Virgil on the Nature of Things: The Georgics, Lucretius and the Didactic Tradition

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Cambridge University Press, Nov 9, 2000 - History - 321 pages
The Georgics has for many years been a source of fierce controversy among scholars of Latin literature. Is the work optimistic or pessimistic, pro- or anti-Augustan? Should we read it as a eulogy or a bitter critique of Rome and her imperial ambitions? This book suggests that the ambiguity of the poem is the product of a complex and thorough-going engagement with earlier writers in the didactic tradition: Hesiod, Aratus and - above all - Lucretius. Drawing on both traditional, philological approaches to allusion, and modern theories of intertextuality, it shows how the world-views of the earlier poets are subjected to scrutiny and brought into conflict with each other. Detailed consideration of verbal parallels and of Lucretian themes, imagery and structural patterns in the Georgics forms the basis for a reading of Virgil's poem as an extended meditation on the relations between the individual and society, the gods and the natural environment.
 

Contents

influence allusion intertextuality
1
2 Beginnings and endings
18
3 The gods the farmer and the natural world
58
mythological allusions
113
5 Labor improbus
143
6 The wonders of the natural world
196
warfare and military imagery
232
the philosopher and the farmer
270
BIBLIOGRAPHY
275
INDEX OF PASSAGES CITED
288
GENERAL INDEX
314
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