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Quaestiones criticae ad Diras et Lydiam pertinentes ...Petry, Johannes, January 1895 (has links)
Inaug.-diss.--Münster. / Cover title. Vita.
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Historische untersuchungen zu den redenfragmenten des M. Porcius Cato beiträge zur lebensgeschichte und politik Catos,Janzer, Benno, January 1936 (has links)
Inaugural dissertation, Würzburg. / Lebenslauf. Includes bibliographical references.
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Die Komposition der Schrift des alten Cato über den LandbauOtterbein, Georg Heinz, January 1940 (has links)
Diss.--Giessen. / Vita. Bibliography: p. 43.
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The literary portrait of Cato Uticensis in Lucan's Bellum civileOrmsby, Robert John, January 1970 (has links)
Thesis--Washington. / Photocopy. Ann Arbor, Mich. : Xerox University Microfilms, 1976. -- 21 cm. Vita. Bibliography: leaves [152]-156.
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Quaestionum Catonianarum capita duo ...Jordan, Henri, January 1856 (has links)
Inaug.-diss.--Berlin. / Vita.
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Historische untersuchungen zu den redenfragmenten des M. Porcius Cato beiträge zur lebensgeschichte und politik Catos,Janzer, Benno, January 1936 (has links)
Inaugural dissertation, Würzburg. / Lebenslauf. Includes bibliographical references.
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Requiem for solo soprano, mixed choir, organ and orchestraOber, Reinhard. Kubík, Ladislav, January 2003 (has links)
Treatise (D.M.A.) -- Florida State University, 2003. / Advisor: Ladislav Kubík, Florida State University, School of Music. Title and description from treatise home page (viewed 11-20-03) Latin and German words, printed as text following score. Document formatted into pages; contains 99 pages. Includes biographical sketch.
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A commentary on Plutarch's Cato MinorGeiger, Joseph January 1971 (has links)
The Introduction is concerned with the antecedents, the circumstances of writing and the structure of the biography. Its first chapter surveys the successive treatments of Cato's figure in the Roman literature: immediately after his suicide at Utica a great literary controversy around Cato came into being: cicero, and later Brutus, Fadius Gallus and Munatius Rufus wrote laudatory accounts while Caesar and A. Hirtius composed defamatory <u>Anticatones</u>. This theme was also central a few years later in Salluet's <u>Catilinarian Conspiracy</u> and was taken up by the aged Augustus in a rhetorical reply to Brutus. With the completion of the Roman revolution the theme of Cato lost its urgency and relevance and during the early Principate Cato's figure is reduced to a few stereotyped acts and situation discussed in the schools of Rhetoric. Yet under the reign of Claudius and Nero a revival in the interest in Cato takes place: Seneca regards him as the Stoic Saint Incarnate, his nephew Lucan makes him the chief hero of his <u>Pharsalia</u>, while Thrasea Paetus composes a full scale <u>Life of Cato</u>: for the senatorial opposition under Nero Cato's figure again has a political relevance. The reign of Domitian ensures the end of the literary preoccupation with Cato: hero worshippers found in Thrasea Paetus and Helvidius Priscus a more recent vintage of martyrs for the cause of libertas.
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Lucan's Cato, the defeat of victory, the triumph of memoryThorne, Mark Allen 01 July 2010 (has links)
This dissertation provides a new examination of the figure of Cato within Lucan's epic poem Bellum Civile by focusing on the theme of memory within the epic and its interaction with Cato's character specifically. It argues that one may read the epic as possessing the rhetorical function of a literary funeral monumentum, the purpose of which is to retell the death of Rome in the Roman Civil War, mourn its passing, and yet in so doing simultaneously preserve its memory so that future generations may remember the liberty Rome once possessed and may be influenced by that memory to action. In this reading, the epic itself--like Cato within the epic--offers a counter-memory of what the civil wars meant to Rome in competition with that promoted by Caesar and his descendants.
This study centers upon the speech of Cato found in Book 2 in which Cato states his two major goals for participation in the civil war: successfully commemorate a perishing Roma et Libertas and transform his own defeat into a self-sacrifice that is beneficial to his fellow Romans. The opening chapters place Cato's speech into its larger context by arguing that it is an integral part of a narrative arc spanning most of the first two books. The image of national suicide within the epic's proem reveals that gaining victory in civil war is what assures self-defeat. This economy of universal defeat pervades Lucan's epic and stands as the greatest threat facing Cato in the successful achievement of his goals. Lucan also shows that the very nature of civil war poses a threat to the viability of memory, as evidenced by scenes in which Roman soldiers and citizens forget and abandon the social ties that bind their identity to that of Rome.
