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Epistles of Pliny [Kietas viršelis]

Edited by (Senior Lecturer in Classics and Fellow of Emmanuel College, University of Cambridge), Edited by (Professor of Latin, University of Manchester)
  • Formatas: Hardback, 546 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 222x149x33 mm, weight: 864 g
  • Serija: Oxford Readings in Classical Studies
  • Išleidimo metai: 02-Jun-2016
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0199545944
  • ISBN-13: 9780199545940
  • Formatas: Hardback, 546 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 222x149x33 mm, weight: 864 g
  • Serija: Oxford Readings in Classical Studies
  • Išleidimo metai: 02-Jun-2016
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0199545944
  • ISBN-13: 9780199545940
This volume brings together some of the best and most influential work to be published on the Epistles of Pliny the Younger in recent decades. Covering historical, (auto)biographical, and literary aspects of the Epistles and their reception, the nineteen classic articles included here offer a wide and representative range of approaches to Pliny, from prosopography and social history to intertextuality and self-representation. Topics include Pliny's villas, friends, and career, alongside literary and historical readings of some of his most famous letters, such as those on the eruption of Vesuvius and the torture of Christians, and correspondence with and about his wife Calpurnia, his uncle Pliny the Elder, his rival Regulus, the historian Tacitus and the emperor Trajan. The volume includes several chapters currently out of print or scarcely available (such as Birley's on Pliny's career and Eco's on the first Vesuvius letter), one which has been wholely rewritten (Cameron on reception) and one newly translated from German (Schenk on intertextuality). In addition, most have been updated by their authors, and translations of all Latin and other foreign languages have been added. A substantial introductory chapter by the editors offers the first full account of the history of scholarship on the Epistles from the birth of printing to the present day, summarises important recent work in languages other than English, and contextualises the articles included within the broader context of modern approaches to Pliny.

Pliny the Younger's ten books of Epistles have only recently moved into the mainstream of classical studies from their traditional role as fodder for Latin beginners or filing cabinet for Roman historians. This volume marks and consolidates that shift by reprinting nineteen of the best and most influential contributions on Pliny and his Epistles from recent decades, newly edited, revised and/or translated into English. It begins with a new, substantial account of the history of Plinian scholarship and survey of the contemporary scholarly landscape. Together this collection offers a detailed study of the man, the events of his time, his career, his friends, even his possessions, and above all the varied artistic and ideological facets of his letters.
Acknowledgements ix
Abbreviations xi
1 Introduction: Readers and Readings of Pliny's Epistles
1(50)
Christopher Whitton
Roy Gibson
PART I PLINY IN HISTORY
2 Pliny's Family, Pliny's Career
51(16)
A. R. Birley
3 Pliny's Less Successful Friends
67(22)
R. Syme
4 The Finances of a Senator
89(18)
R. P. Duncan-Jones
5 Pliny's Other Country
107(16)
Edward Champlin
PART II READING EPISTLES 1--9
6 Pliny's Treatment of History in Epistolary Form
123(23)
Henry W. Traub
7 The Chronology and Arrangement of Pliny's Letters
146(13)
Charles E. Murgia
8 Pliny the Younger, and the Ideal Wife
159(26)
Jo-Ann Shelton
9 A Portrait of the Elder as a Young Pliny
185(16)
Umberto Eco
10 Visualizing Pliny's Villas
201(24)
Bettina Bergmann
11 Self and Community in the Younger Pliny
225(21)
Andrew M. Riggsby
12 Pliny's Catullus: The Politics of Literary Appropriation
246(43)
Matthew Roller
13 Models of Senators and Emperors: Regulus, the Bad Senator (Epistles 1.5)
289(43)
Stanley E. Hoffer
14 Forms of Intertextuality in the Epistles of Pliny the Younger
332(23)
Peter Schenk
15 Pliny and Tacitus
355(23)
Miriam Griffin
16 Knowing Someone Through Their Books: Pliny on Uncle Pliny (Epistles 3.5)
378(41)
John Henderson
PART III EPISTLES 10: A CASE APART?
17 Trajan: Government by Correspondence
419(23)
Fergus Millar
18 Pliny's Province
442(21)
Greg Woolf
PART IV PLINY'S AFTERLIFE
19 The Fate of Pliny's Letters in the Late Empire
463(19)
Alan Cameron
20 The Transmission of Pliny's Epistles
482(7)
L. D. Reynolds
References 489(38)
Index of Passages 527(4)
General Index 531
Roy Gibson is Professor of Latin at the University of Manchester. His publications include Ovid: Ars Amatoria Book 3 (Cambridge, 2003) and (with R. Morello) Reading the Letters of Pliny the Younger: An Introduction (Cambridge, 2012). He is currently completing a biography of Pliny (Man of High Empire) and a commentary on Pliny, Letters Book 6.



Christopher Whitton is Lecturer in Classics at the University of Cambridge and Fellow of Emmanuel College. His publications include articles on literary, historical and linguistic aspects of Pliny's works and a commentary on Epistles Book 2 (Cambridge, 2013).