Epic, Novel and the Progress of Antiquity
Professor Ahuvia Kahane author
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Publishing:24th Jul '25
£19.99
This title is due to be published on 24th July, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

An original examination in understanding the relationship between the formerly contrasted genres epic and novel in antiquity.
This book rethinks the characterization of two highly contrastive forms of ancient literary tradition - epic and novel - and re-frames their function as dynamic points of reference in the history of ideas and in our understanding of the interface between antiquity and the modern. Epic and novel have often been construed in terms of sharp contrasts: temporally, with the epic anchored in the canonical beginnings of classical literature, as opposed to the novel, which rises only late in the ancient era; hierarchically, with epic regularly occupying the canonical core while the novel often resided in the periphery; and in terms of specific highly contrasting attributes: 'sublime' vs. 'subversive'; an aspiration to 'oral' song vs. an intimate association with book culture; heroic vs. 'anti-heroic' or 'mock-heroic'.
Ahuvia Kahane argues for the fallibility of each of several major differential attributes, to the point of generic disintegration. He then constructs a new understanding of epic and novel in antiquity as part of a more fragile, dynamic framework, governed by intertextuality and openness on the one hand, and by fragmented interpretive traditions on the other.
Professor Kahane is the Scheherazade of our days: a brilliant storyteller himself, he has woven together a theoretically sophisticated fabric of novel and epic that speaks adroitly of antiquity but interfaces engagingly with modernity. -- Paul Cartledge, Emeritus A.G. Leventis Professor of Greek Culture, University of Cambridge, UK
ISBN: 9781350278257
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
256 pages