|aThe Cambridge companion to Roman satire /|cedited by Kirk Freudenburg.
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|aCambridge, UK :|bCambridge University Press,|c2005.
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|axvi, 352 p. ;|c23 cm.
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|aCambridge companions to literature
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|aIncludes bibliographical references (p. 323-341) and index.
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|tRome's first 'satirists' : themes and genre in Ennius and Lucilius /|rFrances Muecke --|tThe restless companion : Horace, Satires 1 and 2 /|rEmily Gowers --|tSpeaking from silence : the Stoic paradoxes of Persius /|rAndrea Cucchiarelli --|tThe poor man's feast : Juvenal /|rVictoria Rimell --|tCitation and authority in Seneca's Apocolocyntosis /|rEllen O'Gorman --|tLate arrivals : Julian and Boethius /|rJoel Relihan --|tEpic allusion in Roman satire /|rCatherine Connors --|tSleeping with the enemy : satire and philosophy /|rRoland Mayer --|tThe satiric maze : Petronius, satire, and the novel /|rVictoria Rimell --|tSatire as aristocratic play /|rThomas Habinek --|tSatire in a ritual context /|rFritz Graf --|tSatire and the poet : the body as self-referential symbol /|rAlessandro Barchiesi and Andrea Cucchiarelli --|tThe libidinal rhetoric of satire /|rErik Gunderson --|tRoman satire in the sixteenth century /|rColin Burrow --|tAlluding to satire : Rochester, Dryden, and others /|rDan Hooley --|tThe Horatian and the Juvenalesque in English letters /|rCharles Martindale --|tThe 'presence' : of Roman satire : modern receptions and their interpretative implications /|rDuncan Kennedy --|tThe turnaround : a volume retrospect on Roman satires /|rJohn Henderson.
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|aSatire, Latin|xHistory and criticism.
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|aRome|xIn literature.
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|aFreudenburg, Kirk,|d1961-
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|aRoman satire.
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|3Table of contents|uhttp://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/cam051/2004057024.html