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Studi sull'epigramma scoptico greco

The dissertation is divided into two parts: the first synthesis focused on the definition of the
epigram scoptico imperial age, the second analysis concerns the study of the minor poets of Book XI.
In the Introduction (I), the attention focuses on the genesis of imperial scoptic epigram: here
you try to draw a picture of the satirical Greek literature before the middle of the century AD to identify the debts of the scoptic epigram, especially Lucillius’, in respect of previous authors (from the Middle-up comedy to epigrams of the Crown of Philip), and to emphasize the remoteness of this
literary phenomenon from other experiences of ironic and satirical poetry (Catullus).
In the chapter on the Themes (II), the study was limited to professional groups and those
most targeted (doctors, grammarians, etc..), to that particular type represented by the satire on
ethnic groups. The study of minor poets is necessarily preceded by a general discussion on the
authors most representative of the greek satiric poetry: Lucillius, Ammianus, Nicarchus and
Palladas (III).
All the minor poets of the eleventh book, which you can not provide a date, have been
regarded by scholars as the ‘poets of Diogenian’: the chapter on Anthologion of Diogenian (IV),
which is undergoing critical to the existence (assumed but never proven) of the lost source of Book XI, therefore, serves as an introduction to the commentary of the authors required minors. During the discussion they are not qualified as poets ‘poets of Diogenian’, but are divided into two categories: those included in the string of alphabetically ordered AP XI 388-436 (V), and those who
are not part of (VI).
Finally, a separate chapter (VII) is devoted to the age-old question of epigrams assigned to Lucian, both in the string of alphabetically ordered epigrams, as well as outside it.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:unibo.it/oai:amsdottorato.cib.unibo.it:4015
Date26 May 2011
CreatorsCeccaroli, Stefano <1982>
ContributorsNeri, Camillo
PublisherAlma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna
Source SetsUniversità di Bologna
LanguageItalian
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeDoctoral Thesis, PeerReviewed
Formatapplication/pdf
Rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

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