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Vergil's Aeneid
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For more than a century, critics of the Aeneid have assumed that all or most of its episodes must propound something about Aeneas and his mission to found the Roman people, and through them about R...
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01 June 1993

For more than a century, critics of the Aeneid have assumed that all or most of its episodes must propound something about Aeneas and his mission to found the Roman people, and through them about Rome and Augustus; whether that is their positive aspects, or their brutality and destructiveness, or the contrast between the public "voice" of their achievements and the private "voice" of the suffering they cause. This book argues that this assumption is wrong; the Aeneid's main purpose was to present a series of emotionally moving episodes, especially pathetic ones.
This book shows that the Aeneid makes more sense when regarded primarily as a series of emotion-arousing episodes than as expressing a pro-Aeneas, anti-Aeneas or two voices message. That is how it was regarded into the nineteenth century and that is what the ancient Greeks and Romans assumed was the main purpose of literature.
This book shows that the Aeneid makes more sense when regarded primarily as a series of emotion-arousing episodes than as expressing a pro-Aeneas, anti-Aeneas or two voices message. That is how it was regarded into the nineteenth century and that is what the ancient Greeks and Romans assumed was the main purpose of literature.
Price: $153.00
Pages: 180
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Mnemosyne, Supplements
Publication Date:
01 June 1993
ISBN: 9789004096615
Format: Other
'...he deserves credit for his courage and originality.'
Nicholas Horsfall, Vergilius, 1993.
'...this book laudably stresses the emotional impact of the Aeneid, and contains much interesting material on romantic and emotional elements in ancient literarture.'
S.J. Harrison, Classical Review, 1995.
Nicholas Horsfall, Vergilius, 1993.
'...this book laudably stresses the emotional impact of the Aeneid, and contains much interesting material on romantic and emotional elements in ancient literarture.'
S.J. Harrison, Classical Review, 1995.
Steven Farron is Associate Professor of Classics in the University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. He has published extensively on the Aeneid in e.g. Acta Classica, Greece and Rome, Vergilius, and Enciclopedia Virgiliana.