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Virgil and the Augustan Reception

This book examines the ideological reception of Virgil at specific moments in the last two millennia.

Richard F. Thomas (Author)

9780521028950, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 2 November 2006

348 pages
22.8 x 15.2 x 1.9 cm, 0.522 kg

"...a very valuable contribution to scholarship on Virgil." Classical Outlook

This book is an examination of the ideological reception of Virgil at specific moments in the last two millennia. The author focuses on the emperor Augustus in the poetry of Virgil, detects in the poets and grammarians of antiquity alternately a collaborative oppositional reading and an attempt to suppress such reading, studies creative translation (particularly Dryden's), which reasserts the 'Augustan' Virgil, and examines naive translation which can be truer to the spirit of Virgil. Scrutiny of 'textual cleansing', philology's rewriting or excision of troubling readings, leads to readings by both supporters and opponents of fascism and National Socialism to support or subvert the latter-day Augustus. The book ends with a diachronic examination of the ways successive ages have tried to make the Aeneid conform to their upbeat expectations of this poet.

Acknowledgements
Prologue
Introduction: the critical landscape
1. Virgil and Augustus
2. Virgil and the poets: Horace, Ovid and Lucan
3. Other voices in Servius: schooldust of the ages
4. Dryden's Virgil and the politics of translation
5. Dido and her translators
6. Philology and textual cleansing
7. Virgil in a cold climate: fascist reception
8. Beyond the borders of Eboli: anti-fascist reception
9. Critical end games
Bibliography
Index.

Subject Areas: Educational: Languages other than English [YQF], Literary theory [DSA]

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