The Cambridge Companion to the Epic (Cambridge Companions to Literature)
Cambridge University Press, 4/22/2010
EAN 9780521707367, ISBN10: 0521707366
Paperback, 298 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.7 cm
Language: English
Every great civilisation from the Bronze Age to the present day has produced epic poems. Epic poetry has always had a profound influence on other literary genres, including its own parody in the form of mock-epic. This Companion surveys over four thousand years of epic poetry from the Babylonian Epic of Gilgamesh to Derek Walcott's postcolonial Omeros. The list of epic poets analysed here includes some of the greatest writers in literary history in Europe and beyond: Homer, Virgil, Dante, Camões, Spenser, Milton, Wordsworth, Keats and Pound, among others. Each essay, by an expert in the field, pays close attention to the way these writers have intimately influenced one another to form a distinctive and cross-cultural literary tradition. Unique in its coverage of the vast scope of that tradition, this book is an essential companion for students of literature of all kinds and in all ages.
Preface
1. The Epic of Gilgamesh A. R. George
2. Greek epic Jasper Griffin
3. Roman epic Peter Toohey
4. Heroic epic poetry in the Middle Ages Karl Reichl
5. Dante and the epic of transcendence John Freccero
6. Italian Renaissance epic Giuseppe Mazzotta
7. Camões's Os LusÃÂadas
the first modern epic George Monteiro
8. The Faerie Queene
Britain's national monument Catherine Bates
9. The seventeenth-century Protestant English epic David Loewenstein
10. Mock-heroic and English poetry Claude Rawson
11. Romantic re-appropriations of the epic Michael O'Neill
12. Ezra Pound, T. S. Eliot and the modern epic John Whittier-Ferguson
13. Derek Walcott's Omeros Robert Hamner
14. Epic in translation Paul Merchant.