Between Ecstasy and Truth

Regular price €67.99
A01=Stephen Halliwell
Author_Stephen Halliwell
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=DSA
Category=DSBB
Category=NHC
Category=NL-DS
Category=NL-HB
COP=United Kingdom
Discount=15
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eq_history
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Format=BC
Format_Paperback
HMM=216
IMPN=Oxford University Press
ISBN13=9780198707011
Language_English
PA=Available
PD=20150415
POP=Oxford
Price_€50 to €100
PS=Active
PUB=Oxford University Press
SMM=23
Subject=History
Subject=Literature: History & Criticism
WG=532
WMM=142

Product details

  • ISBN 9780198707011
  • Format: Paperback
  • Weight: 532g
  • Dimensions: 142 x 216 x 23mm
  • Publication Date: 09 Jul 2015
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press
  • Publication City/Country: Oxford, GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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As well as producing one of the finest of all poetic traditions, ancient Greek culture produced a major tradition of poetic theory and criticism. Halliwell's volume offers a series of detailed and challenging interpretations of some of the defining authors and texts in the history of ancient Greek poetics: the Homeric epics, Aristophanes' Frogs, Plato's Republic, Aristotle's Poetics, Gorgias's Helen, Isocrates' treatises, Philodemus' On Poems, and Longinus' On the Sublime. The volume's fundamental concern is with how the Greeks conceptualized the experience of poetry and debated the values of that experience. The book's organizing theme is a recurrent Greek dialectic between ideas of poetry as, on the one hand, a powerfully enthralling experience in its own right (a kind of 'ecstasy') and, on the other, a medium for the expression of truths which can exercise lasting influence on its audiences' views of the world. Citing a wide range of modern scholarship, and making frequent connections with later periods of literary theory and aesthetics, Halliwell questions many orthodoxies and received opinions about the texts analysed. The resulting perspective casts new light on ways in which the Greeks attempted to make sense of the psychology of poetic experience-including the roles of emotion, ethics, imagination, and knowledge-in the life of their culture. Readership: Scholars and students of Greek literature, Greek poetics, and literary theory and criticism.
Stephen Halliwell is Professor of Greek at the University of St. Andrews, Scotland. He taught previously at the universities of Oxford, London, Cambridge, and Birmingham, and has held visiting professorships in Belgium, Canada, Italy, and the USA. He has published extensively on Greek literature, philosophy, and culture, as well as on the influence of Greek texts in the later history of ideas. His last two books both won international prizes: Greek Laughter: A Study of Cultural Psychology from Homer to Early Christianity was awarded the Criticos Prize for 2008; The Aesthetics of Mimesis: Ancient Texts and Modern Problems (2002) won the Premio Europeo d'Estetica in 2008, and has been translated into Italian.