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The Unity of Plutarch's Work

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Millennium transcends boundaries – between epochs and regions, and between disciplines. Like the journal Millennium-Jahrbuch, the Millennium-Studien pursues an international, interdisciplinary app...
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  • 16 September 2008
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This volume of collected essays explores the premise that Plutarch’s work, notwithstanding its amazing thematic multifariousness, constantly pivots on certain ideological pillars which secure its unity and coherence. So, unlike other similar books which, more or less, concentrate on either the Lives or the Moralia or on some particular aspect(s) of Plutarch’s œuvre, the articles of the present volume observe Plutarch at work in both Lives and Moralia, thus bringing forward and illustrating the inner unity of his varied literary production.

The subject-matter of the volume is uncommonly wide-ranging and the studies collected here inquire into many important issues of Plutarchean scholarship: the conditions under which Plutarch’s writings were separated into two distinct corpora, his methods of work and the various authorial techniques employed, the interplay between Lives and Moralia, Plutarch and politics, Plutarch and philosophy, literary aspects of Plutarch’s œuvre, Plutarch on women, Plutarch in his epistemological and socio-historical context. In sum, this book brings Plutarchean scholarship to date by revisiting and discussing older and recent problematization concerning Plutarch, in an attempt to further illuminate his personality and work.

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Price: $490.00
Pages: 869
Publisher: De Gruyter
Imprint: De Gruyter
Publication Date: 16 September 2008
ISBN: 9783110202496
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: HIS002000 HISTORY / Ancient / General, HIS002010 HISTORY / Ancient / Greece, HIS002020 HISTORY / Ancient / Rome, PHI002000 PHILOSOPHY / History & Surveys / Ancient & Classical
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Anastasios G. Nikolaidis, University of Crete, Greece.