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A Companion to Vergil's Aeneid and its Tradition presents a collection of original interpretive essays that represent an innovative addition to the body of Vergil scholarship.
Provides fresh approaches to traditional Vergil scholarship and new insights into unfamiliar aspects of Vergil's textual history
Features contributions by an international team of the most distinguished scholars
Represents a distinctively original approach to Vergil scholarship
"In all, the volume has much to recommend it, reaching the heights of sublimity more often than sending its readers to purgatory. For such an enormous enterprise the editors are to be congratulated, especially as it is well–produced, with very few errors or problems." (Bryn Mawr Classical Review, 16 August 2011)
"Cooperation among the various authors is a significant feature of the book... In sum, this volume includes something for any lover of Virgil." (Choice, January 2011)
"This is a useful reference for scholars in a number of disciplines." (Book News, Inc., November 2010)
Illustrations viii
Notes on Contributors x
Preface xv
Acknowledgments xvi
Note on References xvii
Introduction 1 Joseph Farrell and Michael C.J. Putnam
PART I The Aeneid in Antiquity 11
1 Vergil′s Library 13 Damien P. Nelis
2 On First Looking into Vergil′s Homer 26 Ralph Hexter
3 The Development of the Aeneas Legend 37 Sergio Casali
4 Aeneas′ Sacral Authority 52 Vassiliki Panoussi
5 Vergil′s Roman 66 J.D. Reed
6 Vergil, Ovid, and the Poetry of Exile 80 Michael C.J. Putnam
7 The Unfinished Aeneid? 96 James J. O′Hara
8 The Life of Vergil before Donatus 107 Fabio Stok
PART II Medieval and Renaissance Receptions 121
9 Vergil and St. Augustine 123 Garry Wills
10 Felix Casus: The Dares and Dictys Legends of Aeneas 133 Sarah Spence
11 Vergil in Dante 147 Rachel Jacoff
12 Marvelous Vergil in the Ferrarese Renaissance 158 Dennis Looney
13 Spenser′s Vergil: The Faerie Queene and the Aeneid 173 Philip Hardie
14 The Aeneid in the Age of Milton 186 Henry Power
15 Practicing What They Preach? Vergil and the Jesuits 203 Yasmin Haskell
16 The Aeneid from the Aztecs to the Dark Virgin: Vergil, Native Tradition, and Latin Poetry in Colonial Mexico from Sahagún′s Memoriales (1563) to Villerías′ Guadalupe (1724) 217 Andrew Laird
17 Vergil and Printed Books, 1500 1800 234 Craig Kallendorf
PART III The Aeneid in Music and the Visual Arts 251
18 Vergil and the Pamphili Family in Piazza Navona, Rome 253 Ingrid Rowland
19 Visual and Verbal Translation of Myth: Neptune in Vergil, Rubens, and Dryden 270 Reuben A. Brower
20 The AEneas of Vergil: A Dramatic Performance Presented in the Original Latin by John Ogilby 290 Kristi Eastin
21 Empire and Exile: Vergil in Romantic Art 311 David Blayney Brown
22 Laocoons 325 Glenn W. Most
23 Vergil in Music 341 William Fitzgerald
PART IV The American Aeneid 353
24 Vergil and the Early American Republic 355 Carl J. Richard
25 Why Did American Women Read the Aeneid? 366 Caroline Winterer
26 Vergil in the Black American Experience 376 Michele Valerie Ronnick
27 Vergil and Founding Violence 391 Michèle Lowrie
28 Figuring the Founder: Vergil and the Challenge of Autocracy 404 Joy Connolly
PART V Modern Reactions to the Aeneid 419
29 Classic Vergil 421 Kenneth Haynes
30 Vergil′s Detractors 435 Joseph Farrell
31 Mind the Gap: On Foreignizing Translations of the Aeneid 449 Susanna Morton Braund
32 Vergil′s Aeneid and Contemporary Poetry 465 Karl Kirchwey
Bibliography 482
Index 531
Joseph Farrell is Professor of Classical Studies at the University of Pennsylvania. He is the author of several books and papers on Latin literature, including Vergil s Georgics and the Traditions of Ancient Epic (1991), and Latin Language and Latin Culture from Ancient to Modern Times (2001).
Michael C. J. Putnam is MacMillan Professor of Classics and Professor of Comparative Literature, Emeritus, at Brown University. His works include Maffeo Vegio: Short Epics (2004), Poetic Interplay: Catullus and Horace (2006), and The Virgilian Tradition: The First Fifteen Hundred Years (with Jan Ziolkowski, 2008)
"In all, the volume has much to recommend it, reaching the heights of sublimity more often than sending its readers to purgatory. For such an enormous enterprise the editors are to be congratulated, especially as it is well–produced, with very few errors or problems." (Bryn Mawr Classical Review, 16 August 2011)
"Cooperation among the various authors is a significant feature of the book... In sum, this volume includes something for any lover of Virgil." (Choice, January 2011)
"This is a useful reference for scholars in a number of disciplines." (Book News, Inc., November 2010)
A Companion to Vergil s Aeneid and its Tradition presents a collection of original interpretive essays by an international team of renowned scholars. Topics covered include Vergil′s handling of sources; the history of Vergil reception in literature; and the enduring influence of Vergilian themes in prose, music, and art. The problem of translating the Aeneid into English and other languages is also covered, along with a survey of more recent translations into non–Western languages and their reception. Thought–provoking and accessible, A Companion to Vergil s Aeneid and its Tradition draws out wonderful new insights and complexities from the works of a poet whose voice continues to resonate after 2,000 years.