Self-Imitation in Apuleius' Tales of Tlepolemus/Haemus and Thrasyleon
1994; Brill; Volume: 47; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1163/156852594x00032
ISSN1568-525X
Autores Tópico(s)Linguistics and language evolution
Resumo*) The text of the Metamorphoses is quoted from the Teubner edition of R. Helm, Apulei Platonici Madaurensis opera quae supersunt. Metamorphoseon libri XI (Leipzig 1968). 1) On the robber's three tales in general see B.L. Hijmans Jr. et al., Apuleius Madaurensis Metamorphoses Book IV 1-27. Text. Introduction and Commentary (Groningen 1977), ad. loe. G. Cooper, Sexual and Ethical Reversal in Apuleius: The Metamorphoses as Anti-Epic, Studies in Latin Literature and Roman History 2 (Brussels 1980), 441-42. On the affinities of the tale of Lamachus with Satire see G.F. Gianotti, Memoria letteraria e giuridica nell'episodio di Chryseros e Lamachus (Apul. met. 4.9-11), QFC 3 (1981), 61-83. T. Alimonti, Letteratura e folclore: I Latrones di Apuleio e i briganti di Propp, CCC 7 (1986), 59-76. P.G. Walsh, The Roman Novel. The Satyricon of Petronius and the Metamorphoses of Apuleius (Cambridge 1970), 158. See also P.A. Mackay, Klephtika. The Tradition of the Tales of Banditry in Apuleius, G&R 10 (1963), 147-52. 2) Thus the Groningen commentators, B.L. Hijmans Jr. et ai, Apuleius Madaurensis Metamorphoses Books VI 25-32 and VII. Text. Introduction and Commentary (Groningen 1981), 111. G. Westerbrink, Some Parodies in Apuleius' Metamorphoses, in: B.L. Hijmans Jr. and R.Th. van der Paard (eds.), Aspects of Apuleius' Golden Ass (hereafter AAGA) (Groningen 1978), 69, observes the following connections between Haemus and the robber's three tales of Lamachus, Alcimus, and Thrasyleon:
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