Realism in Alexandrian Poetry
Product details
- ISBN 9781032858067
- Weight: 640g
- Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
- Publication Date: 31 Oct 2024
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
- Language: English
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The poetry of Alexandria under the first three Ptolemies represents a second golden age of Greek literature. The eminence grise of poetic circles was Callimachus, whose poetic manifesto in favour of small scale, meticulously detailed and mannered works was to be of great influence on Augustan poetry in Rome. The stylistic aims of the Alexandrian poets have been much discussed, as has their reliance on literary tradition.
First published in 1987, Realism in Alexandrian Poetry covers less familiar ground. Taking the whole canon of Alexandrian poetry as his starting point, Dr Zanker surveys the use of the realistic mode in works like The Idylls of Theocritus (were these real shepherds?), including such matters as the humorous elements of Callimachus Hymns, the love-story in Apollonius’ ‘Argonautica’, and the low-life sketches of epyllia like Hecale as well as the Mimes of Herodas. The striving for realism and minute detail is set in the context of the admiration of pictorialism in the plastic arts, the new valuation of science as a measure of human experience, and the deliberate mingling of high and low genres. All this is in turn placed in the cultural context of early Alexandria. Few books take the whole of Alexandrian poetry as their canvas. This one which does will be as valuable a study of the Alexandrian poets as it will be a forceful contribution to literary criticism.
Graham Zanker is Emeritus Professor at the University of Canterbury, New Zealand, and Adjunct Professor at the University of Adelaide, South Australia. His latest books include Modes of Viewing in Hellenistic Poetry and Art, Herodas: Mimiambs, and Fate and the Hero in Virgil’s Aeneid: Stoic World Fate and Human Responsibility. He has been awarded fellowships at the Universities of Oxford, Cambridge, London, Tübingen, Cincinnati, the Harvard Center for Hellenic Studies, and the Princeton Institute for Advanced Studies.