Fate and the Hero in Virgil's Aeneid

Stoic World Fate and Human Responsibility

Graham Zanker author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:13th Apr '23

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Fate and the Hero in Virgil's Aeneid cover

Argues that Stoic thought on human responsibility and world fate plays a key role in the Aeneid's characterisation and morality.

Explores how Virgil's incorporation of Stoic thought on human responsibility and providential world fate into the Aeneid permits a reassessment of the characterisation and morality of the poem's gods and heroes. Of interest to both students and professional scholars.This book explores how Virgil in his Aeneid incorporates the ancient Stoics' thinking about how humans can exercise moral responsibility and how this can affect providential world fate. The third-century BC philosopher Chrysippus of Soli located this freedom in the way we can assent to courses of action, and Graham Zanker innovatively demonstrates how Virgil appropriates this concept in the way that Jupiter and Aeneas can assent to the world fate in which they have discovered they must play a part, or Juno and Dido can withhold their assent to it. Indeed, Virgil even offers the model to no-one less than Augustus: the emperor is invited to give his assent to ruling what was believed to be his 'world-wide' empire justly. The book is accessible to both students and professional scholars of the Aeneid, with all Greek and Latin translated into idiomatic English.

ISBN: 9781009319874

Dimensions: 235mm x 158mm x 22mm

Weight: 550g

300 pages