Lies and Fiction in the Ancient World
Editat de Christopher Gill, T. P. Wisemanen Limba Engleză Hardback – 31 dec 1992
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780859893817
ISBN-10: 0859893812
Pagini: 281
Dimensiuni: 155 x 226 x 30 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: Liverpool University Press
Colecția Liverpool University Press
ISBN-10: 0859893812
Pagini: 281
Dimensiuni: 155 x 226 x 30 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: Liverpool University Press
Colecția Liverpool University Press
Cuprins
Preface
Notes on Contributors
Prologue
Michael Wood
1. Lies, Fiction and Slander in Early Greek Poetry
E. L. Bowie
2. Plato on Falsehood—not Fiction
Christopher Gill
3. Truth and Untruth in Herodotus and Thucydides
J. L. Moles
4. Lying Historians: Seven Types of Mendacity
T. P. Wiseman
5. Fiction, Bewitchment and Story Worlds: The Implications of Claims to Truth in Apuleius
Andrew Laird
6. Make-Believe and Make Believe: The Fictionality of the Greek Novels
J. R. Morgan
Epilogue: Towards and Account of the Ancient World’s Concept of Fictive Belief
D. C. Feeney
Bibliography
Index of Passages from Ancient Authors
General Index
Notes on Contributors
Prologue
Michael Wood
1. Lies, Fiction and Slander in Early Greek Poetry
E. L. Bowie
2. Plato on Falsehood—not Fiction
Christopher Gill
3. Truth and Untruth in Herodotus and Thucydides
J. L. Moles
4. Lying Historians: Seven Types of Mendacity
T. P. Wiseman
5. Fiction, Bewitchment and Story Worlds: The Implications of Claims to Truth in Apuleius
Andrew Laird
6. Make-Believe and Make Believe: The Fictionality of the Greek Novels
J. R. Morgan
Epilogue: Towards and Account of the Ancient World’s Concept of Fictive Belief
D. C. Feeney
Bibliography
Index of Passages from Ancient Authors
General Index
Recenzii
“If
the
range
of
ideas
developed
by
ancient
writers
does
not
precisely
correspond
to
modern
categories,
that
is
hardly
surprising:
as
Michael
Wood
and
D.C.
Feeney
argue,
the
boundaries
between
fact,
fiction
and
falsehood
are
culturally
determined
and
change
over
time.
This
book
explores
the
varying
ways
in
which
these
categories
were
constructed
in
the
ancient
world,
and
in
the
process
raises
important
questions
about
the
definition
of
fiction
in
contemporary
culture.”
–Journal
of
Hellenic
Studies
“It
has
long
been
recognized
that
the
imagination
of
the
novelist,
the
poet,
and
the
historian
must
be
related
in
important,
intimate
ways.
This
collection
advances
our
understanding
of
those
related
imaginations.”
–Professor
James
Tatum,
Dartmouth
College,
USA
“Despite
its
selective
focus,
this
superb
collection
of
articles
on
the
problem
of
fiction
in
antiquity
is
a
valuable
acquisition
for
any
general
library,
the
scope
of
the
book
and
the
range
of
the
individual
contributions
extensive
enough
to
ensure
that
the
evidence
for
this
protean
literary
category
is
given
generous
coverage.”
–Classical
World,
June
1997