Startseite Altertumswissenschaften & Ägyptologie The narrative forms and mythological materials of classical epic
Kapitel
Lizenziert
Nicht lizenziert Erfordert eine Authentifizierung

The narrative forms and mythological materials of classical epic

  • Joseph Farrell
Veröffentlichen auch Sie bei De Gruyter Brill
Structures of Epic Poetry
Ein Kapitel aus dem Buch Structures of Epic Poetry

Abstract

The most characteristic themes of Greek and Roman epic are warfare and voyaging. Most epics therefore develop or examine the proposition that ‘life is a battle’ or that ‘life is a journey’. Epic treatments of both themes regard them as consummately heroic undertakings, but may present them either as unproblematically compatible with one another, or else as antithetical or complementary themes. Hercules, for instance, travels the world in what is a series of battles. For Achilles, on the other hand, a journey home stands in sharp contrast to the glorious but short life that he has chosen. But Odysseus’ long-delayed homecoming is the defining achievement of his heroic career. For Homer and most of his critics, Achilles and Odysseus are mutually incompatible, even antagonistic types of hero; yet, Vergil seems to suggest that Aeneas’ ‘Odyssean’ wandering is a necessary prelude to his ‘Iliadic’ victory. These story patterns inform not only mythic but historical epic as well, and once again in various ways. The pattern of voyage followed by war may have been intrinsic to the subgenre of ktisis (foundation) epic, particularly in the case of Greek cities that traced their origins to the colonisation movement of the archaic period. Such poems seem also to have followed the practice of local historians and mythographers by tracing the origins of the cities and peoples that they celebrated back to the heroic period (as is most clearly visible in Ennius’ Annales, despite its fragmentary condition); alternatively, they correlated historical events with mythic antecedents in a typological way (as can be seen variously in the remains of Rhianus’Messeniaca or Naevius’ Bellum Poenicum and with great clarity in Vergil’s Aeneid). Sophisticated responses to these tendencies are to be found in Apollonius’ Argonautica, Ovid’s Metamorphoses, Lucan’s Bellum Ciuile, and in Flavian epic.

Abstract

The most characteristic themes of Greek and Roman epic are warfare and voyaging. Most epics therefore develop or examine the proposition that ‘life is a battle’ or that ‘life is a journey’. Epic treatments of both themes regard them as consummately heroic undertakings, but may present them either as unproblematically compatible with one another, or else as antithetical or complementary themes. Hercules, for instance, travels the world in what is a series of battles. For Achilles, on the other hand, a journey home stands in sharp contrast to the glorious but short life that he has chosen. But Odysseus’ long-delayed homecoming is the defining achievement of his heroic career. For Homer and most of his critics, Achilles and Odysseus are mutually incompatible, even antagonistic types of hero; yet, Vergil seems to suggest that Aeneas’ ‘Odyssean’ wandering is a necessary prelude to his ‘Iliadic’ victory. These story patterns inform not only mythic but historical epic as well, and once again in various ways. The pattern of voyage followed by war may have been intrinsic to the subgenre of ktisis (foundation) epic, particularly in the case of Greek cities that traced their origins to the colonisation movement of the archaic period. Such poems seem also to have followed the practice of local historians and mythographers by tracing the origins of the cities and peoples that they celebrated back to the heroic period (as is most clearly visible in Ennius’ Annales, despite its fragmentary condition); alternatively, they correlated historical events with mythic antecedents in a typological way (as can be seen variously in the remains of Rhianus’Messeniaca or Naevius’ Bellum Poenicum and with great clarity in Vergil’s Aeneid). Sophisticated responses to these tendencies are to be found in Apollonius’ Argonautica, Ovid’s Metamorphoses, Lucan’s Bellum Ciuile, and in Flavian epic.

