Includes bibliographical references (pages 334-362) and index
CONTENTS NOTE
Text of Note
Part I: The poet hero: language and representation in the Odyssey -- Recognition -- Naming and disguise -- Telling a tale -- The voice of the bard -- Part II: Intimations of immortality: fame and tradition from Homer to Pindar -- Critical exchanges -- The revisionary gleam -- Poetics and politics -- The limits of praise and the praise of limits -- Part III: Comic inversion and inverted commas: Aristophanes and parady -- The contest of public voices -- Carnival and licence -- Speaking out -- Purloining the poet's voice -- Part IV: Framing, polyphony and desire: Theocritus and Hellenistic poetics -- The programmatic voice -- The pastoral frame -- The lovers voice: the subject of desire -- Courting fame -- Part V: The paradigms of epic: Apollonius Rhodius and the example of the past -- Back to the future -- Opening and closing the text: singing and signing -- Exemplarity (in brackets) -- The explanation of the past: aetiology and the human sciences
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SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
'The project of this book', writes the author in his Preface, 'is to investigate how poetry and the figure of the poet are represented, discussed, contested within the poetry of ancient Greece'. Dr Goldhill seeks to discover how ancient authors broached the questions: From what position does a poet speak? With what authority? With what debts to the past? With what involvement in the present? Through a series of interrelated essays on Homer, lyric poetry, Aristophanes, Theocritus and Apollonius of Rhodes, key aspects in the history of poetics are discussed: tale-telling and the representation of man as the user of language; memorial and praise; parody, comedy and carnival; irony, masks and desire; the legacy of the past and the idea of influence. Detailed readings of major works of Greek literature show how richly rewarding and revealing this approach can be. The author makes liberal use of critical writings from areas of study other than Classics and focuses on problems central to contemporary critical debate. His book is uniquely placed to bring together modern and ancient poetics in a way that is enlightening for both. The work is written as much for the serious scholar of literary criticism as for the Classicist, and all Greek is translated