Book contents
- Preposterous Poetics
- Greek Culture in the Roman World
- Preposterous Poetics
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 1 Forms of Attention
- Chapter 2 When Size Matters
- Chapter 3 In the Beginning
- Chapter 4 Preposterous Poetics and the Erotics of Death
- Chapter 5 Strange Dogs
- Chapter 6 Life Forms
- Coda
- References
- General Index
- Locorum Index
Chapter 2 - When Size Matters
Erotics, the Epyllion and Colluthus’ Rape of Helen
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 August 2020
- Preposterous Poetics
- Greek Culture in the Roman World
- Preposterous Poetics
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 1 Forms of Attention
- Chapter 2 When Size Matters
- Chapter 3 In the Beginning
- Chapter 4 Preposterous Poetics and the Erotics of Death
- Chapter 5 Strange Dogs
- Chapter 6 Life Forms
- Coda
- References
- General Index
- Locorum Index
Summary
In this and the next chapter, I turn to a poetic form that plays a particular role in the aesthetics of late antiquity, namely, the hexameter narratives generally known as epyllia. In this chapter I will be looking specifically at how an epyllion narrates a story of eros. The parochial fights over definition – what precisely is or is not an epyllion, and is it a genre recognized in antiquity? – need not detain us here, though such debates have repeatedly vexed scholars.1 I have already indicated that questions of form need to go far beyond such restricted, formal perspectives. This chapter is primarily more concerned with the issue of scale, namely, what the effect is of taking a grand subject and renarrating it in the space of a few hundred lines. If scale matters, then the epyllion’s treatment of eros should prove to be a particularly telling space in which to interrogate how the scale of narrative – its form – affects its perspective. What can and cannot be said in a love story? How long should a love story be? How does size matter?
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- Information
- Preposterous PoeticsThe Politics and Aesthetics of Form in Late Antiquity, pp. 38 - 70Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020