Pro se de magia : apologia

by Apuleius

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Apuleius speech Pro Se De Magia is a unique example of 2nd century Roman oratory and a literary masterpiece of the Second Sophistic. On this fascinating speech, no up-to-date commen-tary in English is available. The present publication aims at filling this gap. In the commentary, special attention is paid to the speakers rhetorical strategies and the rich literary texture of the speech.

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Apuleius, of African birth, was educated in Carthage and Athens. His most famous work, The Golden Ass (c.150), is the tale of a young philosopher who transformed himself not into a bird as he had expected, but into an ass. After many adventures he was rescued by the goddess Isis. The episode of "Cupid and Psyche," told with consummate grace, is show more the most celebrated section. This romance of the declining Empire influenced the novels of Boccaccio, Cervantes, Fielding (see Vol. 1), and Smollett (see Vol. 1); Heywood used the theme for a drama and William Morris (see Vol. 1) used some of the material in The Earthly Paradise. Robert Graves's "translation abandons the aureate Latinity of Apuleius for a dry, sharp, plain style---which is itself a small masterpiece of twentieth-century prose" (Kenneth Rexroth, SR SR). The new translation by John Arthur Hanson is authoritative. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Original language
Latin

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Genres
Fiction and Literature, Literature Studies and Criticism
DDC/MDS
875.01Literature & rhetoricLatin & Italic literaturesLatin speechesto ca. 499, Roman period
LCC
PA6207 .A71997Language and LiteratureGreek language and literature. Latin language and literatureRoman literatureIndividual authors
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English, Latin
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Paper
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5