Ennius Noster Ennius Noster

Ennius Noster

Lucretius and the Annales

    • USD 94.99
    • USD 94.99

Descripción editorial

Consensus holds that Lucretius admired the literary prestige of Homeric epos, the form that Ennius famously introduced to Latin literature. However, some hold that Lucretius disagreed with Ennius' quasi-Pythagorean claim to be Homer reborn, and so uniquely qualified to adapt Homeric poetry to the Latin language. Likewise, received wisdom holds that Lucretius followed in the path of poets writing in the wake of Ennius' Annales, most of whom employed an Ennian style. However, throughout the De Rerum Natura, Lucretius' use of Ennius' Annales as a formal model for a long discursive poem in epic meter was neither inevitable nor predictable, on the one hand, nor meaningful in the simple way that critical consensus has always maintained.

Jason Nethercut posits that Lucretius selected Ennius as a model precisely to dismantle the values for which he claimed Ennius stood, including the importance of history as a poetic subject and Rome's historical achievement in particular. As the first book to offer substantial analysis of the relationship between two of the ancient world's most impactful poets, Ennius Noster: Lucretius and the Annales fills an important gap not only in Lucretian scholarship, but also in our understanding of Latin literary history.

GÉNERO
Ficción y literatura
PUBLICADO
2020
8 de noviembre
IDIOMA
EN
Inglés
EXTENSIÓN
224
Páginas
EDITORIAL
Oxford University Press
VENDEDOR
The Chancellor, Masters and Scholars of the University of Oxford trading as Oxford University Press
TAMAÑO
1.7
MB