Plutarch. - RUSSELL, D.A.,

KORTE INHOUD

'After a good introductory first chapter on Plutarch's family and social background, Russell devotes his second chapter to ?Language, style and Form'; as he well observes later, 'ancient writers think of their work primarily in terms of persuasive presentation' and 'the reference to the audience determines almost everything. This second chapter is therefore of the greatest importance for his own presentation of Plutarch, and in it he gives a most laudable account of Plutarch's varieties of style, with quotations from widely differing types of work. (?) In the third chapter ('The Scholar and his Books') we are shown how Plutarch collected his vast range of material and the ways in which he used his sources. The scene is now set for a consideration of Plutarch?s philosophical and religious works (Chapter 4) and 'The Moralist and his Fellow-Men' (Chapter 5), in which the Platonic basis of his views is consistently maintained (?). In dealing with the Lives (?) Russell follows a logical rather than a chronological...
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1973Uitgever: Charles Scribner's Sons183 paginasISBN-10: 0684133512ISBN-13: 9780684133515

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