Book contents
- Greek and Latin Poetry of Late Antiquity
- Greek and Latin Poetry of Late Antiquity
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Introduction
- Part 1 A ‘Late’ Perspective on the Literary Tradition
- Part 2 Late Antique ‘Genres’ and ‘Genre’ in Late Antiquity
- Part 3 The Context of Late Antiquity
- Chapter 8 Saying the Other
- Chapter 9 Internal Audiences in the New Testament Epics of Juvencus and Nonnus
- Chapter 10 Colluthus and Dracontius
- Chapter 11 Objects of the Lusting Gaze
- Chapter 12 Metamorphosis and Mutability in Late Antique Epic
- Bibliography
- General Subject Index
- Index Locorum
Chapter 11 - Objects of the Lusting Gaze
Viewing Women as Works of Art in Late Antique Poetry
from Part 3 - The Context of Late Antiquity
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 June 2022
- Greek and Latin Poetry of Late Antiquity
- Greek and Latin Poetry of Late Antiquity
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Introduction
- Part 1 A ‘Late’ Perspective on the Literary Tradition
- Part 2 Late Antique ‘Genres’ and ‘Genre’ in Late Antiquity
- Part 3 The Context of Late Antiquity
- Chapter 8 Saying the Other
- Chapter 9 Internal Audiences in the New Testament Epics of Juvencus and Nonnus
- Chapter 10 Colluthus and Dracontius
- Chapter 11 Objects of the Lusting Gaze
- Chapter 12 Metamorphosis and Mutability in Late Antique Epic
- Bibliography
- General Subject Index
- Index Locorum
Summary
This chapter examines the peculiar practice, common in late antique epic poetry, of comparing a character to a divinity stripped of their visual attributes. From the works of Claudian, Nonnus, and Colluthus it analyzes three case studies that epitomize this form of comparison and illustrate its use in a specific literary and cultural context. Such comparisons are shown to rely on the reader’s familiarity with visual representations of the pagan gods and to reflect a growing interest in and engagement with the visual arts in late antique literature. In defining characters by attributes they do not possess, the poets draw attention to their visual ambiguity and vulnerability, and allow internal and external audiences to gaze at them uninhibitedly. Female characters in particular are thus proffered as objects of the lusting gaze and are denied individual visual identities and narrative agency. This literary emphasis on artistic beauty, stripped of its attributes and, by extension, divine power, resembles contemporary Christian attempts to de-contextualize pagan artworks by removing their religious attributes and associations, reframing them as purely aesthetic objects.
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- Greek and Latin Poetry of Late AntiquityForm, Tradition, and Context, pp. 222 - 240Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022
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