Readers and scholars of contemporary literature in English and other languages generally do not have to worry very much about their source texts: what is published in book form is essentially what the author wrote, perhaps with a few uncorrected typographical errors. Readers and scholars of Latin and Greek literature are not in such a fortunate position. The texts presented in 'critical editions', such as the Oxford Classical Texts or the Teubner or Bude series, though the outcome of painstaking scholarship carried out over centuries, are by no means as certain as those of most modern literature. Ancient texts were copied and recopied by hand over the course of more than a millennium, and in the process both accidental and deliberate alterations accumulated, often leaving the text in a grievously 'corrupted' condition. The original, 'autograph' texts are long lost, and often our earliest copies are more than a thousand years removed from them. Textual criticism is the discipline that examines whatever 'witnesses' to an ancient text are available and tries to identify mistakes in its transmission and so far as possible establish its original form. Most of what we know about the ancient world comes from written sources, and textual criticism is therefore fundamental to the study of the ancient Greek and Roman worlds.
The Oxford Handbook of Greek and Latin Textual Criticism is unprecedented in its scope and detail. It covers textual transmission in antiquity and the middle ages, the history of the subject and its most important practitioners, and methodological and practical aspects of textual criticism and editorial technique. It includes four case studies and, unlike most other treatments of the subject, deals also with textual criticism of inscriptions and papyri.
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Höhe: 246 mm
Breite: 171 mm
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978-0-19-873812-1 (9780198738121)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Scott Scullion is Fellow and Tutor in Classics, Worcester College, University of Oxford. A native of Toronto in Canada, he studied for his BA at the University of Toronto and for the PhD at Harvard University. He taught at Union College in Schenectady, New York from 1989 to 2003 and joined Worcester College and the Oxford Faculty of Classics in 2003. He has published on Greek religion, Greek tragedy, Herodotus, and Greek literary history.
Wolfgang de Melo is Professor of Classics at the University of Oxford. He has written The Early Latin Verb System: Archaic Forms in Plautus, Terence, and Beyond (OUP 2007), Plautus: Comedies (5 vols., HUP 2011-13), Varros De lingua Latina: Introduction, Text, Translation, and Commentary (2 vols., OUP 2019), and Latin Linguistics: An Introduction (De Gruyter 2024).
Herausgeber*in
Professor of Classical PhilologyProfessor of Classical Philology, Wolfson College, University of Oxford
Fellow and Tutor in ClassicsFellow and Tutor in Classics, Worcester College, University of Oxford