The Shadow of Ulysses
Piero Boitani(Author)
Clarendon Press
Published on 1. June 1994
Book
Hardback
209 pages
978-0-19-812268-5 (ISBN)
Description
This study is an exploration of the myth of Ulysses in a range of Western literature from Homer to Joyce. Describing the many incarnations of Ulysses, Boitani sees the hero as an ideal observation-point from which to measure the similarities and differences between the otherness "alterity" of the past and the "modernity" of the present. Ulysses is seen as a figure which every culture is free to interpret, according him values rooted on the one hand in the mythical qualities of Odysseus as a character, and on the other in the ideals, problems, and philosophycial, ethical and political horizons of the individual civilization. The book follows the evolution of this sign through its various phases - classical, medieval, Renaissance, romantic and modern - returning continuously as it does so to the inter-relations between myth, poetry and history, and between rhetoric and the imaginary. Among the writers discussed are Homer, Dante, Tasso, Tennyson, Poe, Joyce and Borges, to name but a few.
The book should be of interest to: students and scholars of classical, medieval and modern literature; students and scholars of comparative literature; and anyone interested in the history of ideas, the relationships between history and literature.
The book should be of interest to: students and scholars of classical, medieval and modern literature; students and scholars of comparative literature; and anyone interested in the history of ideas, the relationships between history and literature.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Oxford University Press
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
bibliography
ISBN-13
978-0-19-812268-5 (9780198122685)
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Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Content
Introduction - wonder - poetry and history; shadows - figuralism and prophecy; shipwreck - interpretation and alterity; the "nova terra" - typologies, history and intertextuality; from land to land, towards the whirlpool - obliquity, impurity and restless readings; "in breve carta" - science and the poetry of knowledge; the final journey and an end to all journeying - the functions of irony; the mirror of the sea - a hope for literature within history; Ulysses, the sirens and the pheasant - word enigma and silence.