Cato's speech illustrates that his chosen weapon against the epic's economy of defeat will be the power of memory. A careful analysis of the speech reveals that Cato's desired goal of enacting a self-sacrifice--a nod to his future suicidal martyrdom at Utica--can transform him into a monumentum of `Old Rome' (the pre-Caesarian Rome that still retained its libertas) which will in turn ensure his second goal of achieving funeral commemoration of what Rome used to be--and could still be again. The closing chapter examines key passages in Book 9 in which the power of memory is explicitly connected with renewal even in the midst of defeat, suggesting that Cato's (and the epic's) mission to preserve memory can be ultimately successful. This reading of Lucan's Cato has the benefit of showing that his success need no longer be based mainly upon whether or not he can be a virtuous sapiens but also upon what he can actually do for future generations of Romans by preserving the powerful memory of a Rome that still possessed her freedom from the Caesars.
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The impact of policy on perceived livelihood vulnerability : the case of Cato Manor.Caister, Karen. January 2005 (has links)
This dissertation describes the outcome of a sustainable livelihoods approach to assess the
livelihood vulnerability of community structures in Cato Manor (an urban renewal project
of Durban City, KwaZulu-Natal). The sustainable livelihoods approach used looked at the
specifics of the nature of assets wealth, and how the poor made a living. The vulnerability
of poor households and communities depends on the way the poor have combined
available assets and capabilities within a particular context to achieve short and long term
priorities. Amongst other contextual issues of developing countries, structural adjustment
has affected urban survival strategies.
This study explored whether the impact of post-apartheid policy had reduced livelihood
vulnerability for members of ten community structures in Cato Manor (CM). The
investigation was broken down into two sub-problems. Sub-problem one was to establish
what impact post-apartheid policy outcomes had on livelihood strategies in Cato Manor.
Sub-problem two set out to ascertain whether the livelihood strategies described by
participants in Cato Manor reflect reduced livelihood vulnerability.
A unique feature of this study was an agreement between community based facilitators
from Cato Manor (Cato Manor Development Association (CMDA) team) and the
researcher for the development of two research agendas. The CMDA team, comprised of
five community facilitators from the Seliyabuya Housing Co-operative and a Cato Manor
Development Association consultant, conducted sustainable livelihoods analyses as the
first stage of strategic planning for community structures. A secondary case study analysis
of livelihood vulnerabilities was carried out by the researcher using the secondary data
from these sustainable livelihoods analyses. Ten of the thirty five community structures
(29%) identified by the CMDA team as possible participants elected to participate in the
sustainable livelihoods analyses. Members of these structures formed ten groups based on
the focus of their structure goals. Each focus group conducted a sustainable livelihoods
analysis that reflected the assets, strategies for livelihoods and constraints that affected
structures' priorities. Each participant was also asked to complete a household survey
questionnaire providing demographic data for the case study.
The findings of this study showed a tension between government's structural adjustment
goals and the realities of actual delivery. The development goals provided for an urban
space with the physical structures for livelihood security and sustainability. The study identified that development has provided a significant accumulation of physical assets
through infrastructure delivery. However, perceptions of the participants indicated that
development has not provided sufficient economic opportunities; adequate housing; or
educational, social and recreational facilities for desired livelihood outcomes. In addition,
participants believed manufacturing and business growth dependent on the successful
marketing of products was in direct conflict with the actual physical restrictions of the
topography, housing density goals and conceptualisation of the economic opportunities
existing in Cato Manor. Participants relied on survivalist strategies of micro-enterprises
(such as informal trading), and reliance on collective community support as available
rational options for survival. Livelihood vulnerabilities indicated by the study were:
overcrowding of homes, both in formal and informal areas; national economic trends
resulting in job shedding by the formal sectors; and the slow beginnings of local economic
development. In addition, there would be the threat to this community of the unknown
impact of or capacity for the eThekweni Municipality's continuing the development
required in Cato Manor after closure of the Cato Manor Development Association; and the
impact of HIV/AIDS on the human, economic and social capital.
This study showed increasing vulnerability for households and community structures
represented by the sample in terms of physical capital, financial capital, and human capital.
This vulnerability was particularly characterised at community level by the perception of
increased dependency on cash amidst a corresponding reduction in available cash. It has
been recommended that a creative institutional response, using clearly defined roles and
responsibilities, collaborate with the community to define and make use of entry points for
the transfer of skills and Local Economic Development support for the creation of
employment opportunities. In addition, it was recommended that local government make
full use of their knowledge of the livelihoods activities, and human capital in Cato Manor
to facilitate the speedy delivery of appropriate infrastructure and economic support in a
manner that supports the sustainability of municipal management as well as increases the
livelihood options of the poor. To complement this study, further research requires an
ongoing evaluation of the impact of local government and the community's responses; and
an exploration of how democratic citizenship can be developed through the facilitation of
grass-roots collective organisational strategies. / Thesis (M.Agric.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2005.
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