Aesopic conversations popular tradition, cultural dialogue, and the invention of Greek prose /
        محفوظ في:
      
    
          | المؤلف الرئيسي: | |
|---|---|
| مؤلف مشترك: | |
| التنسيق: | الكتروني كتاب الكتروني | 
| اللغة: | الإنجليزية | 
| منشور في: | 
        Princeton :
          Princeton University Press,
    
        2011.
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| سلاسل: | Martin classical lectures.
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| الموضوعات: | |
| الوصول للمادة أونلاين: | An electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click to view | 
| الوسوم: | 
       إضافة وسم    
     
      لا توجد وسوم, كن أول من يضع وسما على هذه التسجيلة!
   
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                جدول المحتويات: 
            
                  - Introduction: an elusive quarry: In search of ancient Greek popular culture; Explaining the joke: a roadmap for classicists; Synopsis of method and structure of argument
 - The Aesopic challenge to Delphic authority: Ideological tensions at Delphi; the Aesopic critique; Neoptolemus and Aesop: sacrifice, hero cult, and competitive scapegoating
 - Sophia before/beyond philosophy: the tradition of Sophia; Sophists and (as) sages; Aristotle and the transformation of Sophia
 - Aesop as sage: political counsel and discursive practice; Aesop among the sages; Political animals: fable and the scene of advising
 - Reading the life: the progress of a sage and the anthropology of Sophia: an Aesopic anthropology of wisdom; Aesop and Ahiqar; Delphic theoria and the death of a sage; the bricoleur as culture hero, or the art of extorting self-incrimination
 - The Aesopic parody of high wisdom: demystifying Sophia: Hesiod, Theognis, and the seven sages; Aesopic parody in the visual tradition
 - Aesop at the invention of philosophy: the problematic sociopolitics of mimetic prose; the generic affiliations of Sokratikoi logoi
 - The battle over prose: fable in sophistic education and Xenophon's Memorabilia: Sophistic fables; traditional fable narration in Xenophon's Memorabilia
 - Sophistic fable in Plato: parody, appropriation, and transcendence: Plato's Protagoras: debunking Sophistic fable; Plato's symposium: ringing the changes on fable
 - Aesop in Plato's Sokratikoi logoi: analogy, elenchos, and disavowal: Sophia into philosophy: Socrates between the sages and Aesop; the Aesopic bricoleur and the "old Socratic tool-box"; sympotic wisdom, comedy, and Aesopic competition in Hippias major
 - Historie and logopoiia: two sides of Herodotean prose: history before prose, prose before history; Aesop ho logopoios; Plutarch reading Herodotus: Aesop, ruptures of decorum, and the non-Greek
 - Herodotus and Aesop: Cyrus tells a fable; Greece and (as) fable, or resignifying the hierarchy of genre; fable as history; the Aesopic contract of the histories: Herodotus teaches his readers.