Fama and Fiction in Vergil's Aeneid
Autor Antonia Sysonen Limba Engleză Paperback – 9 iul 2017
What does it mean to “know” what a work of fiction tells us? In Vergil’s Aeneid, the promise and uncertainty of fama convey this challenge. Expansive and flexible, the Latin word fama can mean “fame,” long-lasting “tradition,” and useful “news,” but also ephemeral “rumor” and disruptive “scandal.” Fama is personified as a horrifying winged goddess who reports the truth while keeping an equally tight grip on what’s distorted or made up. Fama reflects the ways talk—or epic song—may merge past and present, human and divine, things remembered and things imagined.
Most importantly, fama marks the epic’s power to bring its story world into our own. The cognitive dynamics of metaphor share in this power, blending the Aeneid’s poetic authority with the imagined force of the gods. Characters and readers are encouraged—even impelled— to seek divine order amidst unsettling words and visions by linking new experiences with existing knowledge. Transformative moments of recognition set the perceptual stage both for the gods’ commands and for the epic’s persuasive efficacy, for pietas (remembrance of ritual and social obligations) and furor (madness).
Antonia Syson’s sensitive close readings offer fresh insights into questions of fictive knowledge and collective memory in the Aeneid. These perspectives invite readers to reconsider some of the epistemological premises underlying inquiry into ancient cultures. Drawing comparisons with the nineteenth-century English novel, Syson highlights continuities between two narrative genres whose cultural contributions and rhetorical claims have often seemed sharply opposed.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780814254509
ISBN-10: 0814254500
Pagini: 250
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.37 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Ohio State University Press
Colecția Ohio State University Press
ISBN-10: 0814254500
Pagini: 250
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.37 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Ohio State University Press
Colecția Ohio State University Press
Recenzii
“This is a wonderful book from which I have learned a great deal. It will be influential not only for future work on the Aeneid, but also for scholarship on the Latin epic tradition overall. The author handles complicated theoretical material with ease and sophistication.” —Martha Malamud, professor of classics, SUNY Buffalo
" S[yson]’s work is a welcome addition to scholarship on fama, pietas and furor in the Aeneid. Her book is well researched and includes a plethora of subtle and fascinating readings of Virgil’s epic." —
The Classical Review (2015)
The Classical Review (2015)
Notă biografică
Antonia Syson (1973–2018) was associate professor of Classics, School of Languages & Cultures, at Purdue University.
Cuprins
Chapter 1 Introduction
1.1 The seams of fiction in epic and novel
1.2 What Turnus sees
1.3 Classifying fama
1.4 Chapter previews
Chapter 2 Monstrous Fama
2.1 Fama’s tongues
2.2 Jupiter’s bargain
2.3 Sinon’s fama
Chapter 3 Matter out of Place I: Across the Styx
3.1 Dirt and disorder
3.2 Daedalean excesses
3.3 Misenus and the substance of fama
3.4 Putting Palinurus in his place
Chapter 4 This and That
4.1 Memories of the Harpy
4.2 When “that” becomes “this”
4.3 Recognizing divine authority
Chapter 5 Matter out of Place II: Nisus and Euryalus
5.1 Fama evaluated
5.2 Dirty fighting
Chapter 6 The Order of Metamorphosis
6.1 “uidi ipse”
6.2 Cybele and Jupiter’s order
Chapter 7 Slithery Changes
7.1 Venus’ fictions
7.2 What Amata sees
7.3 Reading for the novel
Chapter 8 How to Do Things with Birds
8.1 Rumors
8.2 “accipio agnoscoque deos”
8.3 Juturna’s fictional truth
1.1 The seams of fiction in epic and novel
1.2 What Turnus sees
1.3 Classifying fama
1.4 Chapter previews
Chapter 2 Monstrous Fama
2.1 Fama’s tongues
2.2 Jupiter’s bargain
2.3 Sinon’s fama
Chapter 3 Matter out of Place I: Across the Styx
3.1 Dirt and disorder
3.2 Daedalean excesses
3.3 Misenus and the substance of fama
3.4 Putting Palinurus in his place
Chapter 4 This and That
4.1 Memories of the Harpy
4.2 When “that” becomes “this”
4.3 Recognizing divine authority
Chapter 5 Matter out of Place II: Nisus and Euryalus
5.1 Fama evaluated
5.2 Dirty fighting
Chapter 6 The Order of Metamorphosis
6.1 “uidi ipse”
6.2 Cybele and Jupiter’s order
Chapter 7 Slithery Changes
7.1 Venus’ fictions
7.2 What Amata sees
7.3 Reading for the novel
Chapter 8 How to Do Things with Birds
8.1 Rumors
8.2 “accipio agnoscoque deos”
8.3 Juturna’s fictional truth
Descriere
Offers fresh insights into questions of fictive knowledge and collective memory in the Aeneid.