Pindar's Library is the first volume to explore how readers during the Hellenistic period encountered Pindar's poetry in book form, analysing in detail the role played by Pindar's literary, cultic, and scholarly reception in affecting readers' engagement with his epinician odes. The volume examines the poet's literary devices of encomiastic techniques, mythical narratives, and paraenetic discourses against the background of the song culture of the fifth century, considering the poems as both material documents and performance pieces. With a particular focus on the poems that begin and end the Olympian and Pythian books, the volume considers the continuities between reading and attending performances, highlighting elements of readers' experiences distinctive to Hellenistic culture. It also investigates the issue of quotations of poets in ancient commentaries, and how such citations influenced readers' understanding of intertextual relationships. Throughout the volume, the relations between Pindar's epinicians and the contextual factors that influence their reception are seen in dialogic terms: as well as exerting a powerful influence over subsequent literature, the poems are also recontextualized in ways that shift and extend their cultural significance.
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Pindar's Library is the first volume to analyse the role played by Pindar's literary, cultic, and scholarly reception in affecting readers' engagement with his poetry, considering the continuities between reading and attending performances, and highlighting elements of readers' experiences which were distinctive to Hellenistic culture.
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PART I: CONTEXTS: TO ALEXANDRIA AND BEYOND ; PART II: SINGING PAGES
Pindar's Library is an unusual and ambitious book, experimental in its method and well-grounded in philological detail... Classicists who are interested in the longue durée of Greek literary history and in Pindar's afterlife will find the book stimulating and thought-provoking.
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The first volume to analyse the role played by Pindar's literary, cultic, and scholarly reception in affecting readers' engagement with his poetry Draws on poetic and scholarly responses to Pindar's poems in order to build up a picture of the intellectual climate in which they were read Considers how the cultural significance of the poems changed across time, and examines the reasons why these changes took place Provides the first extensive analysis of ancient citational practices
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Tom Phillips is Junior Research Fellow in Classics at Merton College, the University of Oxford.
The first volume to analyse the role played by Pindar's literary, cultic, and scholarly reception in affecting readers' engagement with his poetry Draws on poetic and scholarly responses to Pindar's poems in order to build up a picture of the intellectual climate in which they were read Considers how the cultural significance of the poems changed across time, and examines the reasons why these changes took place Provides the first extensive analysis of ancient citational practices
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780198745730
Publisert
2015
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
528 gr
Høyde
222 mm
Bredde
146 mm
Dybde
25 mm
Aldersnivå
U, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
342

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Tom Phillips is Junior Research Fellow in Classics at Merton College, the University of Oxford.