Freshly Printed - allow 4 days lead
Afterlives of the Roman Poets
Biofiction and the Reception of Latin Poetry
This innovative book reconceptualises Roman poetry and its reception through the lens of fictional biography ('biofiction').
Nora Goldschmidt (Author)
9781107180253, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 5 December 2019
360 pages, 2 b/w illus.
23.4 x 15.9 x 1.7 cm, 0.51 kg
Conscious of ancient modes of reading poetry 'for the life', Roman poets encoded versions of their lives into their texts. The result is a body of literature that cries out to be read in terms of lives in reception. Afterlives of the Roman Poets shows how the fictional biographies (or 'biofictions') of its authors have shaped the reception of Latin poetry. From medieval biographies of Ovid inscribed in the margins of his texts to republican readings of Lucan's death in periods of revolution to the 'death of the author' in Hermann Broch's Der Tod des Vergil, the book tells a cultural history of the reception of ancient literature as imagined through the lens of poets' lives. Putting modern life-writing studies and ancient poetry into dialogue, it brings biofictional reception to debates in classics, and puts antiquity and its reception onto the map of modern studies in life-writing.
Introduction
1. Medieval Ovids
2. Staging the poets: Ben Jonson's Poetaster
3. Lucan and revolution
4. Lucretius and modern subjectivity
5. The death of the author: Hermann Broch's Der Tod des Vergil
Post-mortem.
Subject Areas: Classical history / classical civilisation [HBLA1], Literary studies: poetry & poets [DSC], Literary studies: classical, early & medieval [DSBB], Biography: literary [BGL]