Latin Language and Latin Culture: From Ancient to Modern TimesCambridge University Press, 15. velj 2001. - Broj stranica: 148 The Latin language is popularly imagined in a number of specific ways: as a masculine language, an imperial language, a classical language, a dead language. This book considers the sources of these metaphors and analyses their effect on how Latin literature is read. It argues that these metaphors have become idées fixes not only in the popular imagination but in the formation of Latin studies as a professional discipline. By reading with and more commonly against these metaphors, the book offers a different view of Latin as a language and as a vehicle for cultural practice. The argument ranges over a variety of texts in Latin and texts about Latin produced by many different sorts of writers from antiquity to the twentieth century. |
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Latin Language and Latin Culture: From Ancient to Modern Times Joseph Farrell Pregled nije dostupan - 2001 |
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actually Aeneid Afrania alleluia Anaxagoras ancient antiquity Arpinum atque Atticus barbarian century Christian Cicero classical classicists contrast Cornelia Crassus dead language dialect distinction ecphrasis eloquence Empedocles English fact father fatherland feminine latinity Funck Gaius gender Gracchus grammar Greek language Hadwig Hebrew Heraclitus history of Latin Hortensia idea Isidore Isidore's Laelia Latin culture Latin language Latin literature Latin studies Latin text latinists learning linguae linguistic Lucretius magnalia male Martial masculine medieval metaphor Middle Ages modern musical myth native speakers natural Oedipus orator parens passage patrius sermo perhaps period Perpetua perspective plainchant poem poet poetry polyphony praise prestige dialect quam Quintilian Quintus Hortensius rebirth Roman Rome Sabellian Sappho scholars seems sense speak specific speech spoken Stravinsky structure style suggest Sulpicia Tallis theme things thinking tradition uariis uerbis Valerius Valerius Maximus Venantius vernacular Virgil voice vulgar woman women word writing