Papers by Lucía Rodríguez-Noriega Guillén
Ktèma, 2023
Through the analysis of several parallel passages between Plutarch and Aelian (Mor. 363C ~ NA 10.... more Through the analysis of several parallel passages between Plutarch and Aelian (Mor. 363C ~ NA 10.28 and VH 4.8; Mor. 982D ~ NA 9.3), this article aims to illustrate how studies of this nature can be of interest beyond the search for relationships of interdependence, the tracing of common sources, or the editing of fragmentary works. Specifically, this kind of approach can contribute to our knowledge of Aelian as a writer,
to a better understanding of certain aspects of the content of his writings, or to clarify questions related to the transmission of the text.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Exemplaria classica: journal of classical philology, 2009
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Ediciones Clásicas eBooks, 1994
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Emerita Revista De Linguistica Y Filologia Clasica, 2010
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
The author of this of this paper provides a new hypothesis about the plot of Epicharmus' dram... more The author of this of this paper provides a new hypothesis about the plot of Epicharmus' drama Τριακάδες:. Taking into account the play's title, some internal evidence, and certain parallels from other Greek comic works, the author suggests that the drama could have dealt with the troubles of some character obliged to pay his debts at the end of the month. The topic of debts and debtors has also parallels in other plays by Epicharmus himself.The author of this of this paper provides a new hypothesis about the plot of Epicharmus' drama Τριακάδες:. Taking into account the play's title, some internal evidence, and certain parallels from other Greek comic works, the author suggests that the drama could have dealt with the troubles of some character obliged to pay his debts at the end of the month. The topic of debts and debtors has also parallels in other plays by Epicharmus himself
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Fortunatae. Revista Canaria de Filología, Cultura y Humanidades Clásicas, 2020
Athenaeus’ Deipnosophistae is the (never explicitly admitted) direct source of some of Aelian’s p... more Athenaeus’ Deipnosophistae is the (never explicitly admitted) direct source of some of Aelian’s passages, especially in the Varia Historia, but also in the Natura Animalium. The aim of this article is the comparison of some of these passages, in order to cast some light on the way both use and quote their sources, and on their personality as writers
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
De acuerdo con la moderna pragmática lingüística, el insulto es un tipo de acto de habla descorté... more De acuerdo con la moderna pragmática lingüística, el insulto es un tipo de acto de habla descortés y, como tal, supone una violación intencionada de las reglas de cooperación (Grice 1975) y de la máxima de cortesía (Leech 1983) por las que se rige la comunicación humana. Se trata de un fenómeno complejo y variable, en cuya producción y recepción no solo intervienen aspectos lingüísticos (incluyendo los pragmáticos), sino también factores sociales y cognitivos. Ningún vocablo o expresión constituye de por sí un insulto, sino que se convierte en tal únicamente al ser empleado con una finalidad determinada y en un contexto cultural y comunicativo dados. En concreto, la intención del hablante al recurrir al insulto es siempre hostil: la de descalificar a alguien o algo como medio de agresión o defensa.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Fragmentation in Ancient Greek Drama, 2020
While the presence of Epicharmus in the Sicilian and Attic culture of the Classical period has be... more While the presence of Epicharmus in the Sicilian and Attic culture of the Classical period has been the subject of discussion for more than a century, giving rise to many publications, there are no global studies addressing knowledge of the poet in the Imperial period. In this essay, I will offer a quick, but I hope illustrative, review of the explicit mentions of Epicharmus in Greek writers between the 1st and 5th century AD (see the table at the end of this paper). I work on the assump-tion that a quotation, although strictly connected to a sense of tradition, is not simply imitation or reproduction, but something that performs a role of its own in the work that has borrowed it, both conferring and deriving meaning in its new setting. I will therefore focus particularly on why and how each author cites Epicharmus, and how this material (whether they be fragments or testimonies) is inserted in the work in question. I leave to one side the lexica and grammatical treatises which cite Epicharmus’ fragments for strictly linguistic reasons (i.e., merely as examples), as well as Stobaeus’ Anthology and the commentators on Aristotle who mention Epicharmus because he was cited by the philosopher, i.e., as a part of the text they are commenting on.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Exemplaria Classica, 2007
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Estudios Sobre Plutarco Ideas Religiosas Actas Del Iii Simposio Internacional Sobre Plutarco Oviedo 30 De Abril a 2 De Mayo De 1992 1994 Isbn 84 7882 135 X Pags 659 670, 1994
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
El volumen se abre en el momento en el que, después de un breve descanso tras la cena que se habí... more El volumen se abre en el momento en el que, después de un breve descanso tras la cena que se había desarrollado en los libros anteriores, los eruditos invitados se recuestan de nuevo para beber y charlar. El libro XIincluye un detallado catálogo de los diversos tipos de vasos griegos, donde la descripción de cada recipiente va acompañada de sus menciones literarias y las discusiones surgidas al respecto. El libro XII se centra en lavoluptuosidad, el placer y la virtud, y en él se relatan toda clase de historias y anécdotas curiosas sobre los grandes amantes del placer en el mundo Antiguo. Finalmente, el libro XIII, recoge información sobre las mujeres, el amor y lasheteras en la Antigüedad, constituyendo nuestra principal fuente literaria de información sobre estas últimas.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
DESCRIPTION The paper analyses, from the point of view of the quoting author, six comic fragments... more DESCRIPTION The paper analyses, from the point of view of the quoting author, six comic fragments transmitted in Porphyry's Homeric Questions, Archipp. fr. 39 K.-A.; Ar. Pl. 454 and fr. 261 K.-A.; Cratin. frs. 194 and 506 K.-A.; Eup. fr. 298 K.-A. and Com. Adesp. fr. 866 K.-A.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Uploads
Papers by Lucía Rodríguez-Noriega Guillén
to a better understanding of certain aspects of the content of his writings, or to clarify questions related to the transmission of the text.
to a better understanding of certain aspects of the content of his writings, or to clarify questions related to the transmission of the text.