Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Juvenal Satires

View through CrossRef
Juvenal's fourth book of Satires consists of three poems which are all concerned with contentment in various forms. The poems use humour and wit to puncture the pretensions of the foolish and the wicked, urging an acceptance of our lives and a more positive stance towards life and death by mockery of the pompous and comic description of the rich and famous. In Satire 10, Juvenal examines the human desire to be rich, famous, attractive and powerful and dismisses all these goals as not worth striving for. In Satires 11 and 12, he argues for the simple life which can deliver genuine happiness rather than risking the decadence of luxury and the perils of sea-travel and legacy-hunting. Self-knowledge and true friendship are the moral heart of these poems; but they are also complex literary constructs in which the figure of the speaker can be elusive and the ironic tone can cast doubt on the message being imparted. The Introduction places Juvenal in the history of Satire and also explores the style of the poems as well as the degree to which they can be read as in any sense documents of real life. The text is accompanied by a literal English translation and the commentary is keyed to important words in the translation and aims to be accessible to readers with little or no Latin. It seeks to explain both the factual background to the poems and also the literary qualities which make this poetry exciting and moving to a modern audience.
Liverpool University Press
Title: Juvenal Satires
Description:
Juvenal's fourth book of Satires consists of three poems which are all concerned with contentment in various forms.
The poems use humour and wit to puncture the pretensions of the foolish and the wicked, urging an acceptance of our lives and a more positive stance towards life and death by mockery of the pompous and comic description of the rich and famous.
In Satire 10, Juvenal examines the human desire to be rich, famous, attractive and powerful and dismisses all these goals as not worth striving for.
In Satires 11 and 12, he argues for the simple life which can deliver genuine happiness rather than risking the decadence of luxury and the perils of sea-travel and legacy-hunting.
Self-knowledge and true friendship are the moral heart of these poems; but they are also complex literary constructs in which the figure of the speaker can be elusive and the ironic tone can cast doubt on the message being imparted.
The Introduction places Juvenal in the history of Satire and also explores the style of the poems as well as the degree to which they can be read as in any sense documents of real life.
The text is accompanied by a literal English translation and the commentary is keyed to important words in the translation and aims to be accessible to readers with little or no Latin.
It seeks to explain both the factual background to the poems and also the literary qualities which make this poetry exciting and moving to a modern audience.

Related Results

Juvenal
Juvenal
Little is known with certainty about the life of Juvenal, despite the existence of part of an ancient biography. He appears to have been born late in the reign of Nero and to have ...
Juvenal Satires Book III
Juvenal Satires Book III
Juvenal is the last and in many ways the greatest of the four major Roman verse satirists, and this book aims to offer more evidence of Juvenal’s status as one of the finest satiri...
Juvenal Satires Book 5
Juvenal Satires Book 5
A new text is printed of Juvenal’s final four satires, based on the most recent scholarship on the textual transmission, accompanied by a full apparatus criticus at the foot of eac...
Juvenal: Satires Book V
Juvenal: Satires Book V
Juvenal’s fifth and last book of Satires consists of three complete poems and one fragment. The poems offer a scandalised exposure of human folly and vice, but the poet also appe...
Commentaries
Commentaries
The commentary seeks to elucidate and explain the background and the significance of every line of Satires 7, 8 and 9. Little previous knowledge of the languages, history and cultu...
Juvenal Satires Book III
Juvenal Satires Book III
The text is based on the most recent scholarship on the textual transmission, accompanied by a full apparatus criticus at the foot of each page and also a facing English translatio...
Introduction
Introduction
Starting with what we know about Juvenal’s life and what he wrote, the Introduction moves on explain the main building blocks of Juvenal’s style in the Satires (irony, parody, allu...
Commentary
Commentary
The commentary seeks to elucidate and explain the background and the significance of every line of this text. The Latin is explained both in relation to what we know of the Roman ...

Back to Top