The Aeneid can strike one as a relatively conventional epic. It may seem an objective heroic tale of Rome's beginnings, unshocking in tone and substance, indeed (and more particularly) patriotic and inspiring. Vergil designed it so that it might read in this way. This is one `voice` that he wished us to hear. We may call it the epic voice. But there are `further voices`. Imagery and other stylistic devices are exploited to insinuate ramifying meanings and messages for those prepared to listen, and these may be disturbing, even shocking, as they add to, comment upon, question and occasionally subvert the implications of the epic voice. This book examines and illustrates Vergil's method of intruding such further voices. In doing so it illuminates with unusual clarity the manner and content of Vergil's communications; it is as if one is taken inside Vergil's workshop, indeed inside his mind.
ISBN: | 9780198140924 |
Publication date: | 12th November 1992 |
Author: | R O A M Fellow and Tutor in Classics, Fellow and Tutor in Classics, Balliol College, Oxford Lyne |
Publisher: | Clarendon Press an imprint of Oxford University Press |
Format: | Paperback |
Pagination: | 262 pages |
Series: | Clarendon Paperbacks |
Genres: |
Literary studies: poetry and poets Literary studies: ancient, classical and medieval Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers |