Scale, Space and Canon in Ancient Literary Culture

Reviel Netz author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:20th Feb '20

Should be back in stock very soon

Scale, Space and Canon in Ancient Literary Culture cover

A history of ancient literary culture told through the quantitative facts of canon, geography, and scale.

How many authors were there in antiquity? Where did they work? How was the 'canon' made? This book provides an account of ancient culture in terms of such quantifiable questions. The end result explains why the Greeks were unique in creating a culture based on pluralistic debate.Greek culture matters because its unique pluralistic debate shaped modern discourses. This ground-breaking book explains this feature by retelling the history of ancient literary culture through the lenses of canon, space and scale. It proceeds from the invention of the performative 'author' in the archaic symposium through the 'polis of letters' enabled by Athenian democracy and into the Hellenistic era, where one's space mattered and culture became bifurcated between Athens and Alexandria. This duality was reconfigured into an eclectic variety consumed by Roman patrons and predicated on scale, with about a thousand authors active at any given moment. As patronage dried up in the third century CE, scale collapsed and literary culture was reduced to the teaching of a narrower field of authors, paving the way for the Middle Ages. The result is a new history of ancient culture which is sociological, quantitative, and all-encompassing, cutting through eras and genres.

'… this work opens a new path for future scholarship. This engaging … volume deserves a wide audience among classicists.' P. E. Ojennus, Choice
'This volume is an amazing achievement, a commanding synthesis, a vast compendium of pages, an argument that demands to be contested. Every Classicist should read it.' Jaś Elsner, Bryn Mawr Classical Review

ISBN: 9781108481472

Dimensions: 235mm x 163mm x 44mm

Weight: 1540g

902 pages