A Companion to Persius and Juvenal 2012
DOI: 10.1002/9781118301074.ch15
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Imperial Satire Reiterated: Late Antiquity through the Twentieth Century

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“…There have also been discussions of individual Horatian translations and imitations in accounts of the broader interplay between the supposedly more clubbable form of ‘Horatian’ satire and the more adversarial approach of Juvenal, generally in the context of how ‘Horatian’ we should consider Pope's Imitations of Horace (Wood, 2011), and how ‘Juvenalian’ we should consider Johnson's Juvenalian imitations London and The Vanity of Human Wishes (Hooley, 2012; O’Flaherty, 2016). Clare Bucknell (2015) has considered the connections between Roman satire, including Horatian satire, and eighteenth‐century political poetry.…”
Section: Surveys and Overviewsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There have also been discussions of individual Horatian translations and imitations in accounts of the broader interplay between the supposedly more clubbable form of ‘Horatian’ satire and the more adversarial approach of Juvenal, generally in the context of how ‘Horatian’ we should consider Pope's Imitations of Horace (Wood, 2011), and how ‘Juvenalian’ we should consider Johnson's Juvenalian imitations London and The Vanity of Human Wishes (Hooley, 2012; O’Flaherty, 2016). Clare Bucknell (2015) has considered the connections between Roman satire, including Horatian satire, and eighteenth‐century political poetry.…”
Section: Surveys and Overviewsmentioning
confidence: 99%