Ulteriori informazioni
Informationen zum Autor John Petropoulos is Assistant Professor of Ancient Greek Literature at the Democritean University of Thrace. Klappentext John Petropoulos discusses the features of ancient Greek poetry! particularly amatory poetry! that can be attributed to the influence of popular song and! conversely! looks at how higher poetry affected lower genres in antiquity and medieval times. Vorwort This text discusses the features of ancient Greek poetry, particularly amatory poetry, that can be attributed to the influence of popular song and, conversely, looks at how 'higher' poetry affected 'lower' genres in antiquity and medieval times. Zusammenfassung Ancient Greek poetry, even at its most sophisticated, presupposed a degree of familiarity with, and assimilation of ,many more elementary types of song. The continuous if uneven interplay between high-flown literature and sub-literary popular oral song types cannot be underestimated in any account of ancient Greek poetry.John Petropoulos discusses the features of ancient Greek poetry, particularly amatory poetry, that can be attributed to the influence of popular song and, conversely, looks at how ‘higher’ poetry affected ‘lower’ genres in antiquity and medieval times. He goes on to investigate the relation between certain types of modern Greek folk song and their medieval - even ancient - predecessors. Concentrating on four cases that illuminate the evolution of the imagery, motifs and formal traits of love songs, this wide-ranging interdisciplinary study will be of interest to classicists and non-classicists alike, and particularly those concerned with popular eroticism and the colourful history of love songs in the Greek world. Inhaltsverzeichnis PrologueNote of AbbreviationsNote on TransliterationAcknowledgementsI. Problems, Sources and StrategiesII. Nuptial PraiseIII. Nuptial BlameIV. Harvest Imagery and the Motif of the AppleV. The Wings of Desire: Popular Amatory WishesEpilogueTestimoniaAddendaAppendixesNotesBibliographyIndex...