Theocritus' pastoral analogies : the formation of a genre

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Theocritus' pastoral analogies : the formation of a genre

Kathryn J. Gutzwiller

(Wisconsin studies in classics)

University of Wisconsin Press, c1991

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Includes bibliography (p. 276-288) and indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The author uses the "Idylls" of Theocritus to show us the formative processes at work in the creation of a literary genre - the pastoral - and how the very structure of a genre both shapes and limits judgments about it. Gutzwiller argues that Theocritus' position as the first pastoralist has haunted critical assessments of him. Was he merely a beginner, whose simple descriptions of country life were reworked by Virgil into poems of imagination and tender feeling? Or was he a genius of great creative ability, who first found the way to encapsulate in humble detail a metaphysical vision of man's emotional core? Examining Theocritus from the point of view of "beginnings", Gutzwiller places him both within his native Greek intellectual tradition and within the tradition of critical commentary on pastoral. Gutzwiller provides an analysis of the herdsman figure in pre-Hellenistic Greek literature, showing that the simple shepherd or goatherd had long been used as a figure of analogy for characters of higher rank. Theocritus was the first poet to focus on the shepherd himself and bring the analogies down into the pastoral world. Through her analyses of the seven pastoral Idylls, Guttzwiller demonstrates that in turning the focus on the shepherd Theocritus created a group of literary works with an inner structure so unique that later readers considered it a new genre. In her conclusion Gutzwiller explores subsequent controversies about the pastoral, from ancient to modern times, revealing how they continue to reflect the structural pattern that originated in Theocritus's poetry.

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