贺拉斯的抑扬格元诗学,第8章和第12章

IF 0.5 3区 历史学 0 CLASSICS HELIOS Pub Date : 2016-03-22 DOI:10.1353/HEL.2016.0001
Erika Zimmermann Damer
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Epodes 8 and 12 may, in fact, offer Roman culture's most overtly misogynistic tone. (2) In spite of the vehemence in the speaker's verbal assaults, he is reacting to his own perceived sexual weakness. In fact, Horatian iambic continually notes the unmartial status and weakness of the speaker's body. He is programmatically imbellis acfirmas parum (Epod. 1.16) and his final appearance is that of an enervated old man: he is jaundiced, breathless, feverish, and aged on account of Canidia's powers (Epod. 17.21-6, 31-4). (3) Accordingly, I posit here that bodily invective in Epodes 8 and 12 functions metapoetically. I call attention to the repetition of stylistic terms--mollitia, inertia, and rabies--within Epodes 8 and 12, and show how these two poems can be seen as part of Horace's ongoing project to distinguish his own emerging iambic project from the incipient genre of Roman love elegy. (4) To these two elegiac terms, mollitia and inertia, the Horatian iambic speaker adds the quintessentially iambic rabies, a term that the poet Horace himself will later call the emotion that first generated iambic poetry. My reading thus suggests that Horace was well aware not only of the tropes and topoi of Roman love elegy, (5) but also of its vocabulary of style that routinely associates the human bodies of its characters with the central stylistic qualities of the poetic genre. While critics have disputed the chronology, (6) most agree that Horace's Epodes were published soon after Actium, in approximately 31/30 BCE, and were followed by the publication of Propertius's Monobiblos and Tibullus's Book 1 in 28 and 27 BCE, respectively. (7) We thus have evidence in the intergeneric dialogue that I draw out of Epocies 8 and 12 for the existence of two-way influence between the poets of Roman iambic and elegiac erotic poetry, what Peter Heslin (2011, 60) has aptly called \"an extended process in which each poet defined himself against the other[s].\" Furthermore, Horace's poems articulate an iambic refusal to valorize these terms that generally characterized effeminacy or other failings of normative Roman masculinity in broader Roman discourses of gender and sexuality. Iambos, despite its transgressively obscene content, thus serves to uphold and reinforce the status quo in a period where elite Roman masculinity was challenged through social forces, upset by the political instability of the Triumviral period, and was witness to the emergence of alternative masculinities in the sartorial self-expression of Roman elites like Caesar and Maecenas and in the poetic aesthetics of Roman love elegy. (8) For many decades, Epodes 8 and 12 were considered so obscene that they were censored from publication and ignored by critics of Horadan iambic. (9) By the late 1980s, however, these Epodes began to be re-evaluated as an integral part of Horace's first lyric collection. (10) William Fitzgerald's groundbreaking study (1988) argued for the interrelation between the political, invective, and