Book contents
- The Arts of Imitation in Latin Prose
- The Arts of Imitation in Latin Prose
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Frontispiece
- Contents
- Ad lectorem
- Quintilian in Brief, in Brief
- Abbreviations
- Chapter 1 Two Scenes from the Life of an Artist
- Chapter 2 Setting the Stage
- Chapter 3 Brief Encounters
- Chapter 4 Dancing with Dialectic
- Chapter 5 Through the Looking-Glass
- Chapter 6 On Length, in Brief (Ep. 1.20)
- Chapter 7 Letters to Lupercus
- Chapter 8 Studiorum secessus (Ep. 7.9)
- Chapter 9 Docendo discitur
- Chapter 10 Reflections of an Author
- Chapter 11 Quintilian, Pliny, Tacitus
- Chapter 12 Beginnings
- References
- Index locorum
- Index of Greek and Latin Words
- General Index
Chapter 11 - Quintilian, Pliny, Tacitus
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 June 2019
- The Arts of Imitation in Latin Prose
- The Arts of Imitation in Latin Prose
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Frontispiece
- Contents
- Ad lectorem
- Quintilian in Brief, in Brief
- Abbreviations
- Chapter 1 Two Scenes from the Life of an Artist
- Chapter 2 Setting the Stage
- Chapter 3 Brief Encounters
- Chapter 4 Dancing with Dialectic
- Chapter 5 Through the Looking-Glass
- Chapter 6 On Length, in Brief (Ep. 1.20)
- Chapter 7 Letters to Lupercus
- Chapter 8 Studiorum secessus (Ep. 7.9)
- Chapter 9 Docendo discitur
- Chapter 10 Reflections of an Author
- Chapter 11 Quintilian, Pliny, Tacitus
- Chapter 12 Beginnings
- References
- Index locorum
- Index of Greek and Latin Words
- General Index
Summary
This last long chapter sharpens the profile of ‘Quintilian in Brief’, and widens the gaze, through syncrisis. I first compare Quintilian’s place in Epistles 1–9 with that in ‘Epistles 10’ (non-existent) and the Panegyricus (limited), and draw some inferences about the different nature, composition and audience of Pliny’s three works. The chapter then devotes itself to Pliny’s contemporary Tacitus. I consider briefly how the Annals imitates the Epistles (and note that Juvenal does too). The focus here, though, is on his Dialogus, both as another punctilious response to the Institutio and as an important ingredient of Pliny’s collection. I propose that the Dialogus antedates the Epistles; show that Pliny imitates it frequently, complicatedly and wittily; and argue that the whole Tacitus cycle is bound into a specifically Quintilianic project. The chapter includes close readings of the Dialogus, Annals 4.32, 4.61 and 15.67 and Epistles 3.20, 4.11, 4.25, 6.21, 7.20, 9.2, 9.10, 9.23 and 9.27; it ends where Chapter 1 began, in Epistles 1.6.
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- Information
- The Arts of Imitation in Latin ProsePliny's <I>Epistles</I>/Quintilian in Brief, pp. 407 - 472Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019