Alexander the Great, according to Plutarch, carried on his
campaigns a copy of the "Iliad," kept alongside a dagger; on a more
pronounced ideological level, ancient Romans looked to the "Aeneid"
as an argument for imperialism. In this major reinterpretation of
epic poetry beginning with Virgil, David Quint explores the
political context and meanings of key works in Western literature.
He divides the history of the genre into two political traditions:
the Virgilian epics of conquest and empire that take the victors'
side (the "Aeneid" itself, Camoes's "Lusiadas," Tasso's
"Gerusalemme liberata") and the countervailing epic of the defeated
and of republican liberty (Lucan's "Pharsalia," Ercilla's
"Araucana," and d'Aubigne's "Les tragiques"). These traditions
produce opposing ideas of historical narrative: a linear,
teleological narrative that belongs to the imperial conquerors, and
an episodic and open-ended narrative identified with "romance," the
story told of and by the defeated.
Quint situates "Paradise Lost" and "Paradise Regained" within
these rival traditions. He extends his political analysis to the
scholarly revival of medieval epic in the late eighteenth and
nineteenth centuries and to Sergei Eisenstein's epic film,
"Alexander Nevsky." Attending both to the topical contexts of
individual poems and to the larger historical development of the
epic genre, "Epic and Empire" provides new models for exploring the
relationship between ideology and literary form."
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