erotic poems of the Epodes, and has laid the foundation for much later criticism focused on the sociopolitical context of the Epodes' production and on Roman sexuality. …","PeriodicalId":43032,"journal":{"name":"HELIOS","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.5000,"publicationDate":"2016-03-22","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1353/HEL.2016.0001","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Iambic Metapoetics in Horace, Epodes 8 and 12\",\"authors\":\"Erika Zimmermann Damer\",\"doi\":\"10.1353/HEL.2016.0001\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"When in Book 1 of his Epistles Horace reflects back upon the beginning of his career in lyric poetry, he celebrates his adaptation of Archilochean iambos to the Latin language. 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He is programmatically imbellis acfirmas parum (Epod. 1.16) and his final appearance is that of an enervated old man: he is jaundiced, breathless, feverish, and aged on account of Canidia's powers (Epod. 17.21-6, 31-4). (3) Accordingly, I posit here that bodily invective in Epodes 8 and 12 functions metapoetically. I call attention to the repetition of stylistic terms--mollitia, inertia, and rabies--within Epodes 8 and 12, and show how these two poems can be seen as part of Horace's ongoing project to distinguish his own emerging iambic project from the incipient genre of Roman love elegy. (4) To these two elegiac terms, mollitia and inertia, the Horatian iambic speaker adds the quintessentially iambic rabies, a term that the poet Horace himself will later call the emotion that first generated iambic poetry. 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引用次数: 1

摘要

贺拉斯在他的书信第一卷中回顾了他的抒情诗生涯的开始,他庆祝了他把阿基罗基亚的安博斯语改编成拉丁语。他进一步指出,虽然他遵循阿基洛库斯的韵律和精神,但他自己的灵魂并没有遵循驱使莱坎姆斯的女儿们自杀的事情和攻击性言论(Epist. 1.19.23- 5,31)。(1)然而,第8章和第12章成对的情色谩骂,将诗人的性无能和他在遇到令人厌恶的性伴侣时的厌恶主题化了。这些《Epodes》的基调无疑是一种严厉的谩骂,而对mulieres反抗的身体的恶毒攻击恰恰符合阿基罗科斯的诗学,为了诗意的攻击,使用了露骨的性行为,图像淫秽以及动物比较。事实上,第8章和第12章可能提供了罗马文化中最明显的厌恶女性的基调。尽管说话者的言语攻击很激烈,但他是在对自己察觉到的性弱点做出反应。事实上,贺拉斯的抑扬格不断地注意到说话者身体的非军事地位和虚弱。他在节目上是imbellis acfirmas parum (Epod. 1.16),他最后的样子是一个虚弱的老人:他患黄疸病,气喘吁吁,发烧,由于Canidia的力量而变老(Epod. 17.21- 6,31 -4)。(3)因此,我在这里假定,第8章和第12章的身体谩骂是元诗的功能。我提请注意在《Epodes》第8章和第12章中反复出现的文体术语——mollitia、惯性和狂犬病,并说明这两首诗如何被视为贺拉斯正在进行的项目的一部分,以区分他自己新兴的抑扬格项目与早期的罗马爱情挽歌类型。(4)对于这两个哀歌术语,mollitia和惯性,贺拉斯抑扬格语的演讲者添加了典型的抑扬格狂狂症,诗人贺拉斯自己后来将这个术语称为最初产生了抑扬格诗的情感。因此,我的阅读表明,贺拉斯不仅非常了解罗马爱情挽歌的比喻和主题,而且还了解其风格词汇,这些词汇通常将人物的人体与诗歌类型的中心风格特征联系起来。虽然评论家们对时间顺序有争议,但大多数人都同意贺拉斯的《Epodes》是在《Actium》之后不久出版的,大约在公元前31/30年,然后是普罗提乌斯的《Monobiblos》和提布洛斯的《Book 1》分别在公元前28和27年出版。(7)因此,我从《时代8》和《时代12》中得出的属间对话证明,罗马抑扬格诗和挽歌情色诗的诗人之间存在着双向影响,彼得·赫斯林(Peter Heslin, 2011, 60)恰当地称之为“一个扩展的过程,在这个过程中,每个诗人都用对方来定义自己。”此外,贺拉斯的诗歌清晰地表达了一种抑扬格的拒绝,拒绝在更广泛的罗马性别和性的话语中,对这些术语进行评价,这些术语通常是女性化的特征,或者是规范的罗马男性气质的其他失败。尽管《Iambos》的内容过于淫秽,但在当时,罗马精英的男子气概受到社会力量的挑战,被“三头王朝”时期的政治不稳定所扰乱,并在凯撒和梅塞纳斯等罗马精英的服装自我表达以及罗马爱情挽歌的诗意美学中,见证了另类男子气概的出现,这一时期,《Iambos》起到了维护和加强现状的作用。(8)几十年来,Epodes 8和12被认为是如此淫秽,以至于它们被禁止出版,也被贺兰丹抑扬格的批评者所忽视。然而,到了20世纪80年代末,这些《Epodes》开始被重新评价为贺拉斯第一部抒情诗集的组成部分。(10)威廉·菲茨杰拉德(William Fitzgerald)开创性的研究(1988)论证了Epodes的政治诗、谩骂诗和情色诗之间的相互关系,并为后来关注Epodes作品的社会政治背景和罗马性行为的批评奠定了基础。...
