Archives: Chapters

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Works Cited

Works Cited Anderson, G. 1974. “Athenaeus: The Sophistic Environment.” In Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt, Teil II: Principat, Band 34.3, 2173–2185. Berlin. ———. 1993. The Second Sophistic: A Cultural Phenomenon in the Roman Empire. London. ———. 2000. “The Banquet of Belles-Lettres: Athenaeus and the […]

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Chapter 18. When a Culture Reflects on Itself

Chapter 18. When a Culture Reflects on Itself The work of Athenaeus would thus be a periodos tēs bibliothēkēs, a “tour of the library”, perhaps the library of Larensius, but certainly also that of memory, and also the ideal library whose reconstruction is enabled by textual tradition, direct and indirect. That trip […]

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Chapter 17. The Epitome of the World

Chapter 17. The Epitome of the World The Deipnosophists crystallizes a fluid chain of texts, fragments, and words, connected by the memory threads of a circle of literati and, ultimately, by the memory of Athenaeus himself. A double logic can be recognized in this, namely a centrifugal and a centripetal logic. By […]

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Chapter 14. Words and Things

Chapter 14. Words and Things The mental gymnastics of the deipnosophists are not only a mechanism that produces and combines quotations indefinitely. Despite its playful character, it is not an end in itself. It plays an instrumental role in the constitution and the enrichment of a field of knowledge and, more generally, […]

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Chapter 13. Scholars’ Practices

Chapter 13. Scholars’ Practices The bibliographical knowledge of Athenaeus and his characters is of a cartographical nature; it organizes a space, subdivides it, and proposes different points of view, which lead from the literary genre to the text and to the quotation, or vice versa. This shift in the hierarchy between container […]

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Chapter 12. Libraries and Bibliophiles

Chapter 12. Libraries and Bibliophiles The mention of Larensius’ rich library at the beginning of Book I does not fill out the portrait of the host of the banquets, a rich Roman bibliophile and philhellene. The library also plays an essential role in Athenaeus’ work. The link that unites text, banquets, and […]

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Chapter 11. How to Speak at Table?

Chapter 11. How to Speak at Table? All that is said in Homer is not always said by Homer” (5.178d). This critical insight, which explains the polyphony of the voices and the instances of enunciation in the epic, could be applied to Athenaeus himself: all that is said in Athenaeus is not […]