Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-lj6df Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-05T08:47:03.610Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

QUEER (A)EDI-(M)OLOGY: ON CALLIMACHUS’ AETIA PROLOGUE

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 June 2022

Mario Telò*
Affiliation:
University of California, [email protected]
Get access

Extract

In the prologue of Callimachus’ Aetia, every single word opens up a wide, virtually boundless spectrum of suggestions, intimations, and evocations. In this paper, I heed Callimachus’ formal intricacies, joining the decoding game that has vexed and entertained ancient and modern readers by homing in on the para-etymological potentialities of the verb ἀείδω (‘I sing’). I wish to explore the possibility that, in this architext of Callimachean programmatics, ‘singing’ may amount to a sort of aesthetic satisfaction in self-deprivation, with formal elements mobilizing a spiral of eating and non-eating. This exploration offers the opportunity to think about Callimachean ‘singing’ as a challenge to conventional notions of human subjectivity and to the very idea of poetic immortality, expressing something like the wish of a poète maudit not for monumental permanence, but for a looping insistence. We may then see Callimachean aesthetics as less rarefied, aristocratic, and decorous than it is usually made out to be. In the recalcitrance, the unruly looping of poetic form, we may glimpse an aesthetic sense that is more subversive, shaped by temporal stuckness, a rejection of fulfillment, and a hunger that rejects the lack that is satisfaction. I first locate the possibility of an alternative para-etymologizing of ἀείδω within the prologue's discourse of corporeality, in its precarious opposition of thinness and fatness. I then search the epigram dedicated to Heraclitus and the Hymn to Demeter for traces of the restless aesthetics inherent in this para-etymologizing, which I will ultimately connect with queer temporality. The Callimachean hymn invites us to see the poetic persona of the Aetia's proem in a new light—as a counterpart of the starving binge eater Erysichthon, Demeter's enemy, who is barely distinguishable from the goddess herself.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Ramus 2022

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

Many thanks to Helen Morales, Ramus’ anonymous readers, and, as always, to Alex Press.

References

Acosta-Hughes, B. (2002), Polyeideia: The Iambi of Callimachus and the Archaic Iambic Tradition (Berkeley, CA).Google Scholar
Acosta-Hughes, B., Lehnus, L., and Stephens, S. (eds) (2011), Brill's Companion to Callimachus (Leiden).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Acosta-Hughes, B., and Stephens, S.A. (2001), ‘Aetia Fr. 1.5 Pf.: I Told My Story like a Child’, ZPE 136, 214–16.Google Scholar
Acosta-Hughes, B., and Stephens, S.A. (2002), ‘Rereading Callimachus’ Aetia Fragment 1’, CPh 97, 238–55.Google Scholar
Acosta-Hughes, B., and Stephens, S.A. (2012), Callimachus in Context: From Plato to the Augustan Poets (Cambridge).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ahl, F. (1985), Metaformations: Soundplay and Wordplay in Ovid and Other Classical Poets (Ithaca, NY).Google Scholar
Althusser, L. (1971), ‘Ideology and Ideological State Apparatuses’, in Althusser, L., Lenin and Philosophy and Other Essays, tr. Brewster, B. (New York), 121–76.Google Scholar
