Abstract
AbstractIn Prudentius, the bodily resurrection becomes a figure for poetic immortality. Just as the author believes that his God will one day raise him from the dead, he expects and invokes a Christian reader to authenticate and authorise the fragile verbal records of a poetry that is insistently human and fallen. In other words, Prudentius’ metapoetics are perfectly in sync with his theology. After (I) presenting Prudentius’ transformation at the end of hisPraefatioand setting out the terms and scope of the argument, this article (II) shows how the author puts himself at the mercy of his readers and patrons in thePeristefanonpoems and then (III) considers the body and the resurrection in theLiber Cathemerinon. A short section (IV) on fictionality and belief opens up the argument, and a conclusion (V) advances it through a reading of the end ofDe opusculis suis. This metapoetic reading of Prudentius reveals that the author's hopes for an afterlife are expressed in and through the creative imagining of poetic and fictional scenes.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Archeology,Visual Arts and Performing Arts,History,Archeology,Classics
Reference112 articles.
1. Witke C. 1971: Numen litterarum: The Old and the New in Latin Poetry from Constantine to Gregory the Great, Leiden.
Cited by
2 articles.
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