I, the poet : first-person form in Horace, Catullus, and Propertius
(2019)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Cornell University Press, 2019
Made available through hoopla
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1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781501739576 (electronic bk.) MWT12454429, 1501739573 (electronic bk.) 12454429
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

First-person poetry is a familiar genre in Latin literature. Propertius, Catullus, and Horace deployed the first-person speaker in a variety of ways that either bolster or undermine the link between this figure and the poet himself. In I, the Poet, Kathleen McCarthy offers a new approach to understanding the ubiquitous use of a first-person voice in Augustan-age poetry, taking on several of the central debates in the field of Latin literary studies-including the inheritance of the Greek tradition, the shift from oral performance to written collections, and the status of the poetic "I-voice." In light of her own experience as a twenty-first century reader, for whom Latin poetry is meaningful across a great gulf of linguistic, cultural, and historical distances, McCarthy positions these poets as the self-conscious readers of and heirs to a long tradition of Greek poetry, which prompted them to explore radical forms of communication through the poetic form. Informed in part by the "New Lyric Studies," I, the Poet will appeal not only to scholars of Latin literature but to readers across a range of literary studies who seek to understand the Roman contexts which shaped canonical poetic genres

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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