第二层次的抒情诗:雅典希米留斯的古代和早期古典诗歌

Francesca Modini
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摘要

摘要本文重新思考了古代和古典诗歌在帝国修辞文本中的接受所带来的方法论问题。它认为,在帝国诡辩家的作品中,对古代诗歌和诗人的引用总是被挪用和重写的产物,对诡辩家与诗歌的研究应该超越Quellenforschung,探索诗歌模式如何以及为什么在新的修辞和帝国背景下发生转变。为了说明这种方法及其对我们理解古代接受现象和帝国修辞文化的贡献,本文将重点放在公元前4世纪雅典的希米里乌斯身上。希米里乌斯是一位诡辩家和修辞老师,他对抒情诗的喜爱使他的演讲被用作抒情片段和证词的采石场。希米留斯对精心挑选的抒情诗模型的处理在这里讨论了他的自我呈现和修辞议程,以展示这位诡辩家如何利用不同抒情诗的声音来促进他的学派,并就他与帝国政府的关系进行谈判。这一分析恢复了希米留斯在帝国晚期文化和社会中的智力意义,但它也表明,对帝国诡秘文学中对古诗的接受进行更深入的研究,如何有可能阐明帝国作者(重新)构建希腊传统所使用的文化政治策略。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
LYRIC IN THE SECOND DEGREE: ARCHAIC AND EARLY CLASSICAL POETRY IN HIMERIUS OF ATHENS
Abstract This article reconsiders the methodological issues posed by the reception of archaic and classical poetry in imperial rhetorical texts. It argues that references to ancient poems and poets in the works of imperial sophists are always already the product of appropriation and rewriting, and that the study of sophists’ engagement with poetry should go beyond Quellenforschung to explore how and why poetic models were transformed in light of their new rhetorical and imperial contexts. To illustrate this approach and its contribution to our understanding of both ancient-reception phenomena and imperial rhetorical culture, the article focusses on Himerius of Athens, a fourth-century c.e. sophist and teacher of rhetoric whose fondness for lyric poetry has caused his Orations to be used as a quarry for lyric fragments and testimonia. Himerius’ treatment of carefully chosen lyric models is here discussed with attention to his self-presentation and rhetorical agenda to show how the sophist appropriated the voices of diverse lyric icons to promote his school and negotiate his position in relation to the imperial administration. This analysis restores Himerius’ intellectual significance within late imperial culture and society, but it also demonstrates how a more in-depth study of the reception of ancient poetry in imperial sophistic literature has the potential to illuminate the strategies of cultural politics used by imperial authors to (re)construct Greek tradition.
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