The first of its kind, A Companion to Ancient Aesthetics
presents a synoptic view of the arts, which crosses traditional
boundaries and explores the aesthetic experience of the ancients
across a range of media–oral, aural, visual, and
literary.
* Investigates the many ways in which the arts were experienced
and conceptualized in the ancient world
* Explores the aesthetic experience of the ancients across a
range of media, treating literary, oral, aural, and visual arts
together in a single volume
* Presents an integrated perspective on the major themes of
ancient aesthetics which challenges traditional demarcations
* Raises questions about the similarities and differences between
ancient and modern ways of thinking about the place of art in
society
Tabella dei contenuti
Illustrations viii
Notes on Contributors ix
Acknowledgments xiv
Introduction 1
Pierre Destrée and Penelope Murray
Part I Art in Context 15
1 Greece 17
Richard P. Martin
2 Figures of the Poet in Greek Epic and Lyric 31
Deborah Steiner
3 The Hellenistic World 47
Graham Zanker
4 Rome 68
Thomas Habinek
5 Music and Dance in Greece and Rome 81
Eleonora Rocconi
6 Greek Sculpture 94
Rosemary Barrow
7 Painting and Private Art Collections in Rome 109
Agnès Rouveret
8 Architecture and Society 128
Catherine Saliou
Part II Reflecting on Art 141
9 Literary Criticism and the Poet’s Autonomy 143
Andrew Ford
10 Poetic Inspiration 158
Penelope Murray
11 The Canons of Style 175
Jeffrey Walker
12 Sense and Sensation in Music 188
Armand D’Angour
13 Dance and Aesthetic Perception 204
Anastasia?]Erasmia Peponi
14 Greek Painting and the Challenge of Mimes¯ is 218
Hariclia Brecoulaki
15 Ways of Looking at Greek Vases 237
François Lissarrague
16 Displaying Sculpture in Rome 248
Thea Ravasi
17 Perceiving Colors 262
M. Michela Sassi
18 The Beauties of Architecture 274
Edmund Thomas
19 Stylistic Landscapes 291
Nancy Worman
20 Conceptualizing the (Visual) ‘Arts’ 307
Michael Squire
Part III Aesthetic Issues 327
21 Mimesis 329
Paul Woodruff
22 Fiction 341
Stephen Halliwell
23 Imagination 354
Anne Sheppard
24 Beauty 366
David Konstan
25 Unity, Wholeness, and Proportion 381
Malcolm Heath
26 The Sublime 393
James I. Porter
27 Poikilia 406
Adeline Grand?]Clément
28 Wonder 422
Christine Hunzinger
29 Tragic Emotions 438
Christof Rapp
30 Laughter 455
Ralph M. Rosen
31 Pleasure 472
Pierre Destrée
32 Art and Morality 486
Elizabeth Asmis
33 Art and Value 505
Michael Silk
Index of Subjects 518
Index of Ancient Texts Discussed 527
Circa l’autore
Pierre Destrée is Associate Researcher at the FNRS and Associate Professor at the University of Louvain, Belgium, where he teaches ancient philosophy. He is the author of a French translation of Aristotle’s Poetics (2014) and editor of Plato and the Poets (with F.G. Herrmann, 2011), Plato and Myth: Studies on the Use and Status of Platonic Myths (with C. Collobert and F. Gonzalez, 2012); The Cambridge Companion to Aristotle’s Politics (with M. Deslauriers, 2013) and What is Up to Us? Causality and Responsibility in Ancient Philosophy (with R. Salles and M. Zingano, 2014).
Penelope Murray was Senior Lecturer and a founding member of the Department of Classics at the University of Warwick, UK, before retiring in 2008. She continues to work on early Greek poetry and poetics, on philosophical responses to Athenian song-culture, especially the views of Plato, and on ancient literary criticism. Her publications include Genius: The History of an Idea (Blackwell, 1989); Plato on Poetry (1996); Classical Literary Criticism (2000); Music and The Muses: The Culture of Mousike in the Classical Athenian City (edited with P. Wilson, 2004).