Lexington Books
Pages: 362
Trim: 6½ x 9¾
978-0-7391-0950-2 • Hardback • March 2007 • $171.00 • (£133.00)
978-0-7391-2143-6 • Paperback • March 2007 • $68.99 • (£53.00)
Nicholas Baechle is Assistant Professor in the Hanover College Classics Department.
Part 1 Treatment of Word Shapes in Composition and the Use of Prosodic Variation
Chapter 2 Definition of Word Shapes
Chapter 3 Metrical Lengthening of Short Final Vowels
Chapter 4 Correptio Attica vs Metrical Lengthening
Chapter 5 Synizesis
Chapter 6 Elision and Lengthening of Words Shaped
Part 7 The Use of Hyperbation in Composition and its Interpretation
Chapter 8 Marked Forms of Word Order for Prepositional Phrases
Chapter 9 Metrical and Prosodic Variations at Mid-Line
Chapter 10 Hyperbata of the Form Modifier—Verb—Noun or the Reverse
Chapter 11 Distribution of Word Shapes
...this is a sound, detailed study, useful for scholars of metrics, tragedy, and comedy...
— Anne Mahoney, Tufts University; Bryn Mawr Classical Review
Baechle gives us a broad, rigorously conducted, and theoretically sophisticated exploration of the iambic trimeter in Greek tragedy. But his achievement extends far beyond this technical tour de force. From his analysis of compositional factors, including hyperbaton, prosodic variation, and intractable word shapes, there emerges a major contribution to our understanding of dramatic style and metrical constraints, the aesthetic differences between dialogue and lyric, variations in the rhythmic qualities of the three tragedians, and of the way Old Comedy played against the trimeter of serious drama.
— Victor Bers, Classics Department, Yale University