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A Companion to Persius and Juvenal breaks new ground in its in-depth focus on both authors as "satiric successors"; detailed individual contributions suggest original perspectives on their work, and provide an in-depth exploration of Persius' and Juvenal's afterlives.
  • Provides detailed and up-to-date guidance on the texts and contexts of Persius and Juvenal
  • Offers substantial discussion of the reception of both authors, reflecting some of the most innovative work being done in contemporary Classics
  • Contains a thorough exploration of Persius' and Juvenal's afterlives
Content:
Chapter One Satire in the Republic: From Lucilius to Horace (pages 17–40): Ralph M. Rosen
Chapter Two The Life and Times of Persius: The Neronian Literary “Renaissance” (pages 41–58): Martin T. Dinter
Chapter Three Juvenalis Eques: A Dissident Voice from the Lower Tier of the Roman Elite (pages 59–78): David Armstrong
Chapter Four Life in the Text: The Corpus of Persius' Satires (pages 79–96): Catherine Keane
Chapter Five Juvenal: The Idea of the Book (pages 97–112): Barbara K. Gold
Chapter Six Satiric Textures: Style, Meter, and Rhetoric (pages 113–136): E. J. Kenney
Chapter Seven Manuscripts of Juvenal and Persius (pages 137–161): Holt. N. Parker
Chapter Eight Venusina lucerna: Horace, Callimachus, and Imperial Satire (pages 163–189): Andrea Cucchiarelli
Chapter Nine Self?Representation and Performativity (pages 190–216): Paul Roche
Chapter Ten Persius, Juvenal, and Stoicism (pages 217–238): Shadi Bartsch
Chapter Eleven Persius, Juvenal, and Literary History after Horace (pages 239–261): Charles McNelis
Chapter Twelve Imperial Satire and Rhetoric (pages 262–282): Christopher S. van den Berg
Chapter Thirteen Politics and Invective in Persius and Juvenal (pages 283–311): Matthew Roller
Chapter Fourteen Imperial Satire as Saturnalia (pages 312–333): Paul Allen Miller
Chapter Fifteen Imperial Satire Reiterated: Late Antiquity through the Twentieth Century (pages 335–362): Dan Hooley
Chapter Sixteen Persius, Juvenal, and the Transformation of Satire in Late Antiquity (pages 363–385): Cristiana Sogno
Chapter Seventeen Imperial Satire in the English Renaissance (pages 386–408): Stuart Gillespie
Chapter Eighteen Imperial Satire Theorized: Dryden's Discourse of Satire (pages 409–435): Josiah Osgood and Susanna Braund
Chapter Nineteen Imperial Satire and the Scholars (pages 436–464): Holt N. Parker and Susanna Braund
Chapter Twenty School Texts of Persius and Juvenal (pages 465–485): Amy Richlin
Chapter Twenty?One Revoicing Imperial Satire (pages 486–512): Gideon Nisbet
Chapter Twenty?Two Persius and Juvenal in the Media Age (pages 513–543): Martin M. Winkler
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