Abstract
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Highlights
Paris of Troy, the son of Priam and Hecuba, importunes Helen of Sparta to leave her husband Menelaus for him. She replies coyly at rst but comes to declare that she is prepared to elope. Both Paris and Helen reveal a consciousness of later history that exceeds what is possible for them to know within the period of the Trojan War
As they make their plans, they comment on the world of their later readers
The three episodes related here gure prominently in the articles by Anders Cullhed, Erik Gunderson, and Jonathan Newman gathered in this inaugural number of JOLCEL
Summary
Paris of Troy, the son of Priam and Hecuba, importunes Helen of Sparta to leave her husband Menelaus for him. The three episodes related here gure prominently in the articles by Anders Cullhed, Erik Gunderson, and Jonathan Newman gathered in this inaugural number of JOLCEL.
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More From: Journal of Latin Cosmopolitanism and European Literatures
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