Book contents
- The Augustan Space
- The Augustan Space
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 The City in Horace’s sermo
- Chapter 2 excucurristi a Neapoli
- Chapter 3 Poetic and Imperial Spaces in Propertius, Books 1–3
- Chapter 4 Horace on Sacred Space
- Chapter 5 Roman Topography, Politics and Gender
- Chapter 6 aurea nunc, olim siluestribus horrida dumis
- Chapter 7 Hippolytus and Egeria in the Woods of Aricia (Virgil, Aen. 7.761–82 and Ovid, Met. 15.479–551)
- Chapter 8 locum tua tempora poscunt
- Chapter 9 imperii Roma deumque locus
- Chapter 10 The Rise and Fall of Virgil’s Sublime Carthage
- Chapter 11 Eccentric Poetry
- Chapter 12 Virgilian Heterotopias
- Chapter 13 loci desperati
- Works Cited
- Index Locorum
- General Index
Chapter 12 - Virgilian Heterotopias
Multiple Entrances to the Underworld
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 June 2024
- The Augustan Space
- The Augustan Space
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 The City in Horace’s sermo
- Chapter 2 excucurristi a Neapoli
- Chapter 3 Poetic and Imperial Spaces in Propertius, Books 1–3
- Chapter 4 Horace on Sacred Space
- Chapter 5 Roman Topography, Politics and Gender
- Chapter 6 aurea nunc, olim siluestribus horrida dumis
- Chapter 7 Hippolytus and Egeria in the Woods of Aricia (Virgil, Aen. 7.761–82 and Ovid, Met. 15.479–551)
- Chapter 8 locum tua tempora poscunt
- Chapter 9 imperii Roma deumque locus
- Chapter 10 The Rise and Fall of Virgil’s Sublime Carthage
- Chapter 11 Eccentric Poetry
- Chapter 12 Virgilian Heterotopias
- Chapter 13 loci desperati
- Works Cited
- Index Locorum
- General Index
Summary
This chapter focuses on three Virgilian entrances to the underworld – Cumae (Aen. 6.237–42), Ampsanctus (Aen. 7. 563–71) and Tainaron (G. 4.464-470). Using the Foucauldian concept of heterotopia (other space) the author argues that these three spaces legitimate multiple forms of religious knowledge, which are, however, linked to the progressive imposition of Augustan authority.
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- Information
- The Augustan SpaceThe Poetics of Geography, Topography and Monumentality, pp. 204 - 215Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024