Ambühl, A. (1995), ‘Callimachus and the Arcadian Asses: The Aitia Prologue and a Lemma in the London Scholion’, ZPE 105, 209–13.Google Scholar
Asper, M. (1997), Onomata Allotria: Zur Genese, Struktur und Funktion poetologischer Metaphern bei Kallimachos (Stuttgart).Google Scholar
Barber, S.M., and Clark, D.L. (2002), ‘Queer Moments: The Performative Temporalities of Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick’, in Barber, S.M. and Clark, D.L. (eds), Regarding Sedgwick: Essays on Queer Culture and Critical Theory (New York), 156.Google Scholar
Bassi, K. (1989), ‘The Poetics of Exclusion in Callimachus’ Hymn to Apollo’, TAPhA 119, 219–31.Google Scholar
Bastianini, G. (1996), ‘κατὰ λεπτόν in Callimachus (fr. 1.11 Pfeiffer)’, in Adorno, F. and Funghi, M.S. (eds), Ὁδοὶ διζήσιος. Le vie della ricerca: Studi in onore di Francesco Adorno (Florence), 6980.Google Scholar
Benedetto, G. (1990), ‘Una congettura di Augusto Rostagni (Call. fr. 1.11 Pf.)’, Quaderni di storia 32, 115–37.Google Scholar
Benvenuti Falciai, P. (1983), ‘Uno stomaco malato (Call. h. VI 87–93)’, Prometheus 9, 6382.Google Scholar
Bernstein, S. (2019), ‘The Philía of Philology’, in Richter, G. and Smock, A. (eds), Give the Word: Responses to Werner Hamacher's 95 Theses on Philology (Lincoln, NE), 181–94.Google Scholar
Bersani, L. (1982), The Death of Stéphane Mallarmé (Cambridge).Google Scholar
Bersani, L. (1986), The Freudian Body: Psychoanalysis and Art (New York).Google Scholar
Bing, P. (1988), The Well-Read Muse: Present and Past in Callimachus and the Hellenistic Poets (Göttingen).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bing, P. (1996), ‘Callimachus and the Hymn to Demeter’, Syllecta Classica 6, 2942.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bing, P. (2003), ‘The Unruly Tongue: Philitas of Cos as Scholar and Poet’, CPh 98, 330–48.Google Scholar
Blanchot, M. (1988), The Unavowable Community, tr. Joris, P. (New York).Google Scholar
Boegehold, A. (2004), ‘Kallimachos Epigram 28. What Does Echo Echo?’, New England Classical Journal 31, 121–3.Google Scholar
Bonelli, G. (1989), Decadentismo antico e moderno. Un confronto tra l'estetismo alessandrino e l'esperienza poetica contemporanea (Turin).Google Scholar
Borgogno, A. (2001), ‘A proposito della vecchiaia di Callimaco (Aetia fr. 1, vv. 32–35)’, Prometheus 27, 217f.Google Scholar
Borthwick, E.K. (1966), ‘A Grasshopper's Diet—Notes on an Epigram of Meleager and a Fragment of Eubulus’, CQ 60, 103–12.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bowie, E. (1985), ‘Theocritus's Seventh Idyll, Philetas, and Longus’, CQ 35, 6791.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brinkema, E. (2011), ‘Laura Dern's Vomit, or, Kant and Derrida in Oz’, Film-Philosophy 12, 5169.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burt, S. (2019), After Callimachus: Poems, foreword by Payne, M. (Princeton).Google Scholar
Butler, B. (2001), ‘Return to Alexandria: Conflict and Contradiction in Discourses of Origins and Heritage Revivalism’, in Layton, R., P.G. Stone, and Thomas, J. (eds), The Destruction and Conservation of Cultural Property (London), 5574.Google Scholar
Butler, J. (1990), ‘The Pleasures of Repetition’, in Glick, R. and Bone, S. (eds), Pleasure beyond the Pleasure Principle (New Haven), 259–75.Google Scholar
