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Drawing on cognitive approaches to literary studies, this volume pursues a new approach to ancient Greek narrative that transcends the taxonomies of structuralist narratologies, deploying concepts such as immersion and embodiment in order to establish a more comprehensive understanding of ancient Greek narrative and ancient reading habits.
Sommario
- Frontmatter
- List of Illustrations
- List of Contributors
- 0: Jonas Grethlein, Luuk Huitink, and Aldo Tagliabue: Narrative and Aesthetic Experience in Ancient Greece: An Introduction
- Part I: Ancient Narrative
- 1: Rutger J. Allan: Narrative Immersion: Some Linguistic and Narratological Aspects
- 2: David Fearn: The Allure of Narrative in Greek Lyric Poetry
- 3: Felix Budelmann and Evert van Emde Boas: Attending to Tragic Messenger Speeches
- 4: Lisa I. Hau: Pathos with a Point: Reflections on 'Sensationalist' Narratives of Violence in Hellenistic Historiography in the Light of 21st-Century Historiography
- 5: Aldo Tagliabue: Experiencing the Church in the Book of Visions of the Shepherd of Hermas
- Part II: Ancient Criticism
- 6: Jonas Grethlein: World and Words: The Limits to Mimesis and Immersion in Heliodorus' Ethiopica
- 7: Casper C. De Jonge: Longinus on Ecstasy: Author, Audience, and Text
- 8: Alex Purves: Rough Reading: Tangible Language in Dionysius' Criticism of Homer
- 9: Luuk Huitink: Enargeia and Bodily Mimesis
- 10: Alessandro Vatri: Asyndeton, Immersion, and Hypokrisis in Ancient Greek Rhetoric
- Part III: Media and Context
- 11: Laura Gianvittorio: Dancing the War Report in Aeschylus' Seven Against Thebes
- 12: Nikolaus Dietrich: Narrative, Experience, and the Image: Incomplete Copies in Imperial Age Sculpture
- 13: Anastasia-Erasmia Peponi: Lived Aesthetics and the Inner Narrative
- Endmatter
- Works Cited
- General Index
- Index of Places
Info autore
Jonas Grethlein holds the Chair in Greek Literature at Heidelberg University. He has been awarded the Maier-Leibnitz Prize, received an ERC starting grant, and was a Gerda Henkel Fellow at Brown University and a Fellow at Wissenschaftskolleg Berlin. His monographs include Aesthetic Experiences and Classical Antiquity: The Significance of Form in Narratives and Pictures (CUP, 2017), Die Odyssee: Homer und die Kunst des Erzählens (C. H. Beck, 2017), Experience and Teleology in Ancient Historiography: Futures Past from Herodotus to Augustine (CUP, 2013), and The Greeks and their Past: Poetry, Oratory and History in the Fifth Century BCE (CUP, 2010).
Luuk Huitink is currently employed as a Postdoctoral Researcher in Classics at Leiden University. He has previously been a Postdoctoral Researcher on the ERC Project 'Ancient Narrative' at Heidelberg University, Leventis Research Fellow in Ancient Greek at Merton College, Oxford, and Spinoza Visiting Fellow at Leiden University. His work focuses on classical Greek prose, and in particular on intersections between linguistics, narratology, and cognition.
Aldo Tagliabue is currently an Assistant Professor in Classics at the University of Notre Dame. He has previously been a Postdoctoral Researcher on the ERC Project 'Ancient Narrative' at Heidelberg University, a Postdoctoral Researcher in Classics at the University of Milan, and a Teaching Fellow at the University of Lampeter. His work focuses on ancient Greek narratives, and in particular on the Greek novels and the intersections between narrative, the divine, and experience.
Riassunto
Drawing on cognitive approaches to literary studies, this volume pursues a new approach to ancient Greek narrative that transcends the taxonomies of structuralist narratologies, deploying concepts such as immersion and embodiment in order to establish a more comprehensive understanding of ancient Greek narrative and ancient reading habits.
Testo aggiuntivo
This is a carefully prepared, clearly written and convincingly argued work with many worthy contributions, which offer fresh and exciting insights into a promising area of current research related to the cognitive sciences.