
This book analyzes the relationship between wedding poetry and love poetry in the classical world. By treating both Greek and Latin texts, it offers an innovative and wide-ranging discussion of the poetic representation of social occasions. The discourses associated with weddings and love affairs both foreground ideas of persuasion and praise even though they differ dramatically in their participants and their outcomes. Furthermore, these texts make it clear that the brief, idealized, and eroticized moment of the wedding stands in contrast to the long-lasting and harmonious agreement of the marriage. At times, these genres share traditional forms of erotic persuasion, but at other points, one genre purposefully alludes to the other to make a bride seem like a paramour or a paramour like a bride. Explicit divergences remind the audience of the different trajectories of the wedding, which will hopefully transition into a stable marriage, and the love affair, which is unlikely to endure with mutual affection. Important themes include the threshold; the evening star; plant and animal metaphors; heroic comparisons; reciprocity and the blessings of the gods; and sexual violence and persuasion. The consistency and durability of this intergeneric relationship demonstrates deep-seated conceptions of legitimate and illegitimate sexual relationships. By examining these two types of poetry in tandem, Eros at Dusk adds fresh insight into the social concerns and generic composition of these occasional poems.
This book investigates the complex interplay between wedding poetry and love poetry in the classical world to determine how these genres construct social and erotic norms. Katherine Wasdin, a scholar of classical literature, utilizes a comparative analysis of Greek and Latin texts to argue that these genres share rhetorical strategies of persuasion and praise while maintaining distinct social trajectories. The work examines how poets manipulate generic conventions to blur or sharpen the lines between legitimate marriage and illicit love affairs.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars view this work as a significant contribution to the study of ancient generic conventions and social history. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the precision with which the author navigates the nuances of classical texts.
Page Count:
299
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190869119
ISBN-13:
9780190869113
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