Butler, S. (2013), ‘Beyond Narcissus’, in Butler, S. and Purves, A. (eds), Synaesthesia and the Ancient Senses (London), 185200.Google Scholar
Butler, S. (2015), The Ancient Phonograph (New York).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Calderón Dorda, E. (1990), ‘Ateneo y la λεπτότης de Filetas’, Emerita 58, 125–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cameron, Α. (1991), ‘How Thin Was Philitas’, CQ n.s. 41, 534–8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cameron, Α. (1995), Callimachus and His Critics (Princeton, NJ).Google Scholar
Caspers, C. (2005), ‘Hermesianax fr. 7.75–8 Powell: Philitas, Bittis…and a Parrot?’, Mnemosyne 58.4, 575–81.Google Scholar
Crane, G. (1986), ‘Tithonus and the Prologue to Callimachus’ Aetia’, ZPE 66, 269–78.Google Scholar
Crawford, L. (2017), ‘Slender Trouble: From Berlant's Cruel Figuring of Figure to Sedgwick's Fat Presence’, GLQ 23, 447–72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
D'Alessio, G.B. (ed.) (1996), Callimaco: Inni, Epigrammi, Ecale. Aitia, Giambi e altri frammenti (2 vols: Milan).Google Scholar
Da Silva, J. (2008), ‘Ecocriticism and Myth: The Case of Erysichthon’, Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment 15.2, 103–16.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
DeArmitt, P. (2014), The Right to Narcissism: A Case for an Impossible Self-Love (New York).Google Scholar
Deleuze, G., and Guattari, F. (1987), A Thousand Plateaus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia, tr. Massumi, B. (Minneapolis, MN).Google Scholar
Deleuze, G., and Parnet, C. (1987), Dialogues II, tr. Tomlison, H. and Habberjam, B. (New York).Google Scholar
Derrida, J. (1996), Archive Fever: A Freudian Impression, tr. Prenowitz, E. (Chicago, IL).Google Scholar
Derrida, J. (1997), ‘Portrait d'un philosophe: Jacques Derrida’, in Philosophie, Philosophie (Revue des étudiants de philosophie, Université Paris VIII-Vincennes à Saint-Denis).Google Scholar
Derrida, J. (2000), Of Hospitality, tr. R. Bowlby (Stanford, CA).Google Scholar
Derrida, J. (2005), Rogues: Two Essays on Reason, tr. Brault, P.-A. and Naas, M. (Stanford, CA).Google Scholar
Derrida, J. (2014), Cinders, tr. Lukacher, N. (Minneapolis, MN).Google Scholar
Derrida, J. (2019), La vie la mort. Séminaire (Paris).Google Scholar
Dettori, E. (ed.) (2000a), Filita grammatico: testimonianze e frammenti (Rome).Google Scholar
Dettori, E. (2000b), ‘La “filologia” di Filita di Cos’, in R. Pretagostini (ed.), La letteratura ellenistica: problemi e prospettive di ricerca (Rome), 183–98.Google Scholar
Dinshaw, C., Edelman, L., Ferguson, R.A., Freccero, C., Freeman, E., Halberstam, J., Jagose, A., Nealon, C., Tan Hoang, N. (2007), ‘Theorizing Queer Temporalities: A Roundtable Discussion’, GLQ 13.2–3 (‘Queer Temporalities’), 177–95.Google Scholar
Dover, K. (ed.) (1993), Aristophanes: Frogs (Oxford).Google Scholar
duBois, P. (2011), ‘Sappho, Tithonos, and the Ruin of the Body’, European Review of History 18, 663–72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Earlie, P. (2015), ‘Derrida's Archive Fever: From Debt to Inheritance’, Paragraph 38, 312–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Edelman, L. (2004), No Future: Queer Theory and the Death Drive (Durham, NC).Google Scholar
