Aeneid modern scholarship Flashcards
P. Hardie on Aeneas?
He has a boring personality because it has been pushed on him by fate
P. Hardie on Dido?
She has to go from housewife to queen, in the afterlife she reverts back to housewife
Camps on Aeneas?
He is like an automaton or puppet because he is controlled by exterior forces
Camps on Turnus?
The audience is meant to sympathise with Turnus although he is fatally misguided and bloodthirsty
J. Griffin on Augustan context?
Virgil doesn’t just flatter Augustus but inspires him to lead like Aeneas
J. Griffin on war and death in the Aeneid?
The future of Rome is paid for by blood and suffering. The price for imperialism and for greatness is the soul
J. Griffin on the end of the Aeneid?
The ending leaves a haunting and complex effect in tune with the rest of the poem. It is deliberate.
D. Williams on Augustan context of the Aeneid?
Virgil reflects Augustus’ policies because they were also his. The two agreed that ‘pietas’, ‘revenge’, and ‘doing your duty’ were important
D. Williams on book 6 of the Aeneid?
book 6 sees Aeneas’ character change from weakness and uncertainty to strength and willingness to succeed on his mission
D. Williams on Aeneas and Homeric heroes?
He is different to a Homeric hero because he suffers for others
S. Harrison on Juno?
“soap opera bitch”. She is like the other gods - petty, childish and trivial
S. Harrison on war and death in the Aeneid?
There is a link between the theme of an early death and the death of Marcellus (23BC)
K.W. Gransden on book 4 of the Aeneid?
it is like a Greek tragedy
- divine messengers/ intervention
- interaction of protagonists
- author = the chorus
K. W. Gransden on family in the Aeneid?
The Aeneid is dominated by fathers and father-figures. Aeneas is called ‘pater’ as much as ‘pius’
K. W. Gransden on war in the Aeneid?
the Aeneid argues for peace not violence. Virgil created a counterpoint to the warlike legends of Romulus. Aeneas wants peace and has pietas