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Summary Pack Details

There are 9 critical essays on Claudian.

Critical Essays on Claudian
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Critical Essay by Jacqueline Long
21,143 words, approx. 71 pages
In the following excerpt, Long analyzes Claudian's attitude towards the relations between the western and eastern Roman empires, particularly as advanced in In Eutropium.
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Critical Essay by Harry L. Levy
14,272 words, approx. 48 pages
In the following essay, Levy examines the career of Flavius Rufinus, the subject inveighed against in one of Claudian's most celebrated poems.
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Critical Essay by Terrot Reaveley Glover
14,160 words, approx. 47 pages
In the following excerpt, Glover examines the style, manner, and method of Claudian's panegyrics and invectives.
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Critical Essay by Sabine G. MacCormack
6,785 words, approx. 23 pages
In the following excerpt, MacCormack analyzes Claudian's treatment of the theme of imperial arrival and presence.
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Critical Essay by Alan Cameron
6,358 words, approx. 21 pages
In the following excerpt, Cameron examines Claudian's motivation for trumpeting Stilicho's policies in his poems.
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Critical Essay by J. B. Hall
4,590 words, approx. 15 pages
In the following excerpt, Hall critiques attempts to date the The Rape of Proserpine.
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Critical Essay by Harry L. Levy
4,448 words, approx. 15 pages
In the following essay, Levy examines three themes developed by Claudian, noting their close relationship to the political, social, and religious conditions of his time.
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Critical Essay by J. H. E. Crees
2,840 words, approx. 10 pages
In the following excerpt, Crees examines the question of Claudian's reliability as an historian, particularly when his subject is his patron, the powerful general Flavius Stilicho.
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Critical Essay by Harry L. Levy
2,098 words, approx. 7 pages
In the following essay, Levy speculates that Claudian essentially ignored magic in his writings because it was associated with Eastern culture and Claudian wished to stress his identity as a Roman.


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