Discourse, Knowledge, and Power in Apuleius' Metamorphoses
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Discourse, Knowledge, and Power in Apuleius' Metamorphoses
Adkins, Evelyn
The University of Michigan Press
05/2022
290
Dura
Inglês
9780472133055
15 a 20 dias
333
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Abbreviations
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Cultural and Discursive Contexts
Apuleius and the Metamorphoses
Language and Meaning in the Metamorphoses
Approaches to Discourse
Apuleius' Manipulation of Discourse in the Apology
This Book
Chapter 1: Discourse from the Margins
The Priests of the Syrian Goddess: Ancient Evidence
The Priests in the Metamorphoses and the Onos
The Bandits: Ancient Evidence
The Robbers' Rhetoric
The Bandits' Betrayal
Conclusion
Chapter 2: Elite Discourse
The Tale of Thelyphron
The Festival of Laughter
The Wise Physician
Markers of Truth
Chapter 3: Asinine Discourse
First Impressions
Lucius' First Master: Milo
Metamorphosis
Asinine Strategies of Communication
Conclusion
Chapter 4: Feminine Discourse
Byrrhena
Photis
The Corinthian Matron
Isis
Conclusion
Chapter 5: Silence
Curiosity, Garrulity, and Silence
Unheeded Warnings
Magical Initiation
How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Ass
The Tale of Cupid and Psyche
Silence and Revelation
Conclusion
Chapter 6: The Novel as Discourse
Models of Reading
The Prologue
The Asinine Narrator and the Characterized Fictive Reader
The Narrator's Control
The Epilogue
Conclusion: The Man from Madauros
Bibliography
Passages Cited
Index
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Cultural and Discursive Contexts
Apuleius and the Metamorphoses
Language and Meaning in the Metamorphoses
Approaches to Discourse
Apuleius' Manipulation of Discourse in the Apology
This Book
Chapter 1: Discourse from the Margins
The Priests of the Syrian Goddess: Ancient Evidence
The Priests in the Metamorphoses and the Onos
The Bandits: Ancient Evidence
The Robbers' Rhetoric
The Bandits' Betrayal
Conclusion
Chapter 2: Elite Discourse
The Tale of Thelyphron
The Festival of Laughter
The Wise Physician
Markers of Truth
Chapter 3: Asinine Discourse
First Impressions
Lucius' First Master: Milo
Metamorphosis
Asinine Strategies of Communication
Conclusion
Chapter 4: Feminine Discourse
Byrrhena
Photis
The Corinthian Matron
Isis
Conclusion
Chapter 5: Silence
Curiosity, Garrulity, and Silence
Unheeded Warnings
Magical Initiation
How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Ass
The Tale of Cupid and Psyche
Silence and Revelation
Conclusion
Chapter 6: The Novel as Discourse
Models of Reading
The Prologue
The Asinine Narrator and the Characterized Fictive Reader
The Narrator's Control
The Epilogue
Conclusion: The Man from Madauros
Bibliography
Passages Cited
Index
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
Apuleius;Metamorphoses;The Golden Ass;discourse;discourse analysis;knowledge;power relations;Roman novel;Latin literature;ancient novel;ancient prose fiction;Greek and Latin novel;Greek and Roman novel;Lucius;self-fashioning;Roman rhetoric;literary studies;Roman social history;Roman cultural history;speech;silence;nonverbal communication;Roman Africa;Roman Greece;Roman Empire;identity;identity construction;gender theory;social status;Middle Platonism;Philosophus Platonicus;donkey;human and animal;mystery cult;mystical silence;Isis and Osiris;Platonic philosophy;masculinity
Abbreviations
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Cultural and Discursive Contexts
Apuleius and the Metamorphoses
Language and Meaning in the Metamorphoses
Approaches to Discourse
Apuleius' Manipulation of Discourse in the Apology
This Book
Chapter 1: Discourse from the Margins
The Priests of the Syrian Goddess: Ancient Evidence
The Priests in the Metamorphoses and the Onos
The Bandits: Ancient Evidence
The Robbers' Rhetoric
The Bandits' Betrayal
Conclusion
Chapter 2: Elite Discourse
The Tale of Thelyphron
The Festival of Laughter
The Wise Physician
Markers of Truth
Chapter 3: Asinine Discourse
First Impressions
Lucius' First Master: Milo
Metamorphosis
Asinine Strategies of Communication
Conclusion
Chapter 4: Feminine Discourse
Byrrhena
Photis
The Corinthian Matron
Isis
Conclusion
Chapter 5: Silence
Curiosity, Garrulity, and Silence
Unheeded Warnings
Magical Initiation
How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Ass
The Tale of Cupid and Psyche
Silence and Revelation
Conclusion
Chapter 6: The Novel as Discourse
Models of Reading
The Prologue
The Asinine Narrator and the Characterized Fictive Reader
The Narrator's Control
The Epilogue
Conclusion: The Man from Madauros
Bibliography
Passages Cited
Index
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Cultural and Discursive Contexts
Apuleius and the Metamorphoses
Language and Meaning in the Metamorphoses
Approaches to Discourse
Apuleius' Manipulation of Discourse in the Apology
This Book
Chapter 1: Discourse from the Margins
The Priests of the Syrian Goddess: Ancient Evidence
The Priests in the Metamorphoses and the Onos
The Bandits: Ancient Evidence
The Robbers' Rhetoric
The Bandits' Betrayal
Conclusion
Chapter 2: Elite Discourse
The Tale of Thelyphron
The Festival of Laughter
The Wise Physician
Markers of Truth
Chapter 3: Asinine Discourse
First Impressions
Lucius' First Master: Milo
Metamorphosis
Asinine Strategies of Communication
Conclusion
Chapter 4: Feminine Discourse
Byrrhena
Photis
The Corinthian Matron
Isis
Conclusion
Chapter 5: Silence
Curiosity, Garrulity, and Silence
Unheeded Warnings
Magical Initiation
How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Ass
The Tale of Cupid and Psyche
Silence and Revelation
Conclusion
Chapter 6: The Novel as Discourse
Models of Reading
The Prologue
The Asinine Narrator and the Characterized Fictive Reader
The Narrator's Control
The Epilogue
Conclusion: The Man from Madauros
Bibliography
Passages Cited
Index
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
Apuleius;Metamorphoses;The Golden Ass;discourse;discourse analysis;knowledge;power relations;Roman novel;Latin literature;ancient novel;ancient prose fiction;Greek and Latin novel;Greek and Roman novel;Lucius;self-fashioning;Roman rhetoric;literary studies;Roman social history;Roman cultural history;speech;silence;nonverbal communication;Roman Africa;Roman Greece;Roman Empire;identity;identity construction;gender theory;social status;Middle Platonism;Philosophus Platonicus;donkey;human and animal;mystery cult;mystical silence;Isis and Osiris;Platonic philosophy;masculinity