Shrunken Epic The Poetics of Epyllion
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| Publication date | 2024 |
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| Book title | The Cambridge Companion to Ancient Greek Epic |
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| ISBN (electronic) |
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| Series | Cambridge companions to literature |
| Pages (from-to) | 147-166 |
| Publisher | Cambridge: Cambridge University Press |
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| Abstract |
This chapter is centred on the controversial epic ‘sub’ genre of the
epyllion. Verhelst first underlines the scholarly debates surrounding
epyllion as a category and then turns to look more closely at poems
which themselves could be termed ‘epyllionic’, starting with the Homeric Hymn to Hermes, and moving through the Hellenistic age (Theocritus’ Idyll 24, Moschus’ Eros the Runaway, and the Batrachomyomachia) to late antiquity (the Orphic Argonautica and Colluthus’ Abduction of Helen).
Verhelst focuses not just on the aesthetic dimensions of these poems,
but also on the characters contained within them: ‘small’ characters in
small epic (children, Hermes, eros, frogs and mice) and foreboding
cameos by ‘large’ figures like Achilles. Verhelst shows how these texts
manipulate their mythological, primarily Homeric, models to put grand
epic heroics into a new perspective, be it comical or dark, and suggests
how characterisation, size and speed are key ways to understand how
these poems negotiate their own position in relation to Homer and the
epic tradition, as ‘shrunken’, but not diminutive epic.
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| Document type | Chapter |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009086585.009 |
| Downloads |
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