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Chapter 5 - Selective Memory and Iliadic Revision

from Part II - Quintus as Quintus: Antagonism and Assimilation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 September 2020

Emma Greensmith
Affiliation:
University of Oxford
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Summary

Examines Quintus’ use of memory as a device for literary recapitulation. Considers what happens when Quintus’ characters, who are ‘still in the Iliad’, remember the Iliad incorrectly. It is argued that rather than offering a correction of Homer’s version of events, Quintus uses the pliability of memory as a retrospective figure to defend and continue the act of poetic selectivity. He is therefore able to provide Homer’s response to charges of lying prevalent in revisionist strands of his imperial reception (e.g. in Dio Chrysostom, Dares, Dictys and Philostratus – who emerge as key players in this chapter).

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Chapter
Information
The Resurrection of Homer in Imperial Greek Epic
Quintus Smyrnaeus' <I>Posthomerica</I> and the Poetics of Impersonation
, pp. 189 - 225
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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