Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on contributors
- Acknowledgments
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Ethics, ethology, terminology: Iliadic anger and the cross-cultural study of emotion
- Chapter 2 Anger and pity in Homer's Iliad
- Chapter 3 Angry bees, wasps, and jurors: the symbolic politics of ὀργή in Athens
- Chapter 4 Aristotle on anger and the emotions: the strategies of status
- Chapter 5 The rage of women
- Chapter 6 Thumos as masculine ideal and social pathology in ancient Greek magical spells
- Chapter 7 Anger and gender in Chariton's Chaereas and Callirhoe
- Chapter 8 “Your mother nursed you with bile”: anger in babies and small children
- Chapter 9 Reactive and objective attitudes: anger in Virgil's Aeneid and Hellenistic philosophy
- Chapter 10 The angry poet and the angry gods: problems of theodicy in Lucan's epic of defeat
- Chapter 11 An ABC of epic ira: anger, beasts, and cannibalism
- References
- Index of passages cited
- Index of proper names
- Index of topics
Chapter 10 - The angry poet and the angry gods: problems of theodicy in Lucan's epic of defeat
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on contributors
- Acknowledgments
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Ethics, ethology, terminology: Iliadic anger and the cross-cultural study of emotion
- Chapter 2 Anger and pity in Homer's Iliad
- Chapter 3 Angry bees, wasps, and jurors: the symbolic politics of ὀργή in Athens
- Chapter 4 Aristotle on anger and the emotions: the strategies of status
- Chapter 5 The rage of women
- Chapter 6 Thumos as masculine ideal and social pathology in ancient Greek magical spells
- Chapter 7 Anger and gender in Chariton's Chaereas and Callirhoe
- Chapter 8 “Your mother nursed you with bile”: anger in babies and small children
- Chapter 9 Reactive and objective attitudes: anger in Virgil's Aeneid and Hellenistic philosophy
- Chapter 10 The angry poet and the angry gods: problems of theodicy in Lucan's epic of defeat
- Chapter 11 An ABC of epic ira: anger, beasts, and cannibalism
- References
- Index of passages cited
- Index of proper names
- Index of topics
Summary
Victrix causa deis placuit sed uicta … poetae. Despite a general assumption that Lucan kept the gods out of his epic, I would argue that he simply kept them out of engagement on the battlefield. If we are rightly curious about why he omitted divine causality from his opening enumeration of causes for the civil war, it is not long before his narrative provides portents in plenty to demonstrate divine anger to the Romans and to his readers. And the poet himself repeatedly reproaches the gods, but is far from consistent in his reproaches: at times he accuses them of active hostility to Roman liberty; on other occasions he seems only to blame them for inertia or indifference. Once, but only once, he will go so far as to assert that “they do not exist – or at least not for us,” the Romans: sunt nobis nulla profecto | numina (7.445–6). But within ten lines he has corrected himself. The gods do exist: they are simply Epicurean gods “who do not care about mankind”: mortalia nulli | sunt curata deo (454–5). Indeed Lucan ends the same outburst by holding them responsible for the Pompeian defeat, when he interprets the deified line of Caesars as the good republicans’ revenge upon the Olympians – retaliation for purposive divine action.
And purposive divine action is the norm before and after the poet's self-generated crisis in the thick of battle.
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- Ancient AngerPerspectives from Homer to Galen, pp. 229 - 249Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2004
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