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A Guided Tour through a Poetic Collection of Statues: Observations on Christodorus of Coptus’ Ekphrastic Practice

  • Viola Palmieri and Irmgard Männlein
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The Poetics of Greek Ekphrasis
This chapter is in the book The Poetics of Greek Ekphrasis

Abstract

In this paper we trace the ekphrastic practice of Christodorus of Coptus (5th–6th century CE) and contextualise it within the cultural and political milieu of Constantinople, the Christian capital of the Eastern Roman Empire. As we argue, the central figure for understanding this practice is the poet as guide and exegete who takes the audience on a virtual tour (in imagination) through the collection of statues in the Baths of Zeuxippus. The poet not only describes the statues, but also interprets their thoughts, their pose and the story of the figures represented. By doing so, he is constructing a narrative around them. Christodorus takes the chance to convey political messages: in his ‘museum of words’, the collection of statues as spolia of the past and symbol of the Greco-Roman paideia, is emblematic of the power of the (Christian) emperor.

Abstract

In this paper we trace the ekphrastic practice of Christodorus of Coptus (5th–6th century CE) and contextualise it within the cultural and political milieu of Constantinople, the Christian capital of the Eastern Roman Empire. As we argue, the central figure for understanding this practice is the poet as guide and exegete who takes the audience on a virtual tour (in imagination) through the collection of statues in the Baths of Zeuxippus. The poet not only describes the statues, but also interprets their thoughts, their pose and the story of the figures represented. By doing so, he is constructing a narrative around them. Christodorus takes the chance to convey political messages: in his ‘museum of words’, the collection of statues as spolia of the past and symbol of the Greco-Roman paideia, is emblematic of the power of the (Christian) emperor.

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Foreword V
  3. Contents VII
  4. List of Figures IX
  5. List of Abbreviations
  6. Introduction 1
  7. Part I: Ekphrasis and Hellenistic Poetics
  8. Poets’ Signatures and Ekphrasis in Inscribed Greek Epigrams 15
  9. Leonidas of Tarentum and Hellenistic Ekphrasis 45
  10. Pictures in Motion: Descriptive Performance in Hellenistic carmina figurata 69
  11. Aratus’ Ekphrastic Skies: Between the Dragon and the Stars Without Name 89
  12. Part II: Ekphrastic Visualization In and Out of the Mind
  13. The Lover is the Perfect Artist: Praxiteles and the Cnidian Aphrodite in Greek Ekphrastic Epigram 117
  14. Imagined Spaces, Imagined Buildings, and the Idea of Architectural Representation: Phantasia in the Wall Paintings of the 2nd Style in Rome and the Vesuvian Cities 141
  15. A Library of Memory in a Ptolemaic Reading Primer (P. Cairo J.E. 65445) 193
  16. Learning from Illusion: Myron’s Heifer and the Stoic Poetics of Ekphrasis 217
  17. Can You Feel It? Ekphrasis and Mind-Reading in Hellenistic Epigram 255
  18. Part III: Developments in Late Antique Ekphrasis
  19. Patchwork Voices: Poetics and Aesthetics of Ekphrasis in Ancient Greek Cento-Poetry 275
  20. Exegete or Ecstatic Visionary? On the Self-Fashioning of the Poet in the Ekphrasis tabulae mundi of John of Gaza 289
  21. Ekphrastic poikilia in Triphiodorus’ Sack of Troy: Towards a Late Antique Poetics of Similarity 313
  22. A Guided Tour through a Poetic Collection of Statues: Observations on Christodorus of Coptus’ Ekphrastic Practice 339
  23. List of Contributors 361
  24. Index Nominum
  25. Index Rerum
  26. Index Locorum
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