Decimus Laberius
This is a newly revised, critical text of the fragments attributed to the Roman knight and mimographer Decimus Laberius, a witty and crudely satirical contemporary of Cicero and Caesar. Laberius is perhaps the most celebrated comic playwright of the late Republic, and the fragments of plays attributed to him comprise the overwhelming majority of the extant evidence for what we conventionally call 'the literary Roman mime'. The volume also includes a survey of the characteristics and development of the Roman mime, both as a literary genre and as a type of popular theatrical entertainment, as well as a re-evaluation of the place of Laberius' work within its historical and literary context. This is the first English translation of all the fragments, and the first detailed English commentary on them from a linguistic, metrical, and (wherever possible) theatrical perspective.
- Provides the first English translation of and commentary on the fragments
- Discusses the context within which each fragment is cited by grammarians and lexicographers
- Includes an account of the origins and chronological development of mime as a genre from the third century BC to late antiquity
Product details
February 2010Adobe eBook Reader
9780511669453
0 pages
0kg
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- 1. Defining the Roman mime
- 2. Origins and chronological development of the genre
- 3. Testimonia on Laberius
- 4. Facts and problems
- 5. Laberius' language and themes
- 6. Laberius' prosody
- 7. The history of the text of Laberius' mimes
- 8. An overview of the anthologies containing Laberius' mimes
- Sigla codicum
- The fragments
- Text
- Translation
- Commentary
- Appendices.