Reading Virgil and his texts : studies in intertextuality / Richard F. Thomas.
1999
PA6825 .T517 1999 (Mapit)
Available at General Collection
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Details
Title
Reading Virgil and his texts : studies in intertextuality / Richard F. Thomas.
Author
ISBN
0472108972 (acid-free paper)
9780472108978 (acid-free paper)
9780472108978 (acid-free paper)
Publication Details
Ann Arbor : University of Michigan Press, ©1999.
Language
English
Language Note
Text in English, Latin, and Greek.
Description
351 pages ; 25 cm
Call Number
PA6825 .T517 1999
Summary
"The articles and notes included in this volume were published between 1979 and 1998. In their present format these studies take on a diachronic aspect additional to the synchronic status that they had in their original context. Dealing with the intricate ways in which Virgil, and in the introductory chapter his predecessor Catullus, manipulated and appropriated their inherited Greek and Roman literary tradition, this book presents a profile, through detailed studies, of the mechanics of one of the most dynamic periods in the literary history of any culture."--Jacket.
"There is throughout a working assumption that intertextual connections can be established, and further that functions and purposes, even intended ones, may be inferred from those connections. The hermeneutic stance, if there is a single one, is that the presence of the model's intertext, when triggered by reader recognition in the (Catullan or) Virgilian text, has a powerful ability to create meaning."--BOOK JACKET. "This book will be of interest to scholars and students of Greek and Roman poetry but should also be of value to students of medieval, Renaissance, and early modern vernacular literatures, most of whose poets saw themselves closely connected to Virgil, and many of whom entered into similar relationships with Virgilian and other Latin texts."--Jacket.
"There is throughout a working assumption that intertextual connections can be established, and further that functions and purposes, even intended ones, may be inferred from those connections. The hermeneutic stance, if there is a single one, is that the presence of the model's intertext, when triggered by reader recognition in the (Catullan or) Virgilian text, has a powerful ability to create meaning."--BOOK JACKET. "This book will be of interest to scholars and students of Greek and Roman poetry but should also be of value to students of medieval, Renaissance, and early modern vernacular literatures, most of whose poets saw themselves closely connected to Virgil, and many of whom entered into similar relationships with Virgilian and other Latin texts."--Jacket.
Note
"There is throughout a working assumption that intertextual connections can be established, and further that functions and purposes, even intended ones, may be inferred from those connections. The hermeneutic stance, if there is a single one, is that the presence of the model's intertext, when triggered by reader recognition in the (Catullan or) Virgilian text, has a powerful ability to create meaning."--BOOK JACKET. "This book will be of interest to scholars and students of Greek and Roman poetry but should also be of value to students of medieval, Renaissance, and early modern vernacular literatures, most of whose poets saw themselves closely connected to Virgil, and many of whom entered into similar relationships with Virgilian and other Latin texts."--Jacket.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 329-338) and indexes.
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
Ch. 1. Preparing the Way: Catullan Intertextuality
Ch. 2. Callimachus, the Victoria Berenices, and Roman Poetry
Ch. 3. From Recusatio to Commitment: The Evolution of the Virgilian Program
Ch. 4. Virgil's Georgics and the Art of Reference
Ch. 5. Prose into Poetry: Tradition and Meaning in Virgil's Georgics
Ch. 6. The Old Man Revisited: Memory, Reference, and Genre in Virgil Georgics 4.116-48
Ch. 7. Callimachus Back in Rome
Ch. 8. Vestigia Ruris: Urbane Rusticity in Virgil's Georgics
Ch. 9. Genre through Intertextuality: Theocritus to Virgil and Propertius
Ch. 10. Virgil's Pindar?
Ch. 11. Voice, Poetics, and Virgil's Sixth Eclogue
Ch. 12. Intertextuality Observed.
Ch. 2. Callimachus, the Victoria Berenices, and Roman Poetry
Ch. 3. From Recusatio to Commitment: The Evolution of the Virgilian Program
Ch. 4. Virgil's Georgics and the Art of Reference
Ch. 5. Prose into Poetry: Tradition and Meaning in Virgil's Georgics
Ch. 6. The Old Man Revisited: Memory, Reference, and Genre in Virgil Georgics 4.116-48
Ch. 7. Callimachus Back in Rome
Ch. 8. Vestigia Ruris: Urbane Rusticity in Virgil's Georgics
Ch. 9. Genre through Intertextuality: Theocritus to Virgil and Propertius
Ch. 10. Virgil's Pindar?
Ch. 11. Voice, Poetics, and Virgil's Sixth Eclogue
Ch. 12. Intertextuality Observed.