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Juvenal

    Juvenalis was een Romeinse dichter die bekend staat om zijn satires, die een scherpe kritiek leveren op de Romeinse samenleving en haar morele verval. Zijn werken, gecomponeerd in dactylische hexameter, kenmerken zich door scherpe humor, bijtende ironie en indringende observaties over de menselijke natuur. Via zijn poëzie duikt Juvenalis in thema's als hebzucht, hypocrisie en de absurditeiten van het dagelijks leven, en levert zo een blijvend commentaar op eeuwige menselijke zwakheden. Zijn onderscheidende stem en compromisloze perspectief bevestigen zijn positie als een belangrijke figuur in de Romeinse literatuur.

    Letteratura universale: Contro le donne
    Color vitae
    Schule der Gesundheit in 99 Kapiteln
    Juvenal and Persius
    The Sixteen Satires
    • Color vitae

      Lucilius, Horaz, Petron, Juvenal - Satiren

      • 83bladzijden
      • 3 uur lezen
      Color vitae1985
    • Juvenal and Persius

      • 414bladzijden
      • 15 uur lezen

      THIS EDITION HAS BEEN REPLACED BY A NEWER EDITION. Juvenal, Decimus Iunius Iuvenalis (ca. AD 60-140), a master of satirical hexameter poetry from Aquinum, crafted incisive satires on various aspects of Roman life. His works critique inept poetry (Satire 1), expose the vices of false philosophers (2), articulate the grievances of the deserving poor (3), and depict the dynamics of clients (5). He satirizes a council meeting under Emperor Domitian (4), vicious women (6), and reflects on the future of letters and learning under a new emperor (7). He emphasizes virtue over birth as the source of nobility (8) and critiques homosexual vice (9). The tone shifts in later satires, exploring themes like the true object of prayer (10), contrasts in eating habits (11), a friend's shipwreck escape, will-hunters (12), guilt and revenge (13), parental examples (14), cannibalism in Egypt (15), and the privileges of soldiers (16, unfinished). Persius Flaccus, Aulus (AD 34-62), of Volaterrae, was of equestrian rank and studied grammar, rhetoric, and Stoic philosophy in Rome. He lived a sober life with his family and friends, including Lucan. His six Satires begin with a prologue and address topics such as the corruption of literature (1), misguided prayers (2), deliberate wrong living (3), insincere politicians (4), praise for Cornutus the Stoic, and the servility of men (5), concluding with a chatty poem to poet Bassus (6).

      Juvenal and Persius1979
    • Juvenal's Satires create a fascinating (and immediately familiar) world of whores, fortune-tellers, boozy politicians, slick lawyers, shameless sycophants, ageing flirts and downtrodden teachers. Perhaps more than any other writer, Juvenal (c. AD 55-138) captures the splendour, the squalor and the sheer vibrant energy of everyday Roman life. A member of the traditional land-owning class, which was rapidly seeing power slip into the hands of dynamic outsiders, he offers equally savage portraits of decadent aristocrats, women interested only in 'rough trade' like actors and gladiators, and the jumped-up sons of panders and auctioneers. He constantly compares the corruption of his own generation with its stern upright forebears. And he makes us feel from within the deep humiliation of having to dance attendance on rich but odious patrons

      The Sixteen Satires1958
      3,9