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Phaedrus' Fables: The Original Corpus

Mnemosyne 52 (3):308-329 (1999)

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  1. Traces of a Freed Language: Horace, Petronius, and the Rhetoric of Fable.Ilaria Marchesi - 2005 - Classical Antiquity 24 (2):307-330.
    This paper investigates the status that the genre of fable acquires when it is employed in literature. In particular, it surveys Horace's treatment of fables in the Satires and Epistles and the carefully controlled circumstances in which zoomorphic language is allowed to emerge during the banquet at Trimalchio's in Petronius' Satyrica. The analysis of the distribution of fables in Horace shows that for the Roman literary public the act of speaking through fables bore in itself a negative connotation, so much (...)
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  • Phaedrus, Callimachus and the recusatio to Success.Patrick Glauthier - 2009 - Classical Antiquity 28 (2):248-278.
    The following article investigates how Phaedrus' Latin verse fables engage standard Callimachean topoi. When Phaedrus imitates the Hymn to Apollo he fails to banish Envy and when he adopts Callimachus' own polemical allusions to Aesop he turns them upside down. Such texts are essentially Callimachean in spirit and technique and constitute a recusatio: by “mishandling” or “abusing” and thus “rejecting” various Callimachean topoi and the role of the “successful” Callimachean poet, the fabulist demonstrates his skill and versatility within the Callimachean (...)
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