
The Hellenistic Period Was An Era Of Literary Canons, Of Privileged Texts And Collections. One Of The Most Stable Of These Consisted Of The Nine (rarely Ten) Lyric Poets: Whether The Selection Was Based On Poetic Quality, Popularity, Or The Availability Of Texts In The Library Of Alexandria, The Lyric Canon Offers A Valuable And Revealing Window On The Reception And Survival Of Lyric In Antiquity. This Volume Explores The Complexities Inherent In The Process By Which Lyric Poetry Was Canonized, And Discusses Questions Connected With The Textual Transmission And Preservation Of Lyric Poems From The Archaic Period Through To The Hellenistic Era. It Firstly Contextualizes Lyric Poetry Geographically, And Then Focuses On A Broad Range Of Sources That Played A Critical Role In The Survival Of Lyric Poetry - In Particular, Comedy, Plato, Aristotle's Peripatetic School, And The Hellenistic Scholars - To Discuss The Reception Of The Nine Canonical Lyric Poets And Their Work. By Exploring The Ways In Which Fifth- And Fourth-century Sources Interpreted Lyric Material, And The Role They Played Both In The Scholarly Work Of The Alexandrians And In The Creation Of What We Conventionally Call The Hellenistic Lyric Canon, It Elucidates What Can Be Defined As The Prevailing Pattern In The Transmission Of Lyric Poetry, As Well As The Place Of Bacchylides As A Puzzling Exception To This Norm. The Overall Discussion Conclusively Demonstrates That The Canonizing Process Of The Lyric Poets Was Already At Work From The Fifth Century Bc And That It Is Reflected Both In The Evaluation Of Lyric By Fourth-century Thinkers And In The Activities Of The Hellenistic Scholars In The Library Of Alexandria.
This volume investigates the historical processes and cultural mechanisms that led to the formation of the canonical collection of nine Greek lyric poets during the Hellenistic period. Theodora A. Hadjimichael, a scholar of classical literature, utilizes a rigorous analysis of textual transmission and reception history to argue that the canonization of lyric poetry was not a sudden Alexandrian invention but a gradual development rooted in fifth- and fourth-century BCE intellectual practices. By examining the influence of comedy, Platonic philosophy, and the Peripatetic school, the author reconstructs the criteria and scholarly activities that determined which lyric works survived into antiquity.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of ancient literary history and the mechanics of canon formation. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is intended for specialists in classical philology and history.
Page Count:
0
Publication Date:
1900-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press,
ISBN-10:
019184800X
ISBN-13:
9780191848001
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