Hesiod and Classical Greek Poetry
Hesiod was regarded by the Greeks as a foundational figure of their culture, alongside Homer. This book examines the rich and varied engagement of fifth-century lyric and drama with the poetic corpus attributed to Hesiod as well as with the poetic figure of Hesiod. The first half of the book is dedicated to Hesiodic reception in Pindaric and Bacchylidean poetry, with a particular focus on poetics, genealogies and mythological narratives, and didactic voices. The second half examines how Hesiodic narratives are approached and appropriated in tragedy and satyr drama, especially in the Prometheus plays and in Euripides' Ion. It also explores the multifaceted engagement of Old Comedy with the poetry and authority associated with Hesiod. Through close readings of numerous case studies, the book surveys the complex landscape of Hesiodic reception in the fifth century BCE, focusing primarily on lyric and dramatic responses to the Hesiodic tradition.
- Gives an overview of the variety, complexity and richness involved in poetic receptions of the Hesiodic corpus in the fifth century BCE
- Takes into account recent research on performance and re-performance in antiquity as well as on gender studies, intertextuality and ancient reception
- Proposes new interpretations of familiar texts and revisits old ones
Product details
August 2021Paperback
9781316615041
280 pages
230 × 150 × 15 mm
0.412kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- 1. Hesiod and the poetics of lyric
- 2. Hesiodic narratives in lyric
- 3. Lyric reception of Hesiod's didactic poetry
- 4. Hesiodic narratives and the tragedians
- 5. Hesiod and Old Comedy
- Conclusion.