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Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University's objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide.

Print Price: $412.50

Format:
Hardback
374 pp.
numerous halftones, 138 mm x 216 mm

ISBN-13:
9780199245734

Publication date:
May 2002

Imprint: OUP UK


Reading Sulpicia

Commentaries 1475 - 1990

Mathilde Skoie

Focusing on the representation of the Augustan poet Sulpicia in commentaries, this book investigates the interpretative strategies involved in the reading of an ancient text. Mathilde Skoie discusses a selection of commentaries from the Renaissance to the present day, combining the history of classical scholarhip, philology, feminist literary theory, and reception theory.

The six short love poems of Sulpicia (Corpus Tibullianum 3. 13-18) have, throughout history, been the subject of numerous different interpretations and judgements. The poems' ambivalent status as poetry, the uncertainties surrounding authorship, the female intrusion in a male-dominated world, and questions about canon and 'feminine Latin' are some of the many issues that make them interesting for an investigation of classical scholarship. The poems can thus be used as a showcase for how commentaries are an interpretative and historically situated genre.

Reading Sulpicia is the first monograph on Sulpicia and her reception, and thereby fills a gap in the literature concerning both reception studies and the study of Sulpicia herself.

Readership : Scholars and students of Classics (including the history of classical scholarship), women's studies (including feminist criticism), gender studies, cultural studies, the history of ideas, literary theory/criticism, hermeneutics

Introduction
1. The first steps: from antiquity to Cyllenius' 15th century commentary
2. Confronting a sibylline leaf: Scaliger's 16th century commentary
3. Male chivalry?: Heyne's 18th century commentary
4. Subtle poetry or feminine fiddling?: Two 19th century commentaries
5. Sulpicia Americana: Smith's 20th century commentary
6. The commentator as collector: Trankle's 1990 commentary
Conclusion: The hermenutics of commenting

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Mathilde Skoie is Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Oslo

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Special Features

  • The first monograph on Sulpicia and her reception
  • Makes an important contribution to broader issues: interpretation, gender, attribution, and commentary
  • Appendices include the text of the Sulpicia poems and samples of the commentaries