Abstract

This paper tries to elucidate the significance of Latin schooling for the production of poetry by lining up five typical cases of recycling Roman texts, from the Middle Ages to the twentieth century. The French poet Baudri de Bourgueil (ca 1050–1130) rewrote Ovid’s Heroides 16–17 within a cultural context, characteristic of the incipient “Ovidian age,” aetas ovidiana, based on classroom practices such as paraphrase, accessus and glosses, presupposing a sense of historical continuity – or translatio studii et imperii – from Antiquity down to the twelfth century. In his great work, The Comedy, the Florentine Dante Alighieri (1265–1321) reused Ovid in a quite different way, representative of the allegorizing tendencies noticeable in Italy and France towards the end of the Ovidian age. The Early Modern motto ad fontes, on the other hand, presupposed a breach between ancient and present times, none the less possible (and surely commendable) to bridge by means of imitation within the framework of studia humanitatis and a new philological culture, made possible by the printing press. This cultural paradigm shift is illustrated by a look at a famous sonnet by the Spanish Golden Age poet Francisco de Quevedo (1580–1645). Finally, our modern and postmodern era, characterized by an ambivalent attitude to the classical heritage, is represented by the Anglo-American poet T.S. Eliot (1888–1965) and his Swedish successor Hjalmar Gullberg (1898–1961), both of whom remembered their Latin classes in their mature poetry, marked by irony, distance and, probably, nostalgia.

Highlights

  • This paper tries to elucidate the signi cance of Latin schooling for the production of poetry by lining up ve typical cases of recycling Roman texts, from the Middle Ages to the twentieth century

  • JOLCEL 1 — 2019 — Latin Education & European Literary Production or narrative poetry) has not been crucial to my discussion, which is aimed at establishing a general comparative taxonomy on the eld of literary reuse

  • My choice of representative students, in turn, has been dictated by their canonical status and exemplarity in literary history; the rst two ourished in the High Middle Ages, the third embodied some advanced properties of Early Modern lyric poetry, and the last two could on reasonable grounds be considered typical of two phases of modernism

Read more

Summary

Introduction

This paper tries to elucidate the signi cance of Latin schooling for the production of poetry by lining up ve typical cases of recycling Roman texts, from the Middle Ages to the twentieth century.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call