Eros, Imitation, and the Epic TraditionBarbara Pavlock here illuminates the significance of the erotic in the epic tradition from Alexandrian Greece to the late Renaissance by examining the transformations of two Homeric episodes, Odysseus' encounter with Nausikaa and the night-raid of Odysseus and Diomedes. Asserting that the erotic serves in the epic as a locus of criticism of social values, she traces adaptations in rhetorical devices, in larger structural patterns, and in major generic forms, as in the combination of tragic with epic models. |
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Page 8
... sexual powers in ways that might be construed as suspicious : she elicits gifts from the suitors who not only want the royal power that presumably comes with a marriage to her but also find her beauty overwhelming , and she raises their ...
... sexual powers in ways that might be construed as suspicious : she elicits gifts from the suitors who not only want the royal power that presumably comes with a marriage to her but also find her beauty overwhelming , and she raises their ...
Page 30
... sexual desire to a state of violence arising from passionate emotions . 31 This word often signals an irre- versible change . In one fine simile , the verb ereuthÅ conveys the flood of pent - up sexual desire in the Lemnian women ...
... sexual desire to a state of violence arising from passionate emotions . 31 This word often signals an irre- versible change . In one fine simile , the verb ereuthÅ conveys the flood of pent - up sexual desire in the Lemnian women ...
Page 84
... sexual act with death , Vergil empha- sizes the ironic waste of a potentially productive life that could have ... sexuality is suggested in the reference to the repressed hero of the Bacchae , and impiety to a family member underlies the ...
... sexual act with death , Vergil empha- sizes the ironic waste of a potentially productive life that could have ... sexuality is suggested in the reference to the repressed hero of the Bacchae , and impiety to a family member underlies the ...
Contents
Apollonius and Homer | 19 |
Epic and Tragedy in Vergils Aeneid | 69 |
Ovids Ariadne and the Catullan Epyllion | 113 |
Copyright | |
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abandoned Achilles Adam Adam's adaptation Aeneas Aeneas's Aeneid alludes allusions amor Aphrodite Apollonius Apollonius Rhodius Apollonius's Argonautica Ariadne Ariadne's Ariosto Bireno Cambridge Catullus Catullus 64 Catullus's character classical Cloridano complex context contrast criticism cupido death depicts desire Dido Dido's discusses divine echoes ekphrasis emphasizes epic episode epyllion eros erotic especially Euripides Eve's father female fides Furioso genre glory goddess Greek Hellenistic Heracles hero hero's heroic values heroine heroism Homeric Hypsipyle Iliad imitation implies ironic Jason kleos Lemnian literary lover male marriage Medea Medoro Metamorphoses Milton narrative nature Nausikaa night raid Nisus and Euryalus Nisus's Odysseus Olimpia Orlando Furioso Ovid Ovid's Paradise Lost passage passion Phaeacian pietas piety poem poet poet's poetry Princeton reader recalls reflects reinforces Renaissance response reveals Rhesus rhetorical Roman Satan scene sexual simile social values suggests Theseus Theseus's tion traditional tragedy Trojan University Press Vergil warrior women young woman