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EMBLEMS OF POWER by GAIL CECELIA POLK PDF

504 Pages·2013·3.84 MB·English
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THE HELMSMAN AND THE CHARIOTEER IN THE AENEID: EMBLEMS OF POWER by GAIL CECELIA POLK (Under the Direction of Sarah Spence) ABSTRACT This dissertation argues that although in the Aeneid Vergil engages extensively with the textual tradition to develop Aeneas’ role as helmsman and Turnus’ as charioteer into emblems of their contrasting leadership, he subsequently interweaves into the text evidence of this distinction’s instability and concludes with its reversal. Chapter 2 discusses the relevance of both Cicero’s community-centered helmsman and politicians he implies are charioteers unable to restrain their passions to the Aeneid’s two leaders and recent history and attitudes toward the Triumph. Chapter 3 argues that Aeschylus’ Seven Against Thebes, the story of an internecine war, in which Eteocles is a figurative helmsman with polis- centered values, while Polynices and his chariot-driving, attacking forces connote future brutal domination, is an important unrecognized intertext for the Aeneid. In the development of the two emblematic images in the Aeneid’s first half (Ch. 4), Juno’s affiliation with the chariot is established in the context of Achilles’ excessive brutality. Mnestheus’ speech to his crew in the ship race engages with that of the Iliad’s charioteer Antilochus to express the salient differences in values of helmsman and charioteer in the Aeneid. The three-way intertextual dialogue between Aeneas, Palinurus and Odysseus, prepares for the substitution of Aeneas for his helmsman, but also highlights Palinurus’ misfortune, while the nature of his sacrificial death evokes the Ciceronian selfless helmsman. Chapter 5 discusses the contribution of Argonautic traces to the construction of the ambivalence of Latinus and his kingdom, symbolically manifested in his ominous gift to Aeneas of fire-breathing horses and a chariot, as well as the intertextual presence of Septem’s warriors among those in the Latin catalogue. Although the linking of Aeneas’ ship of state in his approach to battle with that of Augustus receives immortal confirmation (Chapter 6), his subsequent rage-driven domination of suppliant Latin charioteers is incongruous and exhibits similarities with Turnus’ tyrannical behavior in the scene of Pallas’ death. Significant changes in the heroes’ public speech (Ch. 7) and their exchanging of characteristics in book 12 (Ch. 8) prepare for Turnus’ allusive likening to Odysseus, foreshadowing his death, and Aeneas’ figurative assumption of the role of charioteer. INDEX WORDS: Vergil, Aeneid, Aeschylus, Seven Against Thebes, Political Imagery, Helmsman, Charioteer, Cicero THE HELMSMAN AND THE CHARIOTEER IN THE AENEID: EMBLEMS OF POWER by GAIL CECELIA POLK BA, Pennsylvania State University, 1971 MA, Pennsylvania State University, 1973 MA, University of Georgia, 1994 A Dissertaton Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of The University of Georgia in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY ATHENS, GEORGIA 2013 © 2013 Gail Cecelia Polk All Rights Reserved THE HELMSMAN AND THE CHARIOTEER IN THE AENEID: EMBLEMS OF POWER by GAIL CECELIA POLK Major Professor: Sarah Spence Committee: James McGregor Ronald Bogue Charles Platter Anthony Corbeill Electronic Version Approved: Maureen Grasso Dean of the Graduate School The University of Georgia December 2013 iv DEDICATION I wish to dedicate my dissertation to my father, Stuart Patton, who has been for me the very best life-long model of and advocate for the value of investigative research. v ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I arrived at the point of being able to conceive and execute this project, first, thanks to members of the Latin faculty of the University of Georgia’s Department of Classics, Richard LaFleur (my Master’s thesis advisor), Robert Curtis (from whom I learned a love of Cicero’s Latin) and James Anderson (teacher of the monuments of Rome par excellence), who have written me countless letters of recommendation for jobs, summer travel grants and graduate school. The opportunity to teach Vergil’s Aeneid and readings in Cicero at Athens Academy for seventeen years deepened my appreciation of these authors, while a summer spent at the American School in Athens led directly to my desire to study their Greek antecedents. Again, Georgia’s Department of Classics provided me with excellent teachers of Greek literature to whom I feel a great debt of gratitude: Charles Platter, Nancy Felson, Nick Rynearson (who also served on my comprehensive exam committee) and Brett Rogers. Georgia’s Department of Comparative Literature not only provided me an academic home to pursue a doctorate, but also instruction in literary criticism and theory, which have so significantly informed the study of Greek and Latin literature. I am especially grateful to Ronald Bogue, Dorothy Figueira and James McGregor for their instruction and help in this area. Richard Tarrant generously provided me early access to a part of his wonderful commentary on Aeneid 12 and Stanley Lombardo read and commented on several sections of the dissertation. The opportunity to have the criticism and advice of so distinguished a doctoral committee––Ronald Bogue, Anthony Corbeill, James McGregor and Charles Platter––has been one of the greatest benefits of earning a doctorate. But I am especially grateful to my advisor Sarah Spence. A comparatist and classicist she has brought not only her years as a highly successful teacher and scholar to the reading of my dissertation, but also her ample experience as an editor. Without her knowledge and appreciation of the Aeneid and the questions it raises and her insightful and wise criticism the completion of this dissertation is difficult for me to imagine. My husband, Tom Polk, not ony financed the last stage of my studies, but also tolerated the vast amount of time I devoted to them. I have no doubt that I also vi owe the completion of this degree to the ever-ready help of the secretaries in the Departments of Comparative Literature (Nell Burger and Sharon Brooks) and Classics (Kay Stanton and JoAnn Pulliam). To all of the above I wish to express my heartfelt thanks. vii TABLE OF CONTENTS Page ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ........................................................................................................................... v CHAPTER 1 Introduction ................................................................................................................................ 1 2 Cicero’s Engagement with the Platonic Helmsman and Charioteer ........................................ 13 Plato: The Democratic Ship of State ................................................................................. 13 Cicero: The Republican Ship of State ............................................................................... 21 Cicero and the Phaedrus ................................................................................................... 45 The Unbridled Dark Horse and Charioteer ....................................................................... 53 The Case of Marc Antony ................................................................................................. 60 The Roman Triumph ......................................................................................................... 63 3 Helmsmen and Charioteers in the Greek Literary Tradition ................................................... 86 The Epic Tradition: The Domains of Athena and Poseidon ............................................. 87 The Youthful Charioteer: Hippolytus ................................................................................ 93 Aeschylus’ Seven Against Thebes: The Ship of State ..................................................... 105 Aeschylus’ Seven Against Thebes: The Chariot Ensemble ............................................. 128 Aeschylus’ Seven Against Thebes: Figurative Interaction .............................................. 140 4 The Developing Political Dialogue: Charioteers and Helmsmen Aeneid 1-6 ........................ 148 Opening Scenes: The Storm ............................................................................................ 149 Juno’s Chariot .................................................................................................................. 156 Juno’s Charioteers: Aeolus and Achilles ......