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The Cyclops Myth and the Making of Selfhood / Paul Robertson.

De Gruyter DG Plus PP Package 2022 Part 2 Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Robertson, Paul, Author.
Series:
Perspectives on Philosophy and Religious Thought ; 19
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Cyclopes (Greek mythology) in literature.
Self in literature.
Genre:
Literary criticism.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (285 p.)
Place of Publication:
Piscataway, NJ : Gorgias Press, [2022]
Language Note:
In English.
Summary:
This book explores the myth of the Cyclops across western history, and how its changing form from ancient Greece until the modern day reveals fundamental changes in each era’s elite understandings and depictions of cultural values. From Homer’s Odyssey to Hellenistic poetry, from Roman epic to early medieval manuscript glosses, and from early modern opera to current pop culture, the myth of the Cyclops persists in changing forms. This myth’s distinct forms in each historical era reflect and distill wider changes occurring in the spheres of politics, philosophy, aesthetics, and social values, and as a story that persists continually across three millennia it provides a unique lens for cross-historical comparison across western thought. The story of the Cyclops myth across western history is particularly reflective of changing selfhood, namely the ways that at least certain authors in each historical-cultural period understand how identity is constructed. This study particularly responds to the work of the philosopher and classicist Christopher Gill, who has influentially argued for a clear binary in notions of selfhood between the ancient and modern worlds. I build on Gill and others, but also depart from them, arguing that a comparative analysis of the Cyclops myth illustrates not a binary but rather a series of incremental, clearly defined, but non-linear shifts in selfhood from the ancient to the modern world. In doing so, my project also provides a comprehensive story of the re-tellings of the Cyclops myth over time, showing how these re-tellings not only reflect changing cultural values and understandings, but also distill and even influence them.
Contents:
Frontmatter
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
List of Illustrations
Preface
Introduction. Selfhood and the Cyclops Myth
Chapter One. The Archaic Period: Homer and Hesiod
Chapter Two. The Classical Era: Euripides’ Cyclops
Chapter Three. The Hellenistic Age: Theocritus
Chapter Four. The Roman Empire: Virgil and Ovid
Chapter Five. The Post-Classical World and the Middle Ages
Chapter Six. Modernity: Graphic Novels, Comics, Film, Young Adult Novels
Art History Excursus 2: The Post-Medieval Cyclops, a Selective Summary
Conclusion
Bibliography
Indices
Notes:
Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 24. Mai 2022)
ISBN:
1-4632-4349-9
OCLC:
1306329702

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