Affiliation:
1. Newcastle University, School of History, Classics and Archaeology
Abstract
AbstractThis article considers Pindar’s use of the expression θαῦµα … ἀκοῦσαι, ‘a wonder to hear’, inPythian1 to describe the monster Typhoeus. I argue that the expression needs to be read against Hesiod’s use of a similar locution, θαύµατ’ ἀκοῦσαι, to describe Typhoeus in theTheogony. There, Hesiod adapts the common epic formula θαῦµα ἰδέσθαι, producing a unique phrase to indicate Typhoeus’ chaotic blending of sights and sounds, and at the same time his disruption of the rules of poetic communication. Typhoeus’ disharmonious poetics there stands in contrast to the orderly image of the choral Muses in the proem. I argue in turn that Pindar subtly reworks the Hesiodic formula to reflect Typhoeus’ defeat by Zeus, and thereby subsumes the monster’s ‘acoustics’ within the θαῦµα of the choral performance of the ode itself.
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Linguistics and Language,History,Language and Linguistics,Archeology,Classics
Reference63 articles.
1. Narratology, Deixis, and the Performance of Choral Lyric. On Pindar’s First Pythian Ode;Athanassaki,2009
2. Le dernier adversaire de Zeus. Le mythe de Typhon dans l’épopée grecque archaïque;Ballabriga;RHR,1990
3. L’Épisode de Typhée dans la Théogonie d’ Hésiode;Blaise;REG,1992
4. Hesiod's Cosmos
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