ABSTRACT

First published in 1994. Greek fiction has never been more popular. New approaches to ancient literature, and new courses in literature in translation, have made the ancient novel a fertile field for scholar and student alike. This volume extends the boundaries of the subject beyond the 'canon' of the romances properly called and examines Greek fic­tional writing in the widest possible context, including texts that are not nor­mally treated as novels, such as various kinds of sacred or quasi-historical texts. The editors hope to open up the definition of Greek fiction to further debate and to create cross-currents between scholars working in diverse fields.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

part |16 pages

The Beginnings of Greek Fiction

part |85 pages

The Love Romances

chapter |15 pages

Xenophon of Ephesus1

Eros and Narrative in the Novel

chapter |16 pages

Daphnis and Chloe

Love's Own Sweet Story

chapter |17 pages

The Aithiopika of Heliodoros

Narrative as Riddle

part |85 pages

The Greek Context

chapter |13 pages

The Alexander Romance

From History to Fiction

chapter |15 pages

Dio and Lucian

chapter |19 pages

Philostratus

Writer of Fiction

part |15 pages

Aftermath