Paragraphs in classical Latin texts : problems with editing and the internal evidence from texts

Název: Paragraphs in classical Latin texts : problems with editing and the internal evidence from texts
Zdrojový dokument: Graeco-Latina Brunensia. 2017, roč. 22, č. 1, s. 17-29
Rozsah
17-29
  • ISSN
    1803-7402 (print)
    2336-4424 (online)
Type: Článek
Licence: Neurčená licence
 

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Abstrakt(y)
The present article deals with the question of paragraphs in classical Latin texts. In the first half, it presents and illustrates two major problems that can arise from an editor's careless division of a text into paragraphs (i.e. change in reference of anaphoric pronouns; misleading text segmentation). In the second half, the article claims and tries to prove (largely on the basis of the inner characteristics of texts) that ancient authors (or at least auctor ad Herennium, Cicero, Sallust, and Suetonius) structured their texts into paragraphs, though they used various other means than indentation to signal it to the reader.
Note
This study was supported by the Charles University project Progres 4, Language in the shiftings of time, space, and culture.
Reference
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[5] Daneš, F. (1994). Odstavec jako centrální jednotka tematicko-kompoziční výstavby textu (na materiále textů výkladových) [The Paragraph – a Central Unit of the Thematic and Compositional Build-up of Expository Discourses]. Slovo a slovesnost, 55, 1–17.

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[7] Kroon, C. (1995). Discourse particles in Latin. A study of nam, enim, autem, vero and at. Amsterdam: J. C. Gieben.

[8] Kroon, C. (2011). Latin Particles and the Grammar of Discourse. In J. Clackson (Ed.), A Companion to the Latin Language (pp. 176–195). Malden: Wiley-Blackwell.

[9] Kroon, C. (2014). Causality, Coherence and Latin 'Connectives': A Discourse Pragmatic Approach. In A. Morel-Alizon, & J.-F. Thomas (Eds.), La causalité en Latin (pp. 67–85). Paris: L'Harmattan.

[10] Oakley, S. P. (2009). Style and Language. In A. J. Woodman (Ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Tacitus (pp. 195–211). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

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[12] Wingo, E. O. (1972). Latin Punctuation in the Classical Age. The Hague – Paris: Mouton.