Edelman, L. (2011), ‘Against Survival: Queerness in a Time That's Out of Joint’, Shakespeare Quarterly 62, 148–69.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Edwards, P. (2002), ‘Τις ἄλλος ἔχει: An Echo of Callimachus in Ovid's Metamorphoses’, New England Classics Journal 29.1, 1624.Google Scholar
Egan, R.B. (2004), ‘Eros, Eloquence, and Entomo-Psychology in Plato's Phaedrus’, in Egan, R.B. and Joyal, M.A. (eds), Daimonopylai: Essays in Classics and the Classical Tradition Presented to E.G. Berry (Winnipeg), 6587.Google Scholar
Enterline, L. (2000), The Rhetoric of the Body from Ovid to Shakespeare (Cambridge).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Evans, D. (2004), Rhythm, Illusion and the Poetic Idea: Baudelaire, Rimbaud, Mallarmé (Amsterdam).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fantuzzi, M., and Hunter, R. (2004), Tradition and Innovation in Hellenistic Poetry (Cambridge).Google Scholar
Faraone, C. (2012), ‘Boubrôstis, Meat Eating and Comedy: Erysichthon as Famine Demon in Callimachus’ Hymn to Demeter’, in Harder, M.A., Regtuit, R.F., and Wakker, G.C. (eds), Gods and Religion in Hellenistic Poetry (Leuven), 6180.Google Scholar
Fassino, M., and Prauscello, L. (2001), ‘Memoria ritmica e memoria poetica: Saffo e Alceo in Teocrito Idilli 28–30 tra ἀρχαιολογία metrica e innovazione alessandrina’, MD 46, 937.Google Scholar
Faulkner, A. (2011), ‘Fast, Famine, and Feast: Food for Thought in Callimachus’ Hymn to Demeter’, HSPh 106, 7595.Google Scholar
Fitzgerald, W. (1996), Catullan Provocations: Lyric Poetry and the Drama of Position (Berkeley, CA).Google Scholar
Freeman, E. (2019), Beside You in Time: Sense Methods and Queer Sociabilities in the American 19th Century (Durham, NC).Google Scholar
Freud, S. (1920), Beyond the Pleasure Principle, SE 18, 164.Google Scholar
Gargiulo, T. (1992), ‘L'immagine della bilancia in Callimaco, fr. 1, 9–10 Pfeiffer’, QUCC 42.3, 123–8.Google Scholar
Geissler, C. (2005), ‘Der Tithonosmythos bei Sappho und Kallimachos: Zu Sappho fr. 58 V., 11–22 and Kallimachos, Aitia fr. 1 Pf’, Göttinger Forum für Altertumswissenschaft 8, 105–14.Google Scholar
Greaney, P. (2007), Untimely Beggar: Poverty and Power from Baudelaire to Benjamin (Minneapolis, MN).Google Scholar
Greene, E., and Skinner, M.B. (eds) (2009), The New Sappho on Old Age: Textual and Philosophical Issues (Washington, DC).Google Scholar
Gronewald, M., and Daniel, R.W. (2004), ‘Ein neuer Sappho–Papyrus’, ZPE 147, 18.Google Scholar
Grosz, E. (1994), Volatile Bodies: Toward a Corporeal Feminism (Bloomington, IN).Google Scholar
Gumbrecht, H.U. (2003), The Powers of Philology: Dynamics of Textual Scholarship (Urbana, IL).Google Scholar
Gunderson, E. (2018), ‘The Paraphilologist as Pataphysician’, in Gurd, S. and van Gerven Oei, V.W.J. (eds), Pataphilology: An Irreader (Goleta, CA), 167215.Google Scholar
Güthenke, C. (2020), Feeling and Classical Philology: Knowing Antiquity in German Scholarship, 1770–1920 (Cambridge).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gutzwiller, K. (2002), ‘Art's Echo: The Tradition of Hellenistic Ecphrastic Epigram’, in Harder, M.A., Regtuit, R.F., and Wakker, G.C. (eds), Hellenistic Epigrams (Leuven), 85112.Google Scholar
Gutzwiller, K. (2019), ‘Under the Sign of the Distaff: Aetia 1.5, Spinning and Erinna’, CQ 70.1, 177–91.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guyer, S. (2007), ‘Buccality’, in Schwab, G. (ed.), Derrida, Deleuze, Psychoanalysis (New York), 77104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hage, G. (2015), Alter-Politics: Critical Anthropology and the Radical Imagination (Melbourne).Google Scholar
