A commentary with introduction on the Florida of Apuleius

The most recent, and in many ways the best, text of the Florida of Apuleius is that of P. Vallette in the Budé series (Paris, 1924). I have, however, used the Teubner text by R. Helm (Leipzig, 1910, reprinted with addenda 195 and 1959) as the basis for this Commentary, mainly because of the usefulne...

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Main Author: Opeku, Fabian
Published: Queen Mary, University of London 1974
Subjects:
880
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.301611
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-3016112019-02-27T03:17:04ZA commentary with introduction on the Florida of ApuleiusOpeku, Fabian1974The most recent, and in many ways the best, text of the Florida of Apuleius is that of P. Vallette in the Budé series (Paris, 1924). I have, however, used the Teubner text by R. Helm (Leipzig, 1910, reprinted with addenda 195 and 1959) as the basis for this Commentary, mainly because of the usefulness of Helm's critical apparatus, which is considerably fuller than Vallette's. I have discussed variant readings where the sense appears to be affected, but I have made no independent study of the MSS. This Commentary makes no claim to be a critical edition. I have been more concerned with interpretation and elucidation than with matters of style, though in an author like Apuleius the two aspects cannot always be separated. A commentary is not, however, the most convenient medium for a stylistic study. I have commented mainly on subject matter, on the language (including points of grammar), and on anything of general or special interest that appeared to throw light on the meaning and intention of the author. In the Introduction I have considered the question of the composition of the Florida. My conclusion is that the passages, as we now have them, are excerpts from an earlier collection made by Apuleius himself, and that the division into four books goes back to this original collection. I have also tried to show that, even in its present mutilated state, the Florida gives a unique insight into Apulelus' manner as a public speaker and his relations with his Carthaginian audience. For convenience, I have inserted the Bibliography at the beginning of the work, so that the reader may more easily refer back to the list of older editions, which are discussed in the first section of the Introduction.880ClassicsQueen Mary, University of Londonhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.301611http://qmro.qmul.ac.uk/xmlui/handle/123456789/1550Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 880
Classics
spellingShingle 880
Classics
Opeku, Fabian
A commentary with introduction on the Florida of Apuleius
description The most recent, and in many ways the best, text of the Florida of Apuleius is that of P. Vallette in the Budé series (Paris, 1924). I have, however, used the Teubner text by R. Helm (Leipzig, 1910, reprinted with addenda 195 and 1959) as the basis for this Commentary, mainly because of the usefulness of Helm's critical apparatus, which is considerably fuller than Vallette's. I have discussed variant readings where the sense appears to be affected, but I have made no independent study of the MSS. This Commentary makes no claim to be a critical edition. I have been more concerned with interpretation and elucidation than with matters of style, though in an author like Apuleius the two aspects cannot always be separated. A commentary is not, however, the most convenient medium for a stylistic study. I have commented mainly on subject matter, on the language (including points of grammar), and on anything of general or special interest that appeared to throw light on the meaning and intention of the author. In the Introduction I have considered the question of the composition of the Florida. My conclusion is that the passages, as we now have them, are excerpts from an earlier collection made by Apuleius himself, and that the division into four books goes back to this original collection. I have also tried to show that, even in its present mutilated state, the Florida gives a unique insight into Apulelus' manner as a public speaker and his relations with his Carthaginian audience. For convenience, I have inserted the Bibliography at the beginning of the work, so that the reader may more easily refer back to the list of older editions, which are discussed in the first section of the Introduction.
author Opeku, Fabian
author_facet Opeku, Fabian
author_sort Opeku, Fabian
title A commentary with introduction on the Florida of Apuleius
title_short A commentary with introduction on the Florida of Apuleius
title_full A commentary with introduction on the Florida of Apuleius
title_fullStr A commentary with introduction on the Florida of Apuleius
title_full_unstemmed A commentary with introduction on the Florida of Apuleius
title_sort commentary with introduction on the florida of apuleius
publisher Queen Mary, University of London
publishDate 1974
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.301611
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