Aelius Aristides and the Poetics of Lyric in Imperial Greek Culture
This book is the first study of the persistence and significance of ancient lyric in imperial Greek culture. Redefining lyric reception as a phenomenon ranging from textual engagement with ancient poems to the appropriation of song traditions, Francesca Modini reconsiders the view of imperial culture (paideia) as dominated by Homer and fifth-century Attic literature. She argues that textual knowledge of lyric allowed imperial writers to show a more sophisticated level of paideia, and her analysis further reveals how lyric traditions mobilised distinctive discourses of self-fashioning, local identity, community-making and power crucial for Greeks under Rome. This is most evident in the works of Aelius Aristides, who reconfigured ancient lyric to shape his rhetorical persona and enhance his speeches to imperial communities. Exploring Aristides' lyric poetics also changes how we interpret his reconstruction of the classical tradition and his involvement in the complex politics of the Empire.
- Discusses a wide range of evidence to show that lyric poetry held a special place in imperial education
- Explores the persistence and reconfiguration of lyric figures and traditions in imperial works of art, local coinage, legends and cults, as well as in ongoing lyric (re-)performances
- Reconsiders the Second Sophistic and Aelius Aristides through the lens of lyric reception
Product details
April 2025Hardback
9781009518246
320 pages
244 × 170 mm
7 b/w illus.
Not yet published - available from April 2025
Table of Contents
- Introduction. Imperial Greek Literature, Rhetoric and Lyric: Why?
- Part I. Imperial Phenomenology of Lyric:
- 1. Lyric as literature: locating lyric poetry in imperial Paideia
- 2. Coming (back) to life: materiality, locality and performance of lyric
- Part II. Aelius Aristides' Lyric:
- 3. Princeps Sophistarum: Aristides' construction of lyric and his persona
- 4. A praise of two cities: local (and) lyric traditions for New Corinth
- 5. The politics of Harmonia: Stasis and political song in Rhodes
- 6. Musical Empires: Aristides' Athens and Rome
- Epilogue. From lyric to Aristides and back, and forward.