记忆、情感与女王之死

M. Woods
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这一章讨论迷人的和注定要失败的蒂多,因为中世纪的手稿揭示了他们对她的情感的强调,这一焦点被现代记忆研究所阐明。它始于奥古斯丁童年时期对维吉尔的《埃涅伊德》的痴迷。虽然奥古斯丁对维吉尔的英雄埃涅阿斯有一种轻蔑的反应,但他对狄多和她的情感痛苦有一种痴迷的童年认同感。奥古斯丁称他自己对埃涅阿斯漫游的记忆是一个强迫的过程(cogebra),但似乎毫不费力地记住了蒂多,实际上几乎违背了他的意愿,他把这种记忆与强烈的情感联系在一起,尤其是他对她的死的反应。奥古斯丁强有力的修辞序列与哭泣和死亡有关,将他自己的情感反应固定在我们的脑海里,就像蒂朵被固定在他的脑海里一样。
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Memory, Emotion, and the Death of a Queen
This chapter deals with the attractive and doomed Dido as medieval manuscripts reveal their emphasis on her emotions, a focus illuminated by modern research on memory. It begins with Augustine's boyhood obsession with Virgil's Aeneid. While Augustine had a dismissive reaction to Virgil's hero Aeneas, he had an obsessive boyhood identification with Dido and her emotional pain. Augustine called his own memorizing of Aeneas's wanderings a forced process (cogebra), but appears to remember Dido effortlessly, indeed almost against his will, and he associates that memory with strong emotions, particularly his reaction to her death. Augustine's rhetorically powerful sequence of words associated with weeping and death fixes his own emotional reaction in our minds, as Dido became fixed in his.
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Acknowledgments Chapter 3. Boys Performing Women (and Men): The Classics and After Works Cited Frontmatter Chapter 1. Memory, Emotion, and the Death of a Queen: Teaching the Aeneid
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