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Acknowledgements V
  3. Contents IX
  4. Introduction 1
  5. Part I: Theories of epic
  6. Ancient and modern theories of epic 25
  7. The narrative forms and mythological materials of classical epic 51
  8. Learning the epic formula 81
  9. Narratology and classical epic 99
  10. Epic and rhetoric 115
  11. Alexandrian book division and its reception in Greek and Roman epic 133
  12. Part II: Classification and genre
  13. Intergeneric influences and interactions 167
  14. History and myth in Graeco-Roman epic 193
  15. Didactic and epic: origins, continuity, and interactions 213
  16. Ovid’s Metamorphoses: the naughty boy of the Graeco-Roman epic tradition 275
  17. Epic fragments 317
  18. Narrative patterns and structural elements in Greek epyllia 357
  19. Epic structures in classical and post-classical Roman epyllia 443
  20. Part III: Core structures
  21. The invocation of the Muses and the plea for inspiration 489
  22. Closure and segmentation: endings, medial proems, book divisions 531
  23. ‘Almost-episodes’ in Greek and Roman epic 565
  24. Aetiology and genealogy in ancient epic 609
  25. Epic catalogues 653
  26. Similes and comparisons in the epic tradition 727
  27. Artefact ekphrasis and narrative in epic poetry from Homer to Silius 773
  28. Indices 807
  29. Front Matter 2 I
  30. Contents V
  31. Part I: Battle scenes
  32. Battle scenes in ancient epic – a short introduction 3
  33. Arming scenes, war preparation, and spoils in ancient epic 13
  34. Simply the best? Epic aristeiai 39
  35. Single combat in ancient epic 77
  36. Mass combat in ancient epic 111
  37. Chain-combats in ancient epic 159
  38. Teichoscopies in classical and late antique epic 207
  39. Nyktomachies in Graeco-Roman epic 245
  40. Theomachy in Greek and Roman epic 283
  41. Naval battles in Greek and Roman epic 317
  42. River battles in Greek and Roman epic 355
  43. Flight, pursuit, breach of contract, and ceasefire in classical epic 391
  44. Epic games: structure and competition 409
  45. Death, wounds, and violence in ancient epic 447
  46. Death, ritual, and burial from Homer to the Flavians 483
  47. Indices 523
  48. Front Matter 3 I
  49. Contents V
  50. Part II: Journeys and related scenes
  51. Epic journeys and related scenes – a short introduction 3
  52. Arrival and reception scenes in the epic tradition from Homer to Silius 13
  53. Banquet scenes in ancient epic 55
  54. Scenes of departure by sea in the epic tradition from Homer to Silius 89
  55. Sea-storms in ancient epic 125
  56. Part III: Time
  57. Time in ancient epic – a short introduction 171
  58. Time in Greek epic 183
  59. ‘Time as such’: chronotopes and periphrases of time in Latin epic 215
  60. Part IV: Space
  61. An introduction to the concept of space in ancient epic 245
  62. Cities in ancient epic 261
  63. Landscapes in Greek epic 303
  64. Landscapes in Latin epic 325
  65. Mythical places in ancient epic 361
  66. Abodes of the gods in ancient epic 409
  67. Abodes of the dead in ancient epic 433
  68. Part V: Communication
  69. Principles of communication in Greek and Roman epic-a short introduction 471
  70. Messenger scenes in Greek epic 481
  71. Messenger scenes in Roman epic 501
  72. Dream scenes in ancient epic 563
  73. Prophecies in Greek epic 597
  74. Prophecies in Roman epic 615
  75. Apparition scenes in ancient epic 685
  76. Divine council scenes in ancient epic 719
  77. Necromancies in ancient epic 747
  78. Indices 799
  79. Front Matter 4 I
  80. Contents V
  81. The origin, tradition, and reinvention of epic structures – a short introduction 1
  82. Poetic form and narrative theme in early Greek and Akkadian epic 7
  83. The transformation of the epic genre in Late Antiquity 25
  84. Greek biblical epic: Nonnus’ Paraphrase and Eudocia’s Homerocentones 53
  85. Between imitation and transformation: the (un)conventional use of epic structures in the Latin biblical poetry of Late Antiquity 79
  86. Epic forms and structures in late antique Vergilian centos 135
  87. The tradition of epic poetry in Byzantine literature 175
  88. Medieval epicity and the deconstruction of classical epic 211
  89. Narrative structures in Neo-Latin epic from 1440 to 1500 257
  90. Narrative structures in Neo-Latin epic: 16th–19th century 301
  91. Experiments in digital publishing: creating a digital compendium 331
  92. Overview: Graeco-Roman epyllia and epics from Homer to Late Antiquity 349
  93. Core bibliography 357
  94. Indices 389
  95. List of contributors 417
Heruntergeladen am 5.11.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110492590-003/html
Button zum nach oben scrollen