Metafiction in Classical Literature
The Invention of Self-Conscious Fiction
Owen Hodkinson(Author)
Routledge (Publisher)
1st Edition
Published on 5. January 2026
Book
Hardback
232 pages
978-0-415-52924-2 (ISBN)
Description
Metafiction, the practice in fictional texts of displaying an awareness of their fictional status, highlighting it, or even exploring it after the manner of literary criticism, existed in ancient Greek and Roman literature. The significance of metafiction to this field is very great-arguably even more so than within modern literature studies, despite the greater prevalence of metafictions in later texts-because it necessarily implies that a text is fictional, and that its author was aware of it as such. Some have argued that the ancients had no clear concept of 'fiction', nor the literary-critical tools to think about and analyse it. While some other scholars have recently begun to refer to metafiction in studies devoted to individual literary texts, no general study exists of the use of metafiction in ancient literature and the implications of this for our understanding of fiction in antiquity.
This book demonstrates by cumulative weight of examples the existence of metafiction in classical literature, and in so doing constitutes an 'archaeology' of the origins of metafiction in Western literature. Author Owen Hodkinson engages with a wide range of approaches to fiction and metafiction, and explores detailed examples or case studies from ancient texts. This book provides for the first time for classical and modern literature scholars a full definition of metafiction which uses the earliest metafictional texts in western literature as its examples rather than only modern novels, and the first general but detailed and theoretically-grounded discussion and definition of metafiction aimed at scholars and students of classical literature.
This book demonstrates by cumulative weight of examples the existence of metafiction in classical literature, and in so doing constitutes an 'archaeology' of the origins of metafiction in Western literature. Author Owen Hodkinson engages with a wide range of approaches to fiction and metafiction, and explores detailed examples or case studies from ancient texts. This book provides for the first time for classical and modern literature scholars a full definition of metafiction which uses the earliest metafictional texts in western literature as its examples rather than only modern novels, and the first general but detailed and theoretically-grounded discussion and definition of metafiction aimed at scholars and students of classical literature.
Reviews / Votes
"This most welcome and important study will make us rethink conventional ideas about fiction in Greek and Latin literature." - Thomas Schmitz, University of Bonn, GermanyMore details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Target group
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
ISBN-13
978-0-415-52924-2 (9780415529242)
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Schweitzer Classification
Person
Owen Hodkinson is Lecturer in the Department of Classics at the University of Wales Lampeter. He is author of Sophists in Disguise (2010).
Content
Introduction Part I: Metafiction: Definitions and History 1. What is Metafiction? 2. Modern, Postmodern, or Ancient? The True Story of Metafiction Part II: Ancient Metafictions: Case Studies 3. Literary Philosophy/Philosophical Literature 4. Ancient Novels and Novelistic Texts 5. Epistolary Fictions 6. Conclusions