Theocritus: Space, Absence, and Desire

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Theocritus: Space, Absence, and Desire discusses many of Theocritus's Idylls with emphasis on how these poems construct space--its contours and borders, along with the people, animals, and objects that fill it--and the equally important role of absence. Drawing on spatial theory from anthropology and cultural geography, author William G. Thalmann studies each poem in itself and in its connections with other poems, so that a loose coherence emerges among them. Spatially, the Ptolemaic empire provides a setting and reference point for the various types of Idylls (bucolic, urban, mythological, and encomiastic poems), in ways that help legitimate it. In all the idylls, however, space is constructed selectively from particular perspectives, so that it reflects and shapes people's relations with each other and humans' relations with nature. The bucolic Idylls in particular raise questions about being in and out of place and relations between self and other that would have been
important under the conditions of mobility and intercultural contact in the early Hellenistic period. Yet theirs is a fictional world, defined more by its margins than by its center, and visions of fullness and presence of nature are always distanced from the reader. Absence is constitutive of this world, just as absence of the beloved is the precondition for the desire of bucolic characters and prompts their singing. Their desire mirrors the desire of readers for the absent bucolic world that the poems arouse and that keeps them reading.

Author(s): William G. Thalmann
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Year: 2023

Language: English
Pages: 254
City: New York

Cover
Theocritus
Copyright
Contents
Preface
Introduction
Note on Text and Transliteration
1. Theocritean Spaces 1: The Bucolic and Urban Poems
Fictional Space
Bucolic Space
General Description of Bucolic Space
Spatial Relations in Idyll 5
Spatial Relations in Idyll 1.1–​23
Spatial Relations in Idyll 7
The “Urban Mimes”
Idyll 15
Idyll 2
2. Theocritean Spaces 2: Mythological and Encomiastic Space
Mythological Space
Idyll 13
Idyll 22
Idyll 24
Encomiastic Space
Idyll 16
Idyll 17
Idyll 14
3. The Poetics of Absence
Absence, Desire, and Song
Idyll 1: A Version of Bucolic Origins
Idyll 7: Lykidas’s Song
Idyll 6: Breaking the Frame
Idyll 2: Desire in Town
Idyll 13: Herakles in Love
4. On the Margins of Bucolic
Poems Concerning Margins
Idyll 4: The Waning of Bucolic
Idyll 10: The World of Labor
Idyll 21: The Dream of a Fisherman
5. Conclusion
References
Index of Passages Cited
Subject Index