Lucian's Science Fiction Novel, True Histories: Interpretation and Commentary

Predný obal
BRILL, 1998 - 254 strán (strany)
This is the first substantial commentary on Lucian's "Verae Historiae" ("True Histories"), a fantastic journey narrative considered the earliest surviving example of Science Fiction in the Western tradition. The Introduction situates the work in the context of Lucian's oeuvre, especially his preoccupation with distinguishing truth from fiction and exposing the lies of philosophers. In their commentary, the editors trace the sources and the meaning of the numerous intertextual allusions and parodies of philosophers, poets, historians and paradoxographers. The "Verae Historiae" emerges from this scrutiny as a remarkably complex text with some very "modern" concerns: it problematizes the act of reading, allegorical interpretation, authorial reliability, and the validity of cultural norms and literary genres.

Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy

Obsah

Allegory and the Journey for Knowledge
5
Parody and Allusion
22
The Verae Historiae Satire and Science Fiction
44
A Trip to the Moon
51
Inside the Whale
159
The Land of the Dead
180
Bibliography
233
General Index
247
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O tomto autorovi (1998)

Aristoula Georgiadou, Ph.D. (1990), University of Illinois, is Assistant Professor of Classics at Penn State University. She has published extensively on Plutarch and Lucian, and is currently completing "A Historical and Philological Commentary on Plutarch's "Life of Pelopidas"." David H.J. Larmour, Ph.D. (1987), University of Illinois, is Associate Professor of Classics and Comparative Literature at Texas Tech University. He has published on Lucian, Plutarch, Juvenal and Nabokov and edited "Russian Literature and the Classics" ("Harwood," 1996).

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