ABSTRACT

Fantasy in Greek and Roman Literature offers an overview of Greek and Roman excursions into fantasy, including imaginary voyages, dream-worlds, talking animals and similar impossibilities. This is a territory seldom explored and extends to rarely read texts such as the Aesop Romance, The Battle of the Frogs and the Mice, and The Pumpkinification of the Emperor Claudius.

 

Bringing this diverse material together for the first time, Anderson widens readers’ perspectives on the realm of fantasy in ancient literature, including topics such as dialogues with the dead, Utopian communities and fantastic feasts. Going beyond the more familiar world of myth, his examples range from The Golden Ass to the Late Antique Testament of a Pig. The volume also explores ancient resistance to the world of make-believe.

 

Fantasy in Greek and Roman Literature is an invaluable resource not only for students of classical and comparative literature, but also for modern writers on fantasy who want to explore the genre’s origins in antiquity, both in the more obvious and in lesser-known texts.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

part |2 pages

Themes of fantasy

chapter |10 pages

Otherworldly conversations in antiquity

chapter |15 pages

Talking animals, monstrous creatures

chapter |16 pages

Fantastic voyages, other communities

chapter |20 pages

Dreams, apparitions, horror

chapter |14 pages

Some fantastic aspects of myth

chapter |10 pages

The ultimate myth

Metamorphosis

chapter |11 pages

Bizarre banquets, topsy-turvy tables

chapter |10 pages

Planting the phallus

Sexual fantasy

part |2 pages

Divergent imaginations

chapter |11 pages

Verse fantasy into prose

part |2 pages

Fantastic texts

chapter |11 pages

Fantasy in Old Comedy and Lucian

chapter |7 pages

Getting into heaven

Lucian’s Icaromenippus and Seneca’s Apocolocyntosis

chapter |9 pages

The summation of fantasy

Lucian’s True Histories

part |2 pages

Consumers of fantasy

chapter |10 pages

Narrators and audiences for Fantasy

chapter |11 pages

Some approaches, ancient and modern

chapter |4 pages

Conclusions