1996
DOI: 10.1093/cq/46.1.152
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The art of deceit: Pseudolus and the nature of reading

Abstract: Reading is delusion. In order to read, we have to suspend certain standards of reality and accept others; we have to offer ourselves to deceit, even if it is an act of deception of which we are acutely aware. One way of considering this paradoxical duality in the act of reading (being deceived while being aware of the deception) is more or less consciously to posit multiple levels of reading, whereby the deceived reader is watched by an aware reader, who is in turn watched by a super-reader; and so it continue… Show more

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Cited by 75 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Plautus,. On this comedy, see also Fitzgerald 1995: 56-58;2000: 44-46;Sharrock 1996;Slater 1985]: 12-13. 94.…”
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confidence: 97%
“…Plautus,. On this comedy, see also Fitzgerald 1995: 56-58;2000: 44-46;Sharrock 1996;Slater 1985]: 12-13. 94.…”
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confidence: 97%
“…Feeney (2010) 288-90 notes the paradox that Pseudolus seems more believable the more he assures the audience of his untrustworthiness. See alsoSharrock (1996) 163.…”
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confidence: 99%
“…133-134. 1131 ζ Sharrock (1996). 168.παθβΰυλέ 1138 ζέΝSharrock (2009) 104-1ίθ,Νη ΝαφκληάΝ βθΝ δ αΰπΰδεάΝλά βΝ κυΝPalaestrio.1139 ζ. Sharrock (2009) 10-11, Brotherton (1926εαδΝ 1141 ζέΝ Willcock (1987) 121, Wright Χ1λιζΨΝ ζγ,1154 ζέΝFeeney (2010) 283.…”
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confidence: 99%