Hamacher, W. (2010), Minima Philologica, tr. Diehl, C. and Groves, J. (New York).Google Scholar
Harder, A., (ed.) (2012), Callimachus Aetia. Vols. 1–2 (Oxford).Google Scholar
Hardie, A. (2000), ‘The Ancient “Etymology” of ΑΟΙΔΟΣ’, Philologus 144, 163–75.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hardie, P. (2002), Ovid's Poetics of Illusion (Cambridge).Google Scholar
Hopkinson, N. (ed.) (1984), Callimachus: Hymn to Demeter (Cambridge).Google Scholar
Hopkinson, N. (ed.) (1988), Hellenistic Anthology (Cambridge).Google Scholar
Hunter, R. (1989), ‘Winged Callimachus’, ZPE 76, 1f.Google Scholar
Hunter, R. (1992), ‘Callimachus and Heraclitus’, MD 28, 113–23.Google Scholar
Hunter, R. (1996), Theocritus and the Archaeology of Greek Poetry (Cambridge).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hunter, R. (1997), ‘(B)ionic Man: Callimachus’ Iambic Programme’, PCPhS 43, 4152.Google Scholar
Hunter, R. (ed.) (1999), Theocritus: A Selection (Idylls 1, 3, 4, 6, 7, 10, 11 and 13) (Cambridge).Google Scholar
Hunter, R. (2006), ‘Sweet Nothings—Callimachus fr. 1, 9–12 Revisited’, in Bastianini, G. and Casanova, A. (eds), Callimaco: cent'anni di papiri (Florence), 119–31.Google Scholar
Hunter, R. (2009), Critical Moments in Classical Literature: Studies in the Ancient View of Literature and its Uses (Cambridge).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jakobson, R. (1962), ‘Why “Mama” and “Papa”?’, in Rudy, S. and Taylor, M. (eds), Selected Writings (The Hague), Vol.1, 538–45.Google Scholar
Janan, M. (2009), Reflections in a Serpent's Eye: Thebes in Ovid's Metamorphoses (Oxford).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Janko, R. (2017), ‘Tithonus, Eos, and the Cicada in the Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite and Sappho fr. 58’, in Tsagalis, C. and Markantonatos, A. (eds), The Winnowing Oar–New Perspectives in Homeric Studies (Berlin), 267–92.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kaesser, C. (2004), ‘Callimachus, Fr. 1Pf. on the Meaning of Song’, ZPE 150, 3942.Google Scholar
King, H. (1986), ‘Tithonos and the Tettix’, Arethusa 19, 1535.Google Scholar
Krevans, N. (1993), ‘Fighting against Antimachus: The Lyde and the Aetia Reconsidered’, in Harder, M.A., Regtuit, R.F., and Wakker, G.C. (eds), Callimachus I (Leuven), 149–60.Google Scholar
Krevans, N. (2011), ‘Callimachus’ Philology’, in Acosta-Hughes, Lehnus, and Stephens (2011), 118–33.Google Scholar
Kurke, L. (2021), ‘Musical Animals, Choral Assemblages, and Choral Temporality in Sappho's Tithonus Poem (fr. 58b)’, AJP 142, 139.Google Scholar
Lacan, J. (1981), The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis: The Seminar of Jacques Lacan, Book 11, ed. Miller, J.-A., tr. Sheridan, A. (New York).Google Scholar
Lacan, J. (1991), Le Séminaire: Livre VIII. Le transfert, 1960–61, ed. Miller, J.-A. (Paris).Google Scholar
Lacan, J. (1994), Le Séminaire: Livre IV. La relation d'objet, 1956–57, ed. Miller, J.-A. (Paris).Google Scholar
Lacan, J. (1998), On Feminine Sexuality, The Limits of Love and Knowledge, 1972–1973: The Seminar of Jacques Lacan, Book 20, ed. Miller, J.-A., tr. Fink, B. (New York).Google Scholar
