
Contents
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Hesitant Beginnings: “Satyra Quid?” (“What Is Satire?”) Hesitant Beginnings: “Satyra Quid?” (“What Is Satire?”)
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Formal Verse Satire Formal Verse Satire
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Menippean Satire Menippean Satire
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Fluid Boundaries: Other Forms of Satiric Writing Fluid Boundaries: Other Forms of Satiric Writing
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“Whatever Humans Do . . . Forms the Stuffing of Our Little Book” “Whatever Humans Do . . . Forms the Stuffing of Our Little Book”
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Veiled Unveilers Veiled Unveilers
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Suggested Reading Suggested Reading
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References References
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13 Satire
Get accessProfessor of French and Neo-Latin Studies at the University of Warwick
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Published:09 July 2015
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Abstract
If “satire” in its broadest meaning constitutes a pervasive element of Neo-Latin literature, Neo-Latin satire nonetheless manifests itself in two major forms, viz. (i) as an isometric poem (sermo) in the vein of Lucilius, Horace, Persius, and Juvenal; and (ii) as prosimetric or Menippean satire, in imitation of Seneca’s Apocolocyntosis or the fragmentary and novel-like Satyricon by Petronius. Taking into account both contemporary and current debates on the poetics of satire, this chapter traces the developments and principal representatives of either form. It also surveys the primary themes treated by Neo-Latin satirists and examines the satirical spirit in other modes of writing (such as the letter or the Lucianic dialogue) as well as the relation between Neo-Latin satire and the vernacular.
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