Table of Contents
List of Illustrations viii
Abbreviations ix
Notes on Contributors x
Acknowledgments xv
Introduction: Persius and Juvenal as Satiric Successors 1Josiah Osgood
Part I Persius and Juvenal: Texts and Contexts 17
1 Satire in the Republic: From Lucilius to Horace 19Ralph M. Rosen
2 The Life and Times of Persius: The Neronian Literary “Renaissance” 41Martin T. Dinter
3 Juvenalis Eques: A Dissident Voice from the Lower Tier of the Roman Elite 59David Armstrong
4 Life in the Text: The Corpus of Persius’ Satires 79Catherine Keane
5 Juvenal: The Idea of the Book 97Barbara K. Gold
6 Satiric Textures: Style, Meter, and Rhetoric 113E.J. Kenney
7 Manuscripts of Juvenal and Persius 137Holt. N. Parker
Part II Retrospectives: Persius and Juvenal as Successors 163
8 Venusina lucerna: Horace, Callimachus, and Imperial Satire 165Andrea Cucchiarelli
9 Self-Representation and Performativity 190Paul Roche
10 Persius, Juvenal, and Stoicism 217Shadi Bartsch
11 Persius, Juvenal, and Literary History after Horace 239Charles McNelis
12 Imperial Satire and Rhetoric 262Christopher S. van den Berg
13 Politics and Invective in Persius and Juvenal 283Matthew Roller
14 Imperial Satire as Saturnalia 312Paul Allen Miller
Part III Prospectives: The Successors of Persius and Juvenal 335
15 Imperial Satire Reiterated: Late Antiquity through the Twentieth Century 337Dan Hooley
16 Persius, Juvenal, and the Transformation of Satire in Late Antiquity 363Cristiana Sogno
17 Imperial Satire in the English Renaissance 386Stuart Gillespie
18 Imperial Satire Theorized: Dryden’s Discourse of Satire 409Josiah Osgood and Susanna Braund
19 Imperial Satire and the Scholars 436Holt N. Parker and Susanna Braund
20 School Texts of Persius and Juvenal 465Amy Richlin
21 Revoicing Imperial Satire 486Gideon Nisbet
22 Persius and Juvenal in the Media Age 513Martin M. Winkler
References 545
Index Locorum 587
General Index 603