LeVen, P. (2018), ‘The Erogenous Ear’, in Butler, S. and Nooter, S. (eds), Sound and the Ancient Senses (London), 212–32.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Livrea, E. (1996), ‘Callimaco e gli asini’, Studi Italiani di Filologica Classica 14, 56–8.Google Scholar
Livrea, E. (2007), ‘La vecchiaia su papiro: Saffo Simonide Callimaco Cercida’, in Bastianini, G. and Casanova, A. (eds), I papiri di Saffo e Alceo (Florence), 6781.Google Scholar
Luppe, W. (1997), ‘Kallimachos, Aitien-Prolog V.7–12’, ZPE 115, 50–4.Google Scholar
MacQueen, J.G. (1982), ‘Death and Immortality: A Study of the Heraclitus Epigram of Callimachus’, Ramus 11, 4856.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Magnelli, E. (1999), ‘Quelle bestie dei Telchini (sul v. 2 del prologo degli Aitia)’, ZPE 127, 52–8.Google Scholar
Maslov, B. (2009), ‘The Semantics of ἀοιδός and Related Compounds: Towards a Historical Poetics of Solo Performance in Archaic Greece’, CA 28, 138.Google Scholar
Massimilla, G. (ed.) (1996), Aitia: Libri Primo e Secondo (Pisa).Google Scholar
Moncayo, R. (2017), Lalangue, Sinthome, Jouissance, and Nomination: A Reading Companion and Commentary on Lacan's Seminar XXIII on the Sinthome (London).Google Scholar
Morales, H. (2020), Antigone Rising: The Subversive Power of the Ancient Myths (New York).Google Scholar
Mori, A. (2017), ‘Archives, Innovation, and the Neomorphic Cyclops’, Aitia 7.1 (https://journals.openedition.org/aitia/1696).Google Scholar
Müller, C. (1987), Erysichthon: Der Mythos als narrative Metapher im Demeterhymnos des Kallimachos (Stuttgart).Google Scholar
Murray, J. (2004), ‘The Metamorphoses of Erysichthon: Callimachus, Apollonius, and Ovid’, in Harder, M.A., Regtuit, R.F., and Wakker, G.C. (eds), Callimachus II (Leuven), 207–42.Google Scholar
Nancy, J.-L. (2016), Ego Sum: Corpus, Anima, Fabula, tr. Morin, M.-E. (New York).Google Scholar
Nancy, J.-L. (2017), On Coming, tr. Mandell, C. (New York).Google Scholar
Nisbet, G. (2003), ‘A Sickness of Discourse: The Vanishing Syndrome of Leptosunê’, G&R 50.2, 191205.Google Scholar
Nooter, S. (2020), ‘The Fourth Level of Life: White Noise in the Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite and Plato's Phaedrus’, Parallax 26.2, 133–50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oliensis, E. (2019), Loving Writing / Ovid's Amores (Cambridge).Google Scholar
Orbach, S. (1986), Hunger Strike: The Anorectic's Struggle as a Metaphor for Our Age (New York).Google Scholar
Palumbo Stracca, B. (1988), ‘L'eco di Callimaco (Ep. 28 Pf.) e la tradizione dei versi echoici’, Studi Italiani di Filologia Classica 6, 216–21.Google Scholar
Papanghelis, T.D. (1991), ‘Catullus and Callimachus on Large Women (A Reconsideration of C. 86)’, Mnemosyne 44, 372–86.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Park, M. (2021), ‘Rethinking the Postclassical Greek Hymn: Archive and Textualization in CallimachusHymn to Delos’, ClAnt 40, 283–315.Google Scholar
Payne, M. (2011), ‘Iambic Theatre: The Childhood of Callimachus Revisited’, in Acosta-Hughes, Lehnus, and Stephens (2011), 493507.Google Scholar
Pfeiffer, R. (ed.) (1949 –53), Callimachus (Oxford).Google Scholar
Pfeiffer, R. (1968), History of Classical Scholarship from the Beginnings to the End of the Hellenistic Age (Oxford).Google Scholar
Phillips, T. (2016), Pindar's Library: Performance Poetry and Material Texts (Oxford).Google Scholar
