The sublime in antiquity

Bibliographic Information

The sublime in antiquity

James I. Porter

Cambridge University Press, 2016

  • : hbk

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Current understandings of the sublime are focused by a single word ('sublimity') and by a single author ('Longinus'). The sublime is not a word: it is a concept and an experience, or rather a whole range of ideas, meanings and experiences that are embedded in conceptual and experiential patterns. Once we train our sights on these patterns a radically different prospect on the sublime in antiquity comes to light, one that touches everything from its range of expressions to its dates of emergence, evolution, role in the cultures of antiquity as a whole, and later reception. This book is the first to outline an alternative account of the sublime in Greek and Roman poetry, philosophy, and the sciences, in addition to rhetoric and literary criticism. It offers new readings of Longinus without privileging him, but instead situates him within a much larger context of reflection on the sublime in antiquity.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Introduction: the sublime before and after Longinus
  • 2. The art and rhetoric of the Longinian sublime
  • 3. The sublime before Longinus in rhetoric and criticism: Caecilius to Demetrius
  • 4. The sublime before Longinus in rhetoric and literature: Theophrastus to Homer
  • 5. The material sublime
  • 6. The immaterial sublime
  • Conclusion.

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