Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Contributors
- Introduction: Why Written Texts?
- 1 From Letters to Literature: Reading the “Song Culture” of Classical Greece
- 2 Writing Religion: Inscribed Texts, Ritual Authority, and the Religious Discourse of the Polis
- 3 Letters of the Law: Written Texts in Archaic Greek Law
- 4 Writing, Law, and Legal Practice in the Athenian Courts
- 5 Literacy and the Charlatan in Ancient Greek Medicine
- 6 Literacy in Greek and Chinese Science: Some Comparative Issues
- 7 Writing Philosophy: Prose and Poetry from Thales to Plato
- 8 Prose Performance Texts: Epideixis and Written Publication in the Late Fifth and Early Fourth Centuries
- 9 Writing for Reading: Thucydides, Plato, and the Emergence of the Critical Reader
- 10 Reflecting on Writing and Culture: Theocritus and the Style of Cultural Change
- Bibliography
- Index
1 - From Letters to Literature: Reading the “Song Culture” of Classical Greece
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 July 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Contributors
- Introduction: Why Written Texts?
- 1 From Letters to Literature: Reading the “Song Culture” of Classical Greece
- 2 Writing Religion: Inscribed Texts, Ritual Authority, and the Religious Discourse of the Polis
- 3 Letters of the Law: Written Texts in Archaic Greek Law
- 4 Writing, Law, and Legal Practice in the Athenian Courts
- 5 Literacy and the Charlatan in Ancient Greek Medicine
- 6 Literacy in Greek and Chinese Science: Some Comparative Issues
- 7 Writing Philosophy: Prose and Poetry from Thales to Plato
- 8 Prose Performance Texts: Epideixis and Written Publication in the Late Fifth and Early Fourth Centuries
- 9 Writing for Reading: Thucydides, Plato, and the Emergence of the Critical Reader
- 10 Reflecting on Writing and Culture: Theocritus and the Style of Cultural Change
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
One area of Greek cultural activity that was certainly affected by the introduction of writing was traditional song. It is only thanks to writing that we can study what we call, in a significant divergence from the Greeks, their early “literature.” The translation of Greek song into texts is easily taken for granted, but I will try to show how the very creation of “classical” literature and its perennial reuse as a special source of knowledge and pleasure depended upon the ways that song texts were put to use in the latter part of the classical period. My focus will be on how the Greeks read what we might call, reverting to a Greek term, their poetry, except that my argument will imply that the very notion of poetry as the production (poiēsis) of self-standing works of verbal design, of poiēmata rather than of songs, was a new conception of the ancient singer's art and one that was fostered by an increasing tendency through the fifth century to consult and study songs in the form of written texts.
The “song culture” of my title is taken from John Herington's Poetry into Drama, which documented the ways in which Greek poetry was regularly presented and often preserved through oral performances rather than through writing and reading. Herington was able to see that, though written texts of poems were far from unknown in early Greece, “texts were no part of the performed poem as such” until well into the fifth century.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003
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