 

Soporte
Adobe DRM
Portada de D. H. Berry: Cicero's Catilinarians (ePUB)
The Catilinarians are a set of four speeches that Cicero, while consul in 63 BC, delivered before the senate and the Roman people against the conspirator Catiline and his followers. Or are they? Cicero did not publish the speeches until three years later, and he substantially revised them before publication, rewriting some passages and adding others, all with the aim of justifying the action he had taken against the conspirators and memorializing his own role in the suppression of the conspiracy. How, then, should we interpret these speeches as literature? Can we treat them as representing what Cicero actually said? Or do we have to read them merely as political pamphlets from a later time? In this, the first book-length discussion of these famous speeches, D. H. Berry clarifies what the speeches actually are and explains how he believes we should approach them. In addition, the book contains a full and up-to-date account of the Catilinarian conspiracy and a survey of the influence that the story of Catiline has had on writers such as Sallust and Virgil, Ben Jonson and Henrik Ibsen, from antiquity to the present day.
€22.80
Métodos de pago
Idioma Inglés ● Formato EPUB ● Páginas 206 ● ISBN 9780197510827 ● Editorial Oxford University Press ● Publicado 2020 ● Descargable 3 veces ● Divisa EUR ● ID 8042095 ● Protección de copia Adobe DRM
Requiere lector de ebook con capacidad DRM

Más ebooks del mismo autor / Editor

2.190 Ebooks en esta categoría