Polignac, F. (2000), ‘A Myth Reborn’, in Jacob, C. and Polignac, F. (eds), Alexandria, Third Century BC: The Knowledge of the World in a Single City (Alexandria), 212–16.Google Scholar
Pontani, F. (2014), ‘“Your First Commitments Tangible Again”—Alexandrianism as an Aesthetic Category?’, in Hunter, R., Rengakos, A., and Sistakou, E. (eds), Hellenistic Studies at a Crossroads: Exploring Texts, Contexts, and Metatexts (Berlin), 157–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Porter, J. (2011), ‘Against leptotes: Rethinking Hellenistic Aesthetics’, in Erskine, A. and Jones, L. Llewellyn (eds), Creating a Hellenistic World (Swansea), 271312.Google Scholar
Rancière, J. (2004), The Politics of Aesthetics: The Distribution of the Sensible, tr. Rockhill, G. (London).Google Scholar
Rancière, J. (2011), Mallarmé: The Politics of the Siren, tr. Corcoran, S. (London).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rawles, R. (2019), Callimachus (London).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rostagni, A. (1928), ‘Nuovo Callimaco 1. Il prologo degli Αἴτια’, RFIC 6, 152.Google Scholar
Sartre, J.-P. (1974), Between Existentialism and Marxism, tr. Mathews, J. (New York).Google Scholar
Sbardella, L. (ed.) (2000), Filita: Testimonianze e frammenti poetici (Rome).Google Scholar
Sedgwick, E.K. (1994), Fat Art, Thin Art (Durham, NC).Google Scholar
Selden, D. (1998), ‘Alibis’, ClAnt 17, 289412.Google Scholar
Shoptaw, J. (2000), ‘Lyric Cryptography’, Poetics Today 21, 221–62.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Silk, M. (2004), ‘Alexandrian Poetry from Callimachus to Eliot’, in Hirst, A. and Silk, M. (eds), Alexandria, Real and Imagined (London), 353–72.Google Scholar
Spanoudakis, K. (2001), ‘Poets and Telchines in Callimachus’ Aetia-Prologue’, Mnemosyne 54, 425–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Spanoudakis, K. (ed.) (2002), Philitas of Cos (Leiden).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Steiner, D. (2007), ‘Feathers Flying: Avian Poetics in Hesiod, Pindar, and Callimachus’, AJP 128, 177208.Google Scholar
Stephens, S.A. (ed.) (2015), Callimachus: The Hymns (Oxford).Google Scholar
Strings, S. (2019), Fearing the Black Body: The Racial Origins of Fat Phobia (New York).Google Scholar
Telò, M. (2016), Aristophanes and the Cloak of Comedy (Chicago, IL).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Telò, M. (2018), ‘Tastes of Homer: Matro's Gastroaesthetic Tour Through Epic’, in Rudolph, K.C. (ed.), Taste and the Ancient Senses (New York), 7289.Google Scholar
Telò, M. (2020), Archive Feelings: A Theory of Greek Tragedy (Columbus, OH).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weiss, A.S. (2002), Breathless: Sound Recording, Disembodiment, and the Transformation of Lyrical Nostalgia (Middletown, CT).Google Scholar
Whitmarsh, T. (2005), ‘The Lexicon of Love: Longus and Philetas Grammatikos’, JHS 125, 145–8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williams, F. (ed.) (1978), Callimachus. Hymn to Apollo (Oxford).Google Scholar
Worman, N. (2015), Landscape and the Spaces of Metaphor in Ancient Literary Theory and Criticism (Cambridge).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yunis, H. (ed.) (2011), Plato: Phaedrus (Cambridge).Google Scholar
Žižek, S. (1993), Tarrying with the Negative: Kant, Hegel, and the Critique of Ideology (Durham, NC).Google Scholar
Žižek, S. (2006), The Parallax View (Cambridge, MA).CrossRefGoogle Scholar