A compelling model for reading and appreciating poetry

Corby Kelly, Bryn Mawr Classical Review

This book argues for a new attention to the importance of beauty and the aesthetic in our response to poetry. Charles Martindale explores ways in which Kant's aesthetic theory, as set out in the Critique of Judgement, remains of fundamental importance for the modern critic. He argues that the Kantian 'judgement of taste' is not formalist, and explores the relationship between the aesthetic and the political in our responses to art. Finally he urges the value of aesthetic criticism as pioneered by Walter Pater and others. The (mainly Latin) poems discussed are all translated, and the book will be of interest not only to classicists but to anyone interested in aesthetics, aestheticism, poetry, reception, comparative literature, and critical theory.
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Charles Martindale shows that Kant's analysis of 'the judgement of taste', the judgement that something is beautiful, remains of fundamental importance for the modern critic. In this study of (mainly) Latin poetry, he urges the value of aesthetic criticism as pioneered by Walter Pater.
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1. Immanuel Kant and Aesthetic Judgement (Horace) ; 2. Content, Form, and Frame (Catullus, Horace, Propertius) ; 3. Distinguishing the Aesthetic: Politics and Art (Virgil, Horace) ; 4. The Aesthetic Turn: Latin Poetry and Aesthetic Criticism (Lucretius, Ovid, Lucan)
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`Review from previous edition one can applaud Charles Martindale's bold call for a criticism that does not panic or dissemble when faced with the power of (say) Latin poetry to move and interest us now, in such different historical circumstances and such a different moral, and political, world.' Times Literary Supplement
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Argues for the value of aesthetic criticism, against the prevailing trend of ideological criticism in the humanities Promotes and offers examples of aesthetic criticism of major classical authors such as Horace, Ovid, and Virgil Demonstrates the importance of Kant's Critique of Judgement for discussions of poetry today
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Charles Martindale is Professor of Latin at the University of Bristol.
Argues for the value of aesthetic criticism, against the prevailing trend of ideological criticism in the humanities Promotes and offers examples of aesthetic criticism of major classical authors such as Horace, Ovid, and Virgil Demonstrates the importance of Kant's Critique of Judgement for discussions of poetry today
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Product details

ISBN
9780199216123
Published
2007
Publisher
Oxford University Press; Oxford University Press
Weight
363 gr
Height
214 mm
Width
138 mm
Thickness
17 mm
Age
P, 06
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Number of pages
276

Biographical note

Charles Martindale is Professor of Latin at the University of Bristol.