Beyond Greek: The Beginnings of Latin Literature
English
By (author): Denis Feeney
A History Today Best Book of the Year
A Choice Outstanding Academic Title of the Year
Virgil, Ovid, Cicero, Horace, and other authors of ancient Rome are so firmly established in the Western canon today that the birth of Latin literature seems inevitable. Yet, Denis Feeney boldly argues, the beginnings of Latin literature were anything but inevitable. The cultural flourishing that in time produced the Aeneid, the Metamorphoses, and other Latin classics was one of the strangest events in history.
Feeney is to be congratulated on his willingness to put Roman literary history in a big comparative contextIt is a powerful testimony to the importance of Denis Feeneys work that the old chestnuts of classical literary historyhow the Romans got themselves Hellenized, and whether those jack-booted thugs felt anxiously belated or smugly domineering in their appropriation of Greek culture for their own purposesfeel fresh and urgent again.
Emily Wilson, Times Literary Supplement
[Feeneys] bold theme and vigorous writing render Beyond Greek of interest to anyone intrigued by the history and literature of the classical world.
The Economist