The papers assembled in this volume explore a relatively new area in
scholarship on the ancient novel: the relationship between an ostensibly
non-philosophical genre and philosophy. This approach opens up several
original themes for further research and debate. Platonising fiction was
popular in the Second Sophistic and it took a variety of forms, ranging
from the intertextual to the allegorical, and discussions of the origins
of the novel-genre in antiquity have centred on the role of Socratic
dialogue in general and Plato's dialogues in particular as important
precursors. The papers in this collection cover a variety of genres,
ranging from the Greek and Roman novels to utopian narratives and
fictional biographies, and seek by diverse methods to detect
philosophical resonances in these texts.