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Addressing classicists, philosophers, students, and general readers alike, this volume emphasizes the unity of Seneca's work and his originality as a translator of Stoic ideas in the literary forms of imperial Rome. It features a vitalizing diversity of contributors from different generations, disciplines, and research cultures. Several prominent Seneca scholars publishing in other languages are for the first time made accessible to anglophone readers.

Introduction

Ilsetraut Hadot
Getting to Goodness: Reflections on
Chapter 10 of Brad
Inwood, Reading Seneca

Antonello Orlando
Seneca on Prolpsis: Greek Sources and Ciceros Influence

Jörn Müller
Did Seneca Understand Medea? A Contribution to the Stoic Account of Akrasia

Marcia L. Colish
Seneca on Acting against Conscience

David H. Kaufman
Seneca on the Analysis and Therapy of Occurrent Emotions

Gareth D. Williams
Double Vision and Cross-Reading in Senecas Epistulae Morales and Naturales
Quaestiones

Rita DeglInnocenti Pierini
Freedom in Seneca: Some Reflections on the Relationship between Philosophy
and Politics, Public and Private Life

Jean-Christophe Courtil
Torture in Senecas Philosophical Works: Between Justification and
Condemnation

Tommaso Gazzarri
Gender-Based Differential Morbidity and Moral Teaching in Senecas Epistulae
morales

Elizabeth Gloyn
My Family Tree Goes Back to the Romans: Senecas Approach to the Family in
the Epistulae Morales

Margaret R. Graver
Honeybee Reading and Self-Scripting: Epistulae Morales 84

Linda Cermatori
The Philosopher as Craftsman: A Topos between Moral Teaching and Literary
Production

Martin T. Dinter
Sententiae in Seneca

Matheus De Pietro
Having the Right to Philosophize: A New Reading of Seneca, De Vita Beata
1.16.2

Francesca Romana Berno
In Praise of Tuberos Pottery: A Note on Seneca, Ep. 95.7273 and 98.133

Madeleine Jones
Senecas Letters to Lucilius: Hypocrisy as a Way of Life

Jula Wildberger
The Epicurus Trope and the Construction of a Letter Writer in Senecas
Epistulae Morales

Abbreviations

Index of Passages Cited

Index of Modern Authors

General Index
Jula Wildberger, The American University of Paris, France; Marcia L. Colish, Yale University, New Haven, USA.