Book contents
- The Environmental Poetry of Augustan Rome
- The Environmental Poetry of Augustan Rome
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Editions of Main Texts
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Local Dwelling and Pastoral Place in Vergil’s Eclogues
- Chapter 2 The Local Environments and More-Than-Human Music of the Eclogues
- Chapter 3 Vergil’s Ecological Poem
- Chapter 4 Poetry of Place and Planet
- Chapter 5 Natures and the Nonhuman in Horace’s Odes
- Chapter 6 Translocal Lyric
- Epilogue
- References
- Index Locorum
- General Index
Chapter 4 - Poetry of Place and Planet
Fractal Locality in Vergil’s Georgics
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 December 2024
- The Environmental Poetry of Augustan Rome
- The Environmental Poetry of Augustan Rome
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Editions of Main Texts
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Local Dwelling and Pastoral Place in Vergil’s Eclogues
- Chapter 2 The Local Environments and More-Than-Human Music of the Eclogues
- Chapter 3 Vergil’s Ecological Poem
- Chapter 4 Poetry of Place and Planet
- Chapter 5 Natures and the Nonhuman in Horace’s Odes
- Chapter 6 Translocal Lyric
- Epilogue
- References
- Index Locorum
- General Index
Summary
The ecological thinking of the Georgics leads to intricate problems of scale, which Chapter 4 traces. The poem seeks to conceptualize humans’ place in their local environments – epitomized by the bounded space of the farm – while also imagining life at larger scales and attempting to think the world as a coherent whole. The chapter connects these issues to political, geographical, agricultural, philosophical, and poetical questions. This chapter finds in the Georgics a searching exploration of what it means to be local, and whether such a thing is even possible in the age of Jupiter and the time of Caesar. Ultimately, the poem rethinks a more nuanced concept of locality that is intertwined with the global, and is of shifting, unpredictable scale: a concept of fractal locality. At the center of the poem, Vergil places a fitting emblem for a fractally local poetry, the temple he vows in his native Mantua. This temple models Vergil’s achievement as anchored in particular place, and yet in a place that has become local, Roman, Italian, and global all at once.
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- Information
- The Environmental Poetry of Augustan Rome , pp. 146 - 179Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024