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After Virgil : The Poetry, Politics and Perversion of Roman Epic

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What is epic? Is it all kings and battles with no women? Is it about glorifying and validating the victors? These are the questions that Virgil's successors self-consciously explored through poetry in the 120 years after the Aeneid achieved instant classic status and set the standard for Roman epic.

Through their work they engaged in a dynamic process of imitating, interpreting, reacting against, and even perverting that standard.

With subject matter drawn from myth and history - from Hannibal to Caesar, Oedipus to Medea - these poems explore issues of gender, the relationship between gods and mortals, tyranny, civil war, and, above all, what it meant to be Roman under the Emperors.

After a survey of the epic tradition before Virgil and on through Ovid, each chapter explores a theme or issue, with illustrations and case-studies from all of the post-Virgilian epics.

Themes covered include intertextuality, politics, cities, gender, the supernatural, and narrative.

A final chapter will examine the reception and afterlife of post-Virgilian epic.

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Product Details
Bristol Phoenix Press
190467562X / 9781904675624
Paperback / softback
01/01/2014
United Kingdom
160 pages
138 x 216 mm
Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Learn More