The Loaded Table: Representations of Food in Roman Literature
Gowers, Emily
This Book Offers A Novel And Unconventional Approach To Roman Culture, Through Food, Or Rather, Food As It Is Represented In Literature. Food Is Not Generally Thought Of As The Noblest Of Literary Subjects, And This View Is A Legacy From The Romans, So It Is Curious That Roman Writers Chose So Persistently To Depict Their Society At The Dinner-table. Why This Was So, And What Effect The Inclusion Of Food Had On The Status Of The Literary Texts That Contained It, Are Among The Questions Discussed Here. The Book Also Addresses Many Of The Problems That Arise When A Material Subject Is Translated Into Words, And Contains Fresh Interpretations Of Latin Texts That Have Been Unjustly Undervalued - Comedy, Satire, Epigrams, Letters, And Iambics. While Often Regarded As Something Trivial And Gross, Food Was In Fact One Of The Most Suggestive Images For Roman Civilization.--book Jacket. 1. An Approach To Eating 2. Barbarian Spinach And Roman Bacon: The Comedies Of Plautus 3. Black Pudding: Roman Satire (introduction, Horace, Persius, Juvenal) 4. A Taste Of Things To Come: Invitation Poems (introduction; Catullus 13, Martial, Pliny Epistle 1.15) 5. Garlic Breath: Horace Epode 3. Emily Gowers. Includes Bibliographical References And Index.
Food in literature, Latin literature--History and criticism, Dinners and dining in literature, Literature and society, Literature and society--Rome, Dinners and dining, Dinners and dining--Rome, Food habits in literature, Gastronomy in literature, Food habits, Food habits--Rome, PA6029.F66 G69 1993, PA6029.F66 G69 1992, 870.9/355
| Name in long format: | The Loaded Table: Representations of Food in Roman Literature |
|---|---|
| ISBN-10: | 0198146957 |
| ISBN-13: | 9780198146957 |
| Book pages: | 352 |
| Book language: | en |
| Binding: | Hardcover |
| Publisher: | Oxford University Press |
| Dimensions: | Height: 8.75 Inches, Length: 5.75 Inches, Weight: 1.26545338388 Pounds, Width: 1.029 Inches |











