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E-raamat: Achilles in Love: Intertextual Studies [Oxford Scholarship Online e-raamatud]

(Professor of Greek Literature, University of Macerata, Italy, and Visiting Professor at Columbia University, New York)
  • Formaat: 338 pages, 9 in text illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 20-Dec-2012
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780199603626
  • Oxford Scholarship Online e-raamatud
  • Raamatu hind pole hetkel teada
  • Formaat: 338 pages, 9 in text illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 20-Dec-2012
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780199603626
Achilles in Love traces the escapades of Achilles' erotic history, whether in same-sex or opposite-sex relationships, and how they were developed and revealed, or elided and concealed, in the writing and visual arts following Homer.

The volume investigates how different authors and artists responded to this most controversial aspect of Achilles' character, in comparison to the fiery personality that was shaped by the Iliad and was often considered 'canonical' for his character. Through analyzing Achilles in love from the time of Homer all the way down to the Latin poets of the first century BC and AD, the Ilias Latina, and the authors and iconography of the imperial age, this book makes both novel and productive connections between poetic texts, pictorial images, and literary genres which tried time and time again to capture Achilles' ever-shifting role within the world of eros.
List of Plates
xi
1 Introduction
1(20)
Homer: an encyclopedia of love?
1(5)
Achilles and the crossing of boundaries-of heroism, and of the epic genre
6(7)
Perceptions of (Achilles') love
13(8)
2 Deidameia
21(78)
Epic silence
21(8)
Classical texts and paintings, and the first critics
29(9)
Achilles the coward lover
38(5)
Achilles makes love, not war
43(18)
Achilles (at Scyros) and the issue of character consistency
61(4)
Ovid as a champion of the character consistency of Achilles?
65(6)
Statius and the dignification of Achilles at Scyros
71(18)
Effeminacy, passion, and the melancholy of decisions
89(10)
3 Briseis
99(88)
Homer's inexplicitness
99(10)
Passion or rhetorical self-defence?
109(7)
Briseis
116(7)
Another opinion about Achilles and Briseis
123(5)
Ovid's Briseis far beyond matrimonial hopes, and icy Achilles
128(5)
Briseis' pessimism destabilizes elegy
133(10)
But at least someone did believe that Achilles loved Briseis
143(14)
The fortunes of elegiac Achilles
157(16)
Translating but eroticizing the Iliad
173(2)
The tears of Briseis
175(12)
4 Comrades in Love
187(80)
Epic friendships
187(4)
`And Patroclus complied with his dear friend'
191(7)
Patroclus versus Briseis
198(4)
Patroclus the `second self' of Achilles
202(13)
Tragic eros
215(11)
Classifying the unlabelled
226(6)
The ancient homo-scepticals
232(3)
Virgil and the fortunate losers: in the steps of Achilles/Patroclus and Odysseus/Diomedes
235(11)
Fortunati ambo and amor plus
246(11)
Athis and Lycabas, Hopleus and Dymas
257(10)
5 Flirting with the Enemy
267(20)
`The best of the Achaeans' is impeached
267(12)
Penthesileia between Propertius (Virgil) and Nonnus
279(8)
Works Quoted 287(22)
Index 309
Marco Fantuzzi is Professor of Greek Literature at the University of Macerata, Italy and Visitng Professor at Columbia University, New York. He is author of Tradition and Innovation in Hellenistic Poetry (with R. Hunter) and has co-edited Brill's Companion to Greek and Latin Pastoral (with T. Papanghelis).