Plutarch: the Age of Alexander
by Timothy Duff
Plutarch: the Age of Alexander, edited and (with I. Scott-Kilvert) translated (Penguin Books: London, 2012). Pp. xxxvii+642. ISBN 978-0140449358.
Alexandre des Lumières (Fragments d'histoire européenne)
sous-presse chez Gallimard (Paris), Collection "Essais", 2012.
Annoncé fin août 2012
G. De Sanctis, Filippo e Alessandro. Dal regno macedone alla monarchia universale. lezioni universitarie 1949-1950
by Monica Berti
Tivoli (Roma), Edizioni Tored, 2011
[ISBN: 978-88-88617-45-9]
Co-edited with V. Costa
La titolatura regale macedone fino ad Alessandro Magno
PhD thesis, Italy 2001 (University of Messina, XIV ciclo di Dottorato in Storia Antica)
Epistolary Narratives in Ancient Greek Literature
Edited volume, eds. P.A. Rosenmeyer, E. Bracke and O. Hodkinson.
Draft typescript currently under review with CUP.
Recent scholarship in Classics and related fields has shown great interest in letters and epistolary literature of all... more
Recent scholarship in Classics and related fields has shown great interest in letters and epistolary literature of all forms (e.g. Morello and Morrison 2007; Trapp 2003; Rosenmeyer 2001). The use of embedded letters to advance the narrative in genres such as historiography and the novel, and the potential for real or pseudonymous letters to function as biography (real or fictionalized), autobiography, or historical fiction, mean that letters in antiquity play a crucial role in the development of narrative literature of many kinds. The apparent popularity of letters as reading matter rather than merely tools for communication, especially in the Imperial period, makes it essential that we pay attention to this genre, as we assess the reading practices and literary preferences of antiquity. The literary qualities of Greek letters are often overlooked, despite the fact that they display the same kind of awareness of generic conventions and self-consciousness of their literary nature as other narrative genres.
Letters are always about narrative, among other things, whether directly – narrating events to absent correspondents - or indirectly – presenting fragments of an underlying narrative that the reader attempts to reconstruct. This collection of essays explores the inherent narrative quality of letters and its use by Greek authors in a variety of genres and time periods, as well as the limited and sometimes even willfully obscure nature of epistolary narratives that omit vital information in the name of verisimilitude. A series of case studies, with topics ranging from Classical poetry and historiography through to Philostratus and Christian martyrs, asks why particular authors choose the letter form; how an embedded letter relates to its narrative environment, and, conversely, the effect of the epistolary form on the narrative it contains; and how each author manipulates the epistolary tradition. It explores various types of epistolary forms: individual letters (embedded or free-standing); collections of continuous epistolary narrative; and letters presenting fragmented or discontinuous narrative. It pays close attention to the self-consciously literary or fictional qualities in Greek letters, including intertextuality with other literary texts and particularly allusions to earlier letters as literature. A chronological organization of the volume encourages the reader to consider epistolary narrative as a kind of literature that develops over time, growing in popularity and in the variety of forms it takes.
Античка сегашност. Осврт кон грчко-македонскиот спор за Александровото наследство.
(Skopje: Templum, 2011). In Macedonian. Title in English: Ancient present. Reflections on the Greco-Macedonian feud over Alexander's legacy.
The Landmark Arrian: The Campaigns of Alexander
by James Romm
Part of the Landmark Series of Ancient Historians, under the direction of series editor Robert Strassler.
Ghost on the Throne: The Death of Alexander the Great and the War for Crown and Empire
by James Romm
Forthcoming from Knopf. October 2011
A fast-paced, dramatic recounting of the events that began with Alexander's illness in Babylon, June 323 B.C., and... more A fast-paced, dramatic recounting of the events that began with Alexander's illness in Babylon, June 323 B.C., and ended with the resolution of the struggle for his throne, 316 B.C. Based on the accounts of Plutarch, Quintus Curtius, Diodorus, Arrian, and Pompeius Trogus.
The Roman Alexander: Reading a Cultural Myth
Exeter: University of Exeter Press. 2002
This book seizes on one of the eternal objects of widespread attention in Ancient History and turns the tables on the... more
This book seizes on one of the eternal objects of widespread attention in Ancient History and turns the tables on the scholarship that has shaped and dominated the field.
Instead of scrutinising the documents in order to reconstruct the biography and assess the historical significance, Diana Spencer traces the deployment and development of the mythical figure of Alexander. She explores and synthesises a selection of Latin texts, from the Late Republic to Hadrian, to form a series of themed discussions which investigate the cultural significance of Alexander for Rome.
The selected texts - drawn from verse and prose, history, epic and oratory - are presented alongside their English translation, and provide an insight into a world where to think about Alexander was to engage with the burning ideological issues of Rome during a period of intense and often violent political and cultural change. The book makes clear how particular texts and issues may be readily accessed, providing a valuable resource for teachers and their students, whilst also offering a new approach to cultural histories of Rome and Alexander.
[unfortunately google books only provides a 'snippet' view]
Gekroonde Goden: Hellenistisch koningschap van Alexander de Grote tot Kleopatra
Published with Amsterdam University Press, 2005