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Iambic Metapoetics in Horace, Epodes 8 and 12
When in Book 1 of his Epistles Horace reflects back upon the beginning of his career in lyric poetry, he celebrates his adaptation of Archilochean iambos to the Latin language. He further states that while he followed the meter and spirit of Archilochus, his own iambi did not follow the matter and attacking words that drove the daughters of Lycambes to commit suicide (Epist. 1.19.23-5, 31). (1) The paired erotic invectives, Epodes 8 and 12, however, thematize the poet's sexual impotence and his disgust during encounters with a repulsive sexual partner. The tone of these Epodes is unmistakably that of harsh invective, and the virulent targeting of the mulieres' revolting bodies is precisely in line with an Archilochean poetics that uses sexually-explicit, graphic obscenities as well as animal comparisons for the sake of a poetic attack. Epodes 8 and 12 may, in fact, offer Roman culture's most overtly misogynistic tone. (2) In spite of the vehemence in the speaker's verbal assaults, he is reacting to his own perceived sexual weakness. In fact, Horatian iambic continually notes the unmartial status and weakness of the speaker's body. He is programmatically imbellis acfirmas parum (Epod. 1.16) and his final appearance is that of an enervated old man: he is jaundiced, breathless, feverish, and aged on account of Canidia's powers (Epod. 17.21-6, 31-4). (3) Accordingly, I posit here that bodily invective in Epodes 8 and 12 functions metapoetically. I call attention to the repetition of stylistic terms--mollitia, inertia, and rabies--within Epodes 8 and 12, and show how these two poems can be seen as part of Horace's ongoing project to distinguish his own emerging iambic project from the incipient genre of Roman love elegy. (4) To these two elegiac terms, mollitia and inertia, the Horatian iambic speaker adds the quintessentially iambic rabies, a term that the poet Horace himself will later call the emotion that first generated iambic poetry. My reading thus suggests that Horace was well aware not only of the tropes and topoi of Roman love elegy, (5) but also of its vocabulary of style that routinely associates the human bodies of its characters with the central stylistic qualities of the poetic genre. While critics have disputed the chronology, (6) most agree that Horace's Epodes were published soon after Actium, in approximately 31/30 BCE, and were followed by the publication of Propertius's Monobiblos and Tibullus's Book 1 in 28 and 27 BCE, respectively. (7) We thus have evidence in the intergeneric dialogue that I draw out of Epocies 8 and 12 for the existence of two-way influence between the poets of Roman iambic and elegiac erotic poetry, what Peter Heslin (2011, 60) has aptly called "an extended process in which each poet defined himself against the other[s]." Furthermore, Horace's poems articulate an iambic refusal to valorize these terms that generally characterized effeminacy or other failings of normative Roman masculinity in broader Roman discourses of gender and sexuality. Iambos, despite its transgressively obscene content, thus serves to uphold and reinforce the status quo in a period where elite Roman masculinity was challenged through social forces, upset by the political instability of the Triumviral period, and was witness to the emergence of alternative masculinities in the sartorial self-expression of Roman elites like Caesar and Maecenas and in the poetic aesthetics of Roman love elegy. (8) For many decades, Epodes 8 and 12 were considered so obscene that they were censored from publication and ignored by critics of Horadan iambic. (9) By the late 1980s, however, these Epodes began to be re-evaluated as an integral part of Horace's first lyric collection. (10) William Fitzgerald's groundbreaking study (1988) argued for the interrelation between the political, invective, and erotic poems of the Epodes, and has laid the foundation for much later criticism focused on the sociopolitical context of the Epodes' production and on Roman sexuality. …
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HELIOS
HELIOS CLASSICS-
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