{"title":"编辑注意","authors":"Dinah Wouters","doi":"10.21825/jolcel.vi3.16177","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"We are pleased to offer you the third issue of JOLCEL, a journal devoted to the study of Latin literature from a European and diachronic perspective. Thus far, we have published two thematic issues. In the first issue, we put a spotlight on the often neglected role of Latin education in the production of literature that is regarded as culturally central. Conversely, in the second issue, we looked at contexts where Latin literature occurs as a marginal phenomenon. In these contexts, Latin literature owes its presence to the enduring centrality of Latin education. In this third issue, thematically entitled “Schools and Authority,” we delve deeper into the mediating role that school authorities---teachers, authors, and commentators---played in the reception of classical authorities. \nThe school curriculum institutionalised during Antiquity bequeathed to the later history of Latin education a number of authorities who were read as models and as handbooks. Thus, not only were texts from Roman and Greek Antiquity a constant presence in the creation of literary texts, they were also an essential part of school curricula. To take this element into account is to gain an enhanced view on the literary reception of classical texts. The interaction between school and literature is not just a matter of transmission, but also of evaluation, negotiation, and transformation. The goals of Latin education were much broader than teaching how to read and write literature. As Rita Copeland states it in her response to the articles gathered in this issue, Latin education “was the foundation on which reception could be built,” but it “encompassed far more than classicism: theology, the production of new literature, new scientific and philosophical thought, and networks of civil bureaucracy and ecclesiastical administration.” It therefore offers a broader frame from which to study the reception of classical literature in European literary history. \nThe three articles in this issue exemplify this approach. First, Chrysanthi Demetriou (Open University of Cyprus) looks at the presence of the school author Terence in the plays by the tenth-century playwright Hrotswitha. She opens up a new perspective on this relation by reading through the lens of Donatus’ hugely influential Commentaries on Terence. In particular, she discusses Hrotswitha’s treatment of rape scenes and links it to Donatus’ use of them as an ideal instance for moral instruction. Second, Brian M. Jensen (Stockholm University) discusses the first book ever printed in Sweden, the Dialogus creaturarum moralizatus. With particular reference to fables attributed to Aesop, he shows how the presentation of these fables depends on pedagogical considerations. In the third and last article of this issue, Lucy Jackson (Durham University) studies the Latin school play Medea, a translation of Euripides’ play by the sixteenth-century humanist George Buchanan. In Buchanan’s version, Medea becomes more of a rhetorician than a sorceress, thereby holding up a model of Latinity to the schoolboys performing the play. Finally, Rita Copeland (University of Pennsylvania) brings these three papers together in a critical response piece.","PeriodicalId":421554,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Latin Cosmopolitanism and European Literatures","volume":"45 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-04-14","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Editorial Note\",\"authors\":\"Dinah Wouters\",\"doi\":\"10.21825/jolcel.vi3.16177\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"We are pleased to offer you the third issue of JOLCEL, a journal devoted to the study of Latin literature from a European and diachronic perspective. Thus far, we have published two thematic issues. In the first issue, we put a spotlight on the often neglected role of Latin education in the production of literature that is regarded as culturally central. Conversely, in the second issue, we looked at contexts where Latin literature occurs as a marginal phenomenon. In these contexts, Latin literature owes its presence to the enduring centrality of Latin education. In this third issue, thematically entitled “Schools and Authority,” we delve deeper into the mediating role that school authorities---teachers, authors, and commentators---played in the reception of classical authorities. \\nThe school curriculum institutionalised during Antiquity bequeathed to the later history of Latin education a number of authorities who were read as models and as handbooks. Thus, not only were texts from Roman and Greek Antiquity a constant presence in the creation of literary texts, they were also an essential part of school curricula. To take this element into account is to gain an enhanced view on the literary reception of classical texts. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
我们很高兴为您提供第三期JOLCEL,一本致力于从欧洲和历时角度研究拉丁文学的杂志。到目前为止,我们已经出版了两期专题。在第一期中,我们聚焦于经常被忽视的拉丁教育在文学生产中的作用,这被认为是文化中心。相反,在第二期中,我们考察了拉丁文学作为边缘现象出现的语境。在这些背景下,拉丁文学的存在归功于拉丁教育的持久中心地位。在主题为“学校与权威”的第三期中,我们将深入探讨学校权威——教师、作家和评论家——在接受古典权威时所扮演的中介角色。古代制度化的学校课程给后来的拉丁教育史留下了许多权威,这些权威被当作榜样和手册来阅读。因此,古代罗马和希腊的文本不仅经常出现在文学文本的创作中,而且也是学校课程的重要组成部分。考虑到这一因素,我们就能对经典文本的文学接受有一个更好的认识。学派与文学的互动不仅是一种传递,更是一种评价、协商和转化。拉丁文教育的目标远不止教学生如何阅读和写作。正如丽塔·科普兰(Rita Copeland)在对本期文章的回应中所说,拉丁教育“是建立接受的基础”,但它“包含的远不止古典主义:神学、新文学的产生、新科学和哲学思想,以及民事官僚机构和教会管理的网络。”因此,它为研究欧洲文学史上古典文学的接受提供了一个更广阔的框架。本期的三篇文章举例说明了这种方法。首先,Chrysanthi Demetriou(塞浦路斯开放大学)着眼于学校作家特伦斯在十世纪剧作家赫茨威萨的戏剧中的存在。她通过阅读多纳图斯极具影响力的《特伦斯评论》为这种关系开辟了一个新的视角。特别是,她讨论了赫罗兹对强奸场景的处理,并将其与多纳图斯将其作为道德指导的理想实例联系起来。其次,Brian M. Jensen(斯德哥尔摩大学)讨论了瑞典出版的第一本书,《生物道德对话》。特别提到伊索的寓言,他展示了这些寓言的呈现如何取决于教学方面的考虑。在本期的第三篇也是最后一篇文章中,露西·杰克逊(杜伦大学)研究了拉丁学派戏剧《美狄亚》,这是16世纪人文主义者乔治·布坎南对欧里庇得斯戏剧的翻译。在布坎南的版本中,美狄亚更像是一个修辞学家,而不是一个女巫,因此为表演戏剧的男生们树立了一个拉丁裔的榜样。最后,丽塔·科普兰(宾夕法尼亚大学)将这三篇论文汇集在一起,撰写了一篇批判性的回应文章。
We are pleased to offer you the third issue of JOLCEL, a journal devoted to the study of Latin literature from a European and diachronic perspective. Thus far, we have published two thematic issues. In the first issue, we put a spotlight on the often neglected role of Latin education in the production of literature that is regarded as culturally central. Conversely, in the second issue, we looked at contexts where Latin literature occurs as a marginal phenomenon. In these contexts, Latin literature owes its presence to the enduring centrality of Latin education. In this third issue, thematically entitled “Schools and Authority,” we delve deeper into the mediating role that school authorities---teachers, authors, and commentators---played in the reception of classical authorities.
The school curriculum institutionalised during Antiquity bequeathed to the later history of Latin education a number of authorities who were read as models and as handbooks. Thus, not only were texts from Roman and Greek Antiquity a constant presence in the creation of literary texts, they were also an essential part of school curricula. To take this element into account is to gain an enhanced view on the literary reception of classical texts. The interaction between school and literature is not just a matter of transmission, but also of evaluation, negotiation, and transformation. The goals of Latin education were much broader than teaching how to read and write literature. As Rita Copeland states it in her response to the articles gathered in this issue, Latin education “was the foundation on which reception could be built,” but it “encompassed far more than classicism: theology, the production of new literature, new scientific and philosophical thought, and networks of civil bureaucracy and ecclesiastical administration.” It therefore offers a broader frame from which to study the reception of classical literature in European literary history.
The three articles in this issue exemplify this approach. First, Chrysanthi Demetriou (Open University of Cyprus) looks at the presence of the school author Terence in the plays by the tenth-century playwright Hrotswitha. She opens up a new perspective on this relation by reading through the lens of Donatus’ hugely influential Commentaries on Terence. In particular, she discusses Hrotswitha’s treatment of rape scenes and links it to Donatus’ use of them as an ideal instance for moral instruction. Second, Brian M. Jensen (Stockholm University) discusses the first book ever printed in Sweden, the Dialogus creaturarum moralizatus. With particular reference to fables attributed to Aesop, he shows how the presentation of these fables depends on pedagogical considerations. In the third and last article of this issue, Lucy Jackson (Durham University) studies the Latin school play Medea, a translation of Euripides’ play by the sixteenth-century humanist George Buchanan. In Buchanan’s version, Medea becomes more of a rhetorician than a sorceress, thereby holding up a model of Latinity to the schoolboys performing the play. Finally, Rita Copeland (University of Pennsylvania) brings these three papers together in a critical response piece.