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Masks of Authority: Fiction and Pragmatics in Ancient Greek Poetics
Contributor(s): Calame, Claude (Author), Burk, Peter (Translator)
ISBN: 0801438926     ISBN-13: 9780801438929
Publisher: Cornell University Press
OUR PRICE:   $84.10  
Product Type: Hardcover
Published: April 2005
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Poetry | Ancient & Classical
- History | Ancient - Greece
- Literary Criticism | Ancient And Classical
Dewey: 881.010
LCCN: 2004017457
Series: Myth and Poetics
Physical Information: 0.82" H x 6.62" W x 9.38" (1.04 lbs) 280 pages
Themes:
- Chronological Period - Ancient (To 499 A.D.)
- Cultural Region - Greece
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

Exploring a variety of literary texts representing different poetic genres, Claude Calame, an internationally known classicist, draws the lineaments of a real history of the means used by ancient Greek poets to create in their works a fictional authorship. In this collection of essays, he shows that they made of their poems, through various discursive strategies, texts to be performed, with the collective, ritual, and pragmatic values implicit in the ideas of craft and performance. How is it possible to distinguish between the external context and reception of a discursive work and the elaborate poetic effects produced in the text itself by means of language? Clearly, the partly fictional figure of the author constructed by the text is not the same as the biographical author. In ancient Greece, moreover, the person of the composer of a poem was often distinct from the person of its performer.Important examples in Masks of Authority include some of the Homeric Hymns, didactic poetry by Hesiod, a bucolic poem of Theocritus, performed poetry by Sappho and mimetic poems by Callimachus, Attic tragedy and comedy in masked performances (Sophocles and Aristophanes), an iconographic inscription, an authoritative scientific discourse by Hippocrates, and an initiatory commentary to an Orphic theogony. The result is a selective history of Greek poetics from the perspective of its authorial devices and social functions, its place between oral and written traditions.


Contributor Bio(s): Calame, Claude: - Claude Calame is Director of Studies at the école des Hautes études en Sciences Sociales in Paris and Honorary Professor of Greek Language and Literature at the Université de Lausanne. He is the author of nearly a dozen books, including The Craft of Poetic Speech in Ancient Greece (also from Cornell), Choruses of Young Women in Ancient Greece, The Poetics of Eros in Ancient Greece, and most recently Myth and History in Ancient Greece. Peter M. Burk is a professional translator and a doctoral candidate in Classics at Princeton University.Burk, Peter: - Claude Calame is Director of Studies at the école des Hautes études en Sciences Sociales in Paris and Honorary Professor of Greek Language and Literature at the Université de Lausanne. He is the author of nearly a dozen books, including The Craft of Poetic Speech in Ancient Greece (also from Cornell), Choruses of Young Women in Ancient Greece, The Poetics of Eros in Ancient Greece, and most recently Myth and History in Ancient Greece. Peter M. Burk is a professional translator and a doctoral candidate in Classics at Princeton University.