Plutarch's writings, for long treated in a fragmentary way as a  source for earlier periods, are now increasingly studied in their  own right. The thirteen original essays in this volume range over  Plutarch's relations with his contemporaries and his engagement  in philosophical debate, his views on social issues such as  education and gender, his modes of expression and his  construction of argument. Also treated here are Plutarch's  understanding and use of his antecedents, literary and  historical, and the sophisticated techniques with which he  conveyed his own vision. It is a theme of the present book that  the writings of Plutarch should be seen as the product of a  single, extraordinarily capacious, intelligence.