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The Golden Ass: Difference between revisions
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==Summary== | ==Summary== | ||
''The only work of dramatic fiction written in Latin to survive intact, "The Golden Ass" - as {{Wiki|St. Augustine}} named Apuleius's tale - tells the story of a man who dabbles in carelessly with magic and accidentally turns himself into a donkey. Written in what would later become known as a "picaresque" style, "The Golden Ass" has a wandering, episodic structure, a precursor to later classics like " | ''The only work of dramatic fiction written in Latin to survive intact, "The Golden Ass" - as {{Wiki|St. Augustine}} named Apuleius's tale - tells the story of a man who dabbles in carelessly with magic and accidentally turns himself into a donkey. Written in what would later become known as a "picaresque" style, "The Golden Ass" has a wandering, episodic structure, a precursor to later classics like "[[Don Quixote]]" and "{{Wiki|Tristram Shandy}}".'' | ||
==Reference== | ==Reference== | ||
Revision as of 19:21, 20 November 2016
The Golden Ass was a book written by Apuleius obtained by Ezio Auditore in the 16th century in Constantinople.
Summary
The only work of dramatic fiction written in Latin to survive intact, "The Golden Ass" - as St. Augustine named Apuleius's tale - tells the story of a man who dabbles in carelessly with magic and accidentally turns himself into a donkey. Written in what would later become known as a "picaresque" style, "The Golden Ass" has a wandering, episodic structure, a precursor to later classics like "Don Quixote" and "Tristram Shandy".
Reference
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