| "This
is a stimulating book that should provoke rethinking many common assumptions
about literary history. It offers both a coherent theoretical framework
and many fresh insights into particular works."Comparative Literature
The "classical," Steven Shankman argues, should be not confused
with a particular historical period of Western antiquity, although
it may owe its original articulation to the literary and philosophical
explorations of ancient Greek authors. Shankman's book searches
for and attempts to formulate the shape of the continuing presenceas
embodied in particular literary works mainly from Western antiquity
and the neoclassical and modern periodsof what the author
calls a "classical" understanding of literature.
For Shankman, literature, defined from a classical perspective,
is a coherent, compelling, and rationally defensible representation
that resists being reduced either to the mere recording of material
reality or to the bare exemplification of an abstract philosophical
precept. He derives his definition largely from his reading of Greek
literature from Homer through Plato, from the history of literary
criticism, and from the Greco-Roman tradition in English, American,
and French literature. Shankman reveals unsuspected yet convincing
connections among authors of such widely disparate times and places.
His idea of the "classic" that authorizes these connections is presented
as normative, thus making possible the evaluation of literary works
and, in turn, forthright discussion of what constitutes the "literary"
as distinct from other kinds of discourse. Shankman's study runs
counter to a strong tendency of contemporary criticism that argues
precisely against any distinct category of the "literary." He offers
a series of interpretations that cumulatively advance theoretical
discussion by challenging scholars to rethink the critical paradigms
of postmodernism.
At the center of the book is a discussion of the quintessentially
classic Valéry poem Le Cimetière marin and
the classic qualities it shares with Pindar's third Pythian ode, from which Valéry derives the epigraph for his poem. |
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