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Aratus and the Astronomical Tradition (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,301
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Aratus and the Astronomical Tradition (Hardcover)
Series: Classical Culture and Society
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Why were the stars so important in Rome? Their literary presence
far outweighs their role as a time-reckoning device, which was in
any case superseded by the synchronization of the civil and solar
years under Julius Caesar. One answer is their usefulness in
symbolizing a universe built on "intelligent design." Predominantly
in ancient literature, the stars are seen as the gods' graffiti in
the ordered heaven. Moreover, particularly in the Roman world,
divine and human governance came to be linked, with one striking
manifestation of this connection being the predicted enjoyment of a
celestial afterlife by emperors. Aratus' Phaenomena, which
describes the layout of the heavens and their effect, through
weather, on the lives of men, was an ideal text for expressing such
relationships: its didactic style was both accessible and elegant,
and it combined the stars with notions of divine and human order.
In especially the late Republic extending until the age of
Christian humanism, the impact of this poem on the literary
environment is out of all proportion to its relatively modest size
and the obscurity of its subject matter. It was translated into
Latin many times between the first century BC and the Renaissance,
and carried lasting influence outside its immediate genre. Aratus
and the Astronomical Tradition answers the question of Aratus'
popularity by looking at the poem in the light of Western
cosmology. It argues that the Phaenomena is the ideal vehicle for
the integration of astronomical 'data' into abstract cosmology, a
defining feature of the Western tradition. This book embeds Aratus'
text into a close network of textual interactions, beginning with
the text itself and ending in the sixteenth century, with
Copernicus. All conversations between the text and its successors
experiment in some way with the balance between cosmology and
information. The text was not an inert objet d'art, but a dynamic
entity which took on colors often contradictory in the ongoing
debate about the place and role of the stars in the world. In this
debate Aratus plays a leading, but by no means lonely, role. With
this study, students and scholars will have the capability to
understand this mysterious poem's place in the unique development
of Western cosmology.
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