Exploring both how Plato engaged with existing literary forms and how later literature then created ''classics'' out of some of Plato''s richest works this book includes chapters on such subjects as rewritings of the Apology and re-imaginings of Socrates'' defence Plato''s rich style and the criticisms it attracted and how Petronius and Apuleius threaded Plato into their richly comic texts. The scene for these case studies is set through a thorough examination of how the tradition constructed the relationship between Plato and Homer of how Plato adapted poetic forms of imagery to his philosophical project in the Republic to shared techniques of representation between poet and philosopher and to foreshadowings of later modes of criticism in Plato''s Ion. This is a major contribution to Platonic studies to the history of Platonic reception from the fourth century BC to the third century AD and to the literature of the Second Sophistic.
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