The subject previously treated in the article “Iambic Love: Horace, Inachia, and Dreams of a Perfect Book” (2007), is taken up and studied from a different point of view. In particular, the relationship between Inachia and Archilochus’ model is taken into consideration and developed. The "editorial boundaries" between epodes 10 and 11, 12 and 13, are studied systematically in comparison with the elegiac form, the Eclogues of Virgil and Callimachus’s Iambi. Also the overlap between the iambic poetry and the lyric poetry of Horace is considered. The concept and image of the escape prove to be particularly important in the closures of a number of Horace’s poems.
Viene ripreso e sviluppato l’argomento già parzialmente trattato in Iambic Love: Horace, Inachia, and Dreams of a Perfect Book, «Ordia Prima» 6, 2007, pp. 91-103. In particolare viene approfondito il rapporto con il modello archilocheo e il ruolo di Inachia. I “confini editoriali” dell’epodo 11 e 12, e così quello dell’epodo 13, vengono studiati sistematicamente, nel confronto con la forma elegiaca, l’esemplare delle Bucoliche virgiliane e i Giambi di Callimaco. Vengono analizzate le sovrapposizioni tra la poesia giambica e la poesia lirica oraziane. Il concetto e l’immagine della fuga mostrano di essere particolarmente rilevanti nelle chiuse oraziane.
Eros e giambo. Forme editoriali negli Epodi di Orazio / Cucchiarelli, Andrea. - In: MATERIALI E DISCUSSIONI PER L'ANALISI DEI TESTI CLASSICI. - ISSN 0392-6338. - STAMPA. - 60:(2008), pp. 69-104.
Eros e giambo. Forme editoriali negli Epodi di Orazio
CUCCHIARELLI, ANDREA
2008
Abstract
The subject previously treated in the article “Iambic Love: Horace, Inachia, and Dreams of a Perfect Book” (2007), is taken up and studied from a different point of view. In particular, the relationship between Inachia and Archilochus’ model is taken into consideration and developed. The "editorial boundaries" between epodes 10 and 11, 12 and 13, are studied systematically in comparison with the elegiac form, the Eclogues of Virgil and Callimachus’s Iambi. Also the overlap between the iambic poetry and the lyric poetry of Horace is considered. The concept and image of the escape prove to be particularly important in the closures of a number of Horace’s poems.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.