Plutarch: How to Study Poetry (De audiendis poetis)
Plutarch's essay 'How to Study Poetry' offers a set of reading practices intended to remove the potential damage that poetry can do to the moral health of young readers. It opens a window on to a world of ancient education and scholarship which can seem rather alien to those brought up in the highly sophisticated world of modern literary theory and criticism. The full Introduction and Commentary, by two of the world's leading scholars in the field, trace the origins and intellectual affiliations of Plutarch's method and fully illustrate the background to each of his examples. As such this book may serve as an introduction to the whole subject of ancient reading practices and literary criticism. The Commentary also pays particular attention to grammar, syntax and style, and sets this essay within the context of Plutarch's thought and writing more generally.
- First full commentary on this unusually fascinating text
- Offers full help with grammar, syntax and style to help student readers
- Provides a wide range of background material and context, enabling the book to serve as an introduction to the whole range of ancient reading practices and literary criticism
Reviews & endorsements
'It is one of the most informative and intriguing of the studies on ancient reading that I have encountered in some years.' Peter Toohey, Comptes Rendus
Product details
No date availableAdobe eBook Reader
9781316138380
0 pages
0kg
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Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Text
- Commentary
- Bibliography
- General index
- Index of passages discussed.