Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Greek Tragedy in Vergil s “Aeneid”
View through CrossRef
This book is a systematic study of the importance of Greek tragedy as a fundamental 'intertext' for Vergil's Aeneid. Vassiliki Panoussi argues that the epic's representation of ritual acts, especially sacrifice, mourning, marriage, and maenadic rites, mobilizes a connection to tragedy. The tragic-ritual model offers a fresh look into the political and cultural function of the Aeneid, expanding our awareness of the poem's scope, particularly in relation to gender, and presenting new readings of celebrated episodes, such as Anchises' games, Amata's maenadic rites, Dido's suicide, and the killing of Turnus. She interprets the Aeneid as a work that reflects the dynamic nature of Augustan ideology, contributing to the redefinition of civic discourse and national identity. In her rich study, readers will find a unique exploration of the complex relationship between Greek tragedy and Vergil's Aeneid and a stimulating discussion of problems of gender, power, and ideology in ancient Rome.
Title: Greek Tragedy in Vergil s “Aeneid”
Description:
This book is a systematic study of the importance of Greek tragedy as a fundamental 'intertext' for Vergil's Aeneid.
Vassiliki Panoussi argues that the epic's representation of ritual acts, especially sacrifice, mourning, marriage, and maenadic rites, mobilizes a connection to tragedy.
The tragic-ritual model offers a fresh look into the political and cultural function of the Aeneid, expanding our awareness of the poem's scope, particularly in relation to gender, and presenting new readings of celebrated episodes, such as Anchises' games, Amata's maenadic rites, Dido's suicide, and the killing of Turnus.
She interprets the Aeneid as a work that reflects the dynamic nature of Augustan ideology, contributing to the redefinition of civic discourse and national identity.
In her rich study, readers will find a unique exploration of the complex relationship between Greek tragedy and Vergil's Aeneid and a stimulating discussion of problems of gender, power, and ideology in ancient Rome.
Related Results
Elegiac Love and Death in Vergil's Aeneid
Elegiac Love and Death in Vergil's Aeneid
Abstract
Elegiac Love and Death in Vergil’s Aeneid poses new questions about Vergil’s pervasive engagement with elegy, both amatory and funerary, throughout his fina...
Luke and the Politics of Homeric Imitation
Luke and the Politics of Homeric Imitation
Luke and the Politics of Homeric Imitation: Luke–Acts as Rival to the Aeneid argues that the author of Luke–Acts composed not a history but a foundation mytholo...
Is The Aeneid Relevant to Modern Leadership?
Is The Aeneid Relevant to Modern Leadership?
<p>This thesis explores the Aeneid, Virgil's foundation epic of the Latin canon, from a values-based leadership perspective, which is defined as the moral foundation underlyi...
Introduction
Introduction
Abstract
The Introduction begins by explaining the aim, methodology, and scope of the volume and its examination of Vergilian experimentation with elegy in the Aenei...
David Hart, The Beauty of the Infinite: A Response
David Hart, The Beauty of the Infinite: A Response
I dissent from Hart's project of a theological aesthetics by a hair's breadth: but that hair's breadth is tragedy. The Beauty of the Infinite is an excellent book, but it would be ...
From Amor to Mors
From Amor to Mors
Abstract
The final book of the Aeneid begins with a sequential dialogic exchange between Turnus, Latinus, Amata, and Lavinia that harks back to their programmatic in...
Drepanum and the Limits of the Aeneid
Drepanum and the Limits of the Aeneid
This chapter examines how Sicily stands as an emblem of empire in Vergil's Aeneid. While we are inclined to approach the Aeneid as a poem of opposites—furor versus pietas; Juno ver...
Greek Tragedy and Modernist Performance
Greek Tragedy and Modernist Performance
This book explores how encounters between modernist theatre makers and Greek tragedy were constitutive in modernist experiments in performance. It analyses the experiments of Isado...

