Book contents
- Writing Literary History in the Greek and Roman World
- Writing Literary History in the Greek and Roman World
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Introduction
- Part I Between Literature and Scholarship
- Part II Lives and Afterlives
- Part III Narratives of Change
- Chapter 10 Aristotelian Teleology in Literary Criticism
- Chapter 11 Progress and Decline in Roman Perspectives on Literary History
- Chapter 12 The Pleasure of the Text?
- Chapter 13 Plutarch and the History of Greek Poetry
- Epilogue
- Afterword
- Bibliography
- Index Locorum
- Index of Subjects
Chapter 13 - Plutarch and the History of Greek Poetry
from Part III - Narratives of Change
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 June 2024
- Writing Literary History in the Greek and Roman World
- Writing Literary History in the Greek and Roman World
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Introduction
- Part I Between Literature and Scholarship
- Part II Lives and Afterlives
- Part III Narratives of Change
- Chapter 10 Aristotelian Teleology in Literary Criticism
- Chapter 11 Progress and Decline in Roman Perspectives on Literary History
- Chapter 12 The Pleasure of the Text?
- Chapter 13 Plutarch and the History of Greek Poetry
- Epilogue
- Afterword
- Bibliography
- Index Locorum
- Index of Subjects
Summary
This chapter discusses Plutarch’s On the Oracles at Delphi, and in particular the account of the grammarian Theon as to how prose came to replace verse, not just in the delivery of the Delphic oracle, but in literary discourse as a whole. Theon’s account of the history of Greek literate culture is an important document of how learned Greeks in the Roman empire imagined how their world had changed, along with the literature in which it was represented. The first part of the chapter considers another Plutarchan account of cultural and intellectual change, namely the opening of On the Obsolescence of Oracles, which tells the foundation story of Delphi. Both texts lay weight upon the fact of change itself, rather than on any detailed plotting of that change, let alone a chronology for it; so too, both illustrate a tendency to see recurrent patterns of change, by which the outlines of Greek literary history are found already adumbrated in classical literature itself. Among the classical texts which are central to this appropriation of past models are the programmatic chapters of Thucydides and Aristotle’s account of the development of poetic language.
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- Writing Literary History in the Greek and Roman World , pp. 282 - 302Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024