Catullus
Charles Martin(Author)
Yale University Press
Published on 27. May 1992
Book
Hardback
214 pages
978-0-300-05199-5 (ISBN)
Description
One of the most popular of the Roman poets, Catullus is known for the accessibility of his witty and erotic love poems. In this book Charles Martin, himself a poet, offers a deeper reading of Catullus, revealing the art and intelligence behind the seemingly spontaneous verse. Martin considers Catullus' life, habits of composition, and the circumstances in which he worked. He places him among the modernists of his age, who created a new ironic and subjective poetics, and he shows the affinity between Catullus and the modernists of our own age. Martin offers intepretations of Catullus' poems, viewing the love poems to "Lesbia" as unified, artfully arranged poetic sequence, and the short poems, often dismissed as unworthy of serious critical attention, as the irreverent products of a sophisticated poetic innovator. Unlike Horace, Virgil, and Ovid, Catullus did not influence our literary culture until the beginning of the modern era, but he is now regarded as a poet who speaks to our age with a singular directness.
Pointing to Catullus' self-awareness, playfulness, and comic invention and to the elaborate complexity of his experiments in poetic form, Martin aims to give both the scholar and the general reader a fresh appreciation of his poetic art.
Pointing to Catullus' self-awareness, playfulness, and comic invention and to the elaborate complexity of his experiments in poetic form, Martin aims to give both the scholar and the general reader a fresh appreciation of his poetic art.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
notes, bibliography, index
Dimensions
Height: 208 mm
Width: 139 mm
Weight
278 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-300-05199-5 (9780300051995)
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Schweitzer Classification
Content
Part 1 Buried presents: "The Very Worst of Poets"; the book of Catullus; life into art. Part 2 Poetic license: of poetry and playfulness; invitations and excoriations; transformations of the gift. Part 3 Vanishing lines: on passionate virtuosity in a poem of some length; lifting the poet's fingerprints - a reading of poems 61-68.