Читать книгу Beyond the Second Sophistic - Tim Whitmarsh - Страница 7
ОглавлениеACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The following chapters are revisions of previously published material; permission from the various publishers to revisit that material is gratefully acknowledged.
Chapter 1, “The ‘Invention of Fiction,’ ” revised from “Prose Fiction,” in A Companion to Hellenistic Literature, edited by M. Cuypers and J. Clauss (Oxford: Blackwell, 2010), 395–411.
Chapter 4, “An I for an I: Reading Fictional Autobiography,” revised from the article of the same name in Cento Pagine 3 (2009): 56–66 (available online at http://www2.units.it/musacamena/ iniziative/SCA2009_Withmarsh.pdf [sic]); appears in slightly different form in The Author’s Voice in Classical and Late Antiquity, edited by A. Marmodoro and J. Hill (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013), 233–47.
Chapter 5, “Metamorphoses of the Ass,” revised from the chapter of the same name in Lucian of Samosata: Greek Writer and Roman Citizen, edited by F. Mestre and P. Gómez (Barcelona: Universitat de Barcelona, 2010), 73–81.
Chapter 6, “Addressing Power: Fictional Letters between Alexander and Darius,” revised from the chapter of the same name in Epistolary Narratives in Ancient Greek Literature, edited by O. Hodkinson, P. Rosenmeyer, and E. Bracke (Leiden: Brill, forthcoming).
Chapter 7, “Philostratus’s Heroicus: Fictions of Hellenism,” revised from “Performing Heroics: Language, Landscape and Identity in Philostratus’ Heroicus,” in Philostratus, edited by E. Bowie and J. Elsner (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009), 205–29.
Chapter 8, “Mimesis and the Gendered Icon in Greek Theory and Fiction,” revised from “The Erotics of Mimēsis: Gendered Aesthetics in Greek Theory and Fiction,” in The Construction of the Real and the Ideal in the Ancient Novel, edited by M. Paschalis and S. Panayotakis (Groningen: Barkhuis, forthcoming).
Chapter 9, “Greek Poets and Roman Patrons in the Late Republic and Early Empire” revised from “Greek Poets and Roman Patrons in the Late Republic and Early Empire: Crinagoras, Antipater, and Others on Rome” in The Struggle for Identity: Greeks and Their Past in the First Century BCE, edited by T. Schmitz and N. Wiater (Stuttgart: Franz Steiner, 2011), 189–204.
Chapter 10, “The Cretan Lyre Paradox: Mesomedes, Hadrian, and the Poetics of Patronage,” revised from the chapter of the same name in Paideia: The World of the Second Sophistic, edited by B.E. Borg (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2004), 377–402.
Chapter 12, “Quickening the Classics: The Politics of Prose in Roman Greece,” revised from the chapter of the same name in Classical Pasts: The Classical Traditions of Greco-Roman Antiquity, edited by J.I. Porter (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2005), 353–74.
Chapter 13, “Politics and Identity in Ezekiel’s Exagoge,” revised from “Pharaonic Alexandria: Ezekiel’s Exagoge and Political Allegory in Hellenistic Judaism,” in The Space of the City in Graeco-Roman Egypt: Image and Reality, edited by E. Subias, P. Azara, J. Carruesco, I. Fiz, and R. Cuesta (Tarragona: Institut Català d’Arqueologia Clàssica, 2011): 41–48.