Description
Book SynopsisVirgil's "Aeneid" invites its reader to identify with the Roman nation whose origins and destiny it celebrates. This work argues that the great Roman epic satisfies this identification only indirectly - if at all. It offers fresh readings of such major episodes as the fall of Troy, the pageant of heroes in the underworld, and the death of Turnus.
Trade Review"Point of view or perspective, in all its forms, has been a chief concern of Virgilian criticism for decades now, and Reed's book shows that there is yet much to be discovered in these well-traveled areas of investigation, especially where narratology meets intertextuality... [T]he book both informs and provides much to contemplate."--Brian W. Breed, New England Classical Journal "Reed is an excellent interweaver of citations. He seems to have photographic recall of every metaphor ever penned in Hellenistic literature. His elucidation of the tangled ethnographies of peoples and cities of the ancient world is admirably precise. And he is correct to note the ironies that Virgil has built into his foundational epic."--Anthony Esolen, Claremont Review of Books "This book has many strengths. The close readings it extracts from the Aeneid's intertextuality with early Roman poetry, especially Naevius and tragedy, are often exciting."--Brian W. Breed, New England Classical Journal
Table of ContentsPREFACE vii Introduction 1 CHAPTER ONE: Euryalus 16 CHAPTER TWO: Turnus 44 CHAPTER THREE: Dido 73 CHAPTER FOUR: Andromache 101 CHAPTER FIVE: Ancient Cities 129 CHAPTER SIX: Marcellus 148 CHAPTER SEVEN: Aeneas 173 BIBLIOGRAPHY 203 INDEX OF TEXTS CITED 211 GENERAL INDEX 223