Concatenatio Catulliana: A New Reading of the Carmina

Format: Book
Published: Brill 2002
Subjects:
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020 |a 9789050632881  |c 30,6 
245 |a Concatenatio Catulliana: A New Reading of the Carmina  |c Claes, Paul 
260 |b Brill  |c 2002 
500 |a The arrangement of Catullus’ Carmina is one of those controversial issues that in-cite respectable commentators to take up extreme positions. In 1914, the German scholar Bernhard Schmidt described the collection as ‘a wild chaos’. Forty-five years later, his compatriot Otto Weinreich riposted with the laconic statement: ‘Chaos? Cosmos!’ Former attempts to detect a structure in the collection were based on rather subjective assumptions. While translating Catullus' poetry into Dutch, Dr Claes detected an objective foundation: the principle of concatenation, i.e. the recurrence of motifs and phrases in consecutive poems. The generality of this phenomenon proves that the poet conceived of the Carmina as a coherent collection, in which the poems fit like links in a chain. The discovery of this coherence suggests a new reading of Catullus, which has also implications for the constitution of the text. 
650 |a LATIN LYRIC POETRY 
952 |a GRAtEVE  |b 59099b916c5ad1338a931d25  |c 995b  |d 995e  |e 06585/2016-1  |t 1  |x m  |z Books