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Petronius and the Anatomy of Fiction

Petronius and the Anatomy of Fiction

Petronius and the Anatomy of Fiction

Victoria Rimell, Girton College, Cambridge
No date available
Paperback
9780521037013
Paperback

    Petronius' Satyricon, long regarded as the first 'novel' of the Western tradition, has always sparked controversy. It has been puzzled over as a strikingly modernist riddle, elevated as a work of exemplary comic realism, condemned as obscene and repackaged as a morality tale. This reading of the surviving portions of the work shows how the Satyricon fuses the anarchic and the classic, the comic and the disturbing, and presents readers with a labyrinth of narratorial viewpoints. Dr Rimell argues that the surviving fragments are connected by an imagery of disintegration, focused on the pervasive Neronian metaphor of the literary text as a human or animal body. Throughout, she discusses the limits of dominant twentieth-century views of the Satyricon as bawdy pantomime, and challenges prevailing restrictions of Petronian corporeality to material or non-metaphorical realms. This 'novel' emerges as both very Roman and very satirical in its 'intestinal' view of reality.

    • Makes an important contribution to feminist criticism through its exploration of metaphors of the body
    • Revises twentieth-century criticisms of Petronius, including seminal ideas of critics like Auerbach and Bakhtin
    • This book on Petronius sees this fragmentary work as unified on the level of imagery

    Reviews & endorsements

    '… succeeds in drawing from a wide range of both primary source material and recent secondary scholarship in its fashioning of an innovative critical interpretation of the Petronian text … Rimell is in full command of both her subject matter and her thesis.' Journal of the Classical Association of Canada

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    Product details

    No date available
    Paperback
    9780521037013
    252 pages
    229 × 153 × 15 mm
    0.387kg

    Table of Contents

    • Acknowledgements
    • List of abbreviations
    • Introduction: corporealities
    • 1. Rhetorical red herrings
    • 2. Behind the scenes
    • 3. The beast within
    • 4. From the horse's mouth
    • 5. Bella intestina
    • 6. Regurgitating Polyphemus
    • 7. Scars of knowledge
    • 8. How to eat Virgil
    • 9. Ghost stories
    • 10. Decomposing rhythms
    • 11. Conclusion: licence and labyrinths
    • Appendices
    • Bibliography
    • Index of passages discussed
    • Index of subjects.
      Author
    • Victoria Rimell , Girton College, Cambridge

      Victoria Rimell is Associate Professor in the Department of Greek and Latin Philology at the University of Rome, La Sapieza. She has published Petronius and the Anatomy of Fiction (2002), Ovid's Lovers (2006) and Martial's Rome (2008), and has also contributed to The Cambridge Companion to Roman Satire (edited by Kirk Freudenberg, 2005) and Ordering Knowledge in the Roman Empire (edited by Jason Konig and Tim Whitmarsh, 2007).