Last Trojan Hero

£20.69

Last Trojan Hero

A Cultural History of Virgil's Aeneid

History of art Art music, orchestral and formal music Literary studies: ancient, classical and medieval General and world history Ancient history History of ideas

Author: Philip Hardie

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Language: English

Published by: I.B. Tauris

Published on: 30th March 2014

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 264 pages

ISBN: 9780857735065


Introduction

“I sing of arms and of a man: his fate had made him fugitive: he was the first to journey from the coasts of Troy as far as Italy and the Lavinian shores.” The resonant opening lines of Virgil's Aeneid rank among the most famous and consistently recited verses to have been passed down to later ages by antiquity.

And after the Odyssey and the Iliad, Virgil's masterpiece is arguably the greatest classical text in the whole of Western literature. This sinuous and richly characterised epic vitally influenced the poetry of Dante, Petrarch and Milton.

The doomed love of Dido and Aeneas inspired Purcell, while for T S Eliot Virgil's poem was the classic of all Europe. The poet's stirring tale of a refugee Trojan prince, torn from Libyan waves to found a new homeland in Italy, has provided much fertile material for writings on colonialism and for discourses of ethnic and national identity.

The Aeneid has even been viewed as a template and a source of philosophical justification for British and American imperialism and adventurism. In his major new book Philip Hardie explores the many remarkable afterlives - ancient, medieval and modern - of the Aeneid in literature, music, politics, the visual arts and film.

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