Callimachus: The Hymns - Susan a Stephens - Books - Oxford University Press Inc - 9780199783045 - May 21, 2015
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Callimachus: The Hymns

Susan a Stephens

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Callimachus: The Hymns

This volume offers a text and commentary of all six of Callimachus' hymns, as well as interpretive essays on each hymn that integrate what has been the dominant paradigm--intertextuality--into a broader focus on Callimachus' context.


Marc Notes: This volume offers a text and commentary of all six of Callimachus' hymns, as well as interpretive essays on each hymn integrating what has been the dominant paradigm-intertextuality-into a broader focus on Callimachus' context.; Text in English and Greek. Table of Contents: AbbreviationsMapsIntroduction 1. Hymn to Zeus 2. Hymn to Apollo 3. Hymn to Artemis 4. Hymn to Delos 5. Hymn to Athena or The Bath of Pallas 6. Hymn to Demeter Works Cited Index Locorum General IndexBiographical Note: Susan A. Stephens is Sara Hart Kimball Professor in the Humanities and Professor of Classics at Stanford University. Publisher Marketing: Callimachus was arguably the most important poet of the Hellenistic age, for two reasons: his engagement with previous theorists of poetry and his wide-ranging poetic experimentation. Of his poetic oeuvre, which exceeded what we now have of Theocritus, Aratus, Posidippus, and Apollonius combined, only his six hymns and around fifty of his epigrams have survived intact. His enormously influential Aetia, the collection of Iambi, the Hecale, and all of his prose output have been reduced to a handful of citations in later Greek lexica and handbooks or papyrus fragments. In recent years excellent commentaries and synthetic studies of the Aetia, the Iambi, and the Hecale have appeared or are about to appear. But there is no modern study in English of the collection of hymns. And while there are excellent commentaries in English on three of the hymns (Apollo, Athena, Demeter), the commentaries on Zeus and on Delos are limited in scope, and there is no commentary at all on the Artemis hymn. Synthetic studies in English for the most part treat only one hymn, not the collection, and tend to focus on Callimachus' intertextual relationships with his predecessors and/or his influence on Roman poetry. Yet recent work is requiring scholars to broaden their perspective and to consider Callimachus' religious, civic, and geo-political contexts much more systematically in attempting to understand the hymns. A further incentive is that apart from the Homeric and Orphic hymns, Callimachus' are the only other hymns that have survived intact; those written in earlier periods are now reduced to fragments. For these reasons a study of the six hymns together is a desideratum. An additional reason is that Callimachus' collection of six hymns is very likely to have been an authorially arranged poetry book, quite possibly the earliest such book that we have intact; therefore, it allows a unique perspective on the evolution of the form. This volume offers a text and commentary of all six hymns for advanced students of classics and classical scholars, as well as interpretive essays on each hymn that integrate what has been the dominant paradigm-intertextuality-into a broader focus on Callimachus' context. Her introduction treats the transmission of the hymns, the potential for and likelihood of the Homeric hymns as models, the hymns as a poetry book, their language and meter (especially in light of recent work done on this topic), performance practices, and their relationship to cult, court, local geographies, and panhellenic sanctuaries. For each hymn Stephens presents the Greek text, a translation, and a brief commentary containing important information or parallels for interpretation.

Contributor Bio:  Stephens, Susan A Susan A. Stephens is Sara Hart Kimball Professor in the Humanities and Professor of Classics at Stanford University. She is author of Seeing Double: Intercultural Poetics in Ptolemaic Alexandria (2003) a study that has transformed scholarly thinking about Egypt as present in Hellenistic poetry. Trained as a papyrologist, she co-edited, with the late Jack Winkler, Ancient Greek Novels: The Fragments (1995). She is the author of numerous articles on Hellenistic poetry and is co-editor, with Benjamin Acosta-Hughes and Luigi Lehnus, of the forthcoming Brill's Companion to Callimachus. She is further co-editor, with Phiroze Vasunia, of the 2010 collection Classics and National Cultures.

Media Books     Paperback Book   (Book with soft cover and glued back)
Released May 21, 2015
ISBN13 9780199783045
Publishers Oxford University Press Inc
Genre Chronological Period > Ancient (To 499 A.d.)
Pages 344
Dimensions 236 × 158 × 25 mm   ·   516 g
Editor Stephens, Susan A. (Sara Hart Kimball Professor in the Humanities and Professor of Classics, Sara Hart Kimball Professor in the Humanities and Professor of Classics, Stanford University)

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