American Journal of Philology 127 (2006), 2

Title 
American Journal of Philology 127 (2006), 2
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is published quarterly in March, June, September, and December
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Individuals: $38.00 ; Institutions: $104.40 (print)

 

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Organization name
American Journal of Philology (AJPh)
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United States
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The Johns Hopkins University Press Journals Publishing Division P.O. Box 19966 Baltimore, Maryland 21211 Phone: (410) 516-6987 FAX: (410) 516-6968 Toll-Free: 1-800-548-1784
By
Kahlert, Torsten

Table of contents

CONTENTS
Articles

Payne, Mark. On Being Vatic: Pindar, Pragmatism, and Historicism

Abstract:
In this paper I argue that the large truth claims made in Pindar's gnomic language have a correspondingly large cultural function since they instantiate the capacity for unprecedented conceptual invention within a culture that lacks any master discourse in which its own self-understanding is embedded. I discuss the famous Nomos basileus fragment and its handling by Callicles in Plato's Gorgias, and by Hölderlin in his Pindar Fragments. I argue that, by using Pindar's claim as a starting point for reflections of their own, these thinkers recognize its contingency, and future orientation, as vatic speech.

Belfiore, Elizabeth S., 1944- Dancing with the Gods: The Myth of the Chariot in Plato's Phaedrus

Abstract:
In Plato's Phaedrus, Socrates compares the soul to a team of two horses, one obedient and one unruly, driven by a human charioteer. This article argues that essential clues to the psychological ideas expressed in this myth are provided by the imagery of the dance and that of the unruly horse, which resembles not only a satyr but also Socrates himself. Satyrs are daimonic beings with the ability to mediate between mortals and gods. They can thus represent qualities that are essential to the psychic equilibrium of a soul moving in what Socrates characterizes as choral dances led by the gods.

Fletcher, K. F. B. Vergil's Italian Diomedes

Abstract:
This paper builds on existing scholarship concerning Vergil's Diomedes and his relationship to Aeneas in two ways: first, by stressing that the character of Diomedes presented a problem for Vergil, not just because he wounded Aeneas, Aphrodite, and Ares in Iliad 5, but also because he came to be an important figure in Italian myth; second, by focusing on numerous passages previously ignored in this context, including ones in which Diomedes significantly does not appear. In these ways, I hope to show just how elaborate, and important, a process Vergil's rewriting of Diomedes is.

Zadorojnyi, Alexei V. Plutarch's Themistocles and the Poets

Abstract:
This article focuses on the relationships between Themistocles and the lyric poets Simonides of Ceos and Timocreon of Rhodes in Plutarch's Life of Themistocles. It is argued that Plutarch expects the reader to connect explicit references to the poets and their works with stories located outside the narrative in the anecdotal biographic tradition. Through an implicit synkrisis with the protagonist, the poets' anecdotal personae create a narrative counterbalance that suggests a faultline in Themistocles' characterization that, in turn, reflects the model of the "timocratic" man in Plato's Republic.

Brief Mention

McDonough, Christopher Michael. Some Late Sonnets of Gildersleeve Found at Sewanee

Book Reviews

Wheeler, Everett L. Soldiers and Ghosts: A History of Battle in Classical Antiquity (review)

Pedrick, Victoria. The Limits of Heroism: Homer and the Ethics of Reading (review)

Mueller, Hans-Friedrich, 1959- Rome's Religious History: Livy, Tacitus and Ammianus on Their Gods (review)

O'Hara, James J., 1959- Vergil's Aeneid and the Roman Self: Subject and Nation in Literary Discourse (review)

Corrigendum

Books Received

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Holdings 0002-9475 (print); 1086-3168 (E)