Lands and Peoples in Roman Poetry  
The Ethnographical Tradition
Author(s): Richard F. Thomas
Published by Cambridge Philological Society
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781913701130
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Fixed in diction and form, the tradition of ethnographical prose extends from fifth-century Greece through all of Latin literature. Issues such as situation, climate and fertility have a direct effect on the social and ethical status of a land's inhabitants, and it is this uniformity of purpose that motivates the strictly formulaic nature of ethnographical texts. In this volume, Professor Thomas examines the influence of that tradition on the poetry of Virgil, Horace and Lucan. At their hands it emerges as a vehicle for the expression of attitudes not only towards civilized Italian society, but also to landscapes and environments which are largely their own poetic creations, and which are to be viewed in contrast to the world of Rome. The work concludes with an examination of Tacitus' place both in the acknowledged prose tradition, and in the more allusive poetic tradition which this study has detected.
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Fixed in diction and form, the tradition of ethnographical prose extends from fifth-century Greece through all of Latin literature. Issues such as situation, climate and fertility have a direct effect on the social and ethical status of a land's inhabitants, and it is this uniformity of purpose that motivates the strictly formulaic nature of ethnographical texts. In this volume, Professor Thomas examines the influence of that tradition on the poetry of Virgil, Horace and Lucan. At their hands it emerges as a vehicle for the expression of attitudes not only towards civilized Italian society, but also to landscapes and environments which are largely their own poetic creations, and which are to be viewed in contrast to the world of Rome. The work concludes with an examination of Tacitus' place both in the acknowledged prose tradition, and in the more allusive poetic tradition which this study has detected.
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Title Page
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Acknowledgements
  • Introduction: The Tradition
  • Chapter I: The Landscapes of Horace
  • Chapter II: Failure and Success in the Georgics
  • Chapter III: Of Bees, Orpheus and Men: The Fourth Georgic
  • Chapter IV: Cultural Polemics in the Aeneid
  • Chapter V: The Stoic Landscape of Lucan 9
  • Chapter VI: Tacitus: The Tradition Matured
  • Conclusion
  • Works Cited
  • Index
  • Back Cover
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