The War with God: Theomachy in Roman Imperial Poetry

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Oxford University Press, Mar 27, 2014 - History - 336 pages
Epic and tragedy, from Homer's Achilles and Euripides' Pentheus to Marlowe's Tamburlaine and Milton's Satan, are filled with characters challenging and warring against the gods. Nowhere is the theme of theomachy more frequently and powerfully represented, however, than in the poetry of early imperial Rome, from Ovid's Metamorphoses at the beginning of the first century AD to Statius' Thebaid near its end. This book -- the first full-length study of human-divine conflict in Roman literature -- asks why the war against god was so important to the poets of the time and how this understudied period of literary history influenced a larger tradition in Western literature. Drawing on a variety of contexts -- politics, religion, philosophy, and aesthetics -- Pramit Chaudhuri argues for the fundamental importance of battles between humans and gods in representing the Roman world. A cast of tyrants, emperors, rebels, iconoclasts, philosophers, and ambitious poets brings to life some of the most extraordinary artistic products of classical antiquity. Based on close readings of the major extant epics and selected tragedies, the book replaces a traditionally Aeneid-centric view of imperial epic with a richer dialogue between Greek and Roman texts, contemporary authors, and diverse genres. The renewed sense of a tradition reveals how the conflicts these works represent constitute a distinctive theology informed by other discourses yet peculiar to epic and tragedy. Beginning with the Greek background and ending with a look ahead to developments in the Renaissance, this book charts the history of a theme that would find its richest expression in a time when men became gods and impiety threatened the very order of the world.
 

Contents

Introduction
1
Theomachy in Greek Epic and Tragedy
15
The Origins of Roman Theomachy Lucretius and Vergil
56
Theomachy as Test in Ovids Metamorphoses
82
Deification and Theomachy in Senecas Hercules Furens
116
Theomachy in Historical Epic Disenchantment and Remystification in Lucans Bellum Civile
156
Paradigms of Theomachy in Flavian Epic Homer Intertextuality and the Struggle for Identity
195
The War of the Worlds
231
Theomachy and the Limits of Epic Capaneus in Statius Thebaid
256
The Politics of Theomachy
298
Epilogue
322
Bibliography
329
Index of Passages
357
General Index
375
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About the author (2014)

Pramit Chaudhuri is Associate Professor of Classics at Dartmouth College. He is the co-editor of Reception and the Classics: An Interdisciplinary Approach to the Classical Tradition (2012).

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