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Landscape and the Spaces of Metaphor in Ancient Literary Theory and Criticism

Landscape and the Spaces of Metaphor in Ancient Literary Theory and Criticism

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Nancy Worman
Cambridge University Press, 12/30/2015
EAN 9780521769556, ISBN10: 0521769558

Hardcover, 378 pages, 24.7 x 17.4 x 2.4 cm
Language: English

This study explores a previously uncharted area of ancient literary theory and criticism: the ancient landscapes (such as the Ilissus river in Athens and Mount Helicon) that generate metaphors for distinguishing styles, which dovetail with ancient conceptions of metaphor as itself spatial and mobile. Ancient writers most often coordinate stylistic features with country settings, where authoritative performers such as Muses, poets, and eventually critics or theorists view, appropriate, and emulate their bounties (for example springs, flowers, rivers, paths). These spaces of metaphor and their elaborations provide poets and critics with a vivid means of distinguishing among styles and an influential vocabulary. Together these figurative terrains shape critical and theoretical discussions in Greece and beyond. Since this discourse has a remarkably wide reach, the book is broad in scope, ranging from archaic Greek poetry through Roman oratory and 'Longinus' to the reception of critical imagery in Proust and Derrida.

Introduction
dreams of order
1. Mimesis, style, and the spaces of metaphor
2. Rural resources
Hesiod, Pindar, and establishing poetic dominion
3. On the road
charting the path of literary judgment in Aristophanes
4. Rural retreats
staking philosophy's terrain in Plato
5. Diaspora
journeys and idylls in Hellenistic poetry
6. On the road again
Demetrius and fellow travelers on aesthetic re-routings
7. In Plato's garden
reordering the retreat in Cicero and Dionysius of Halicarnassus
Epilogue
dreaming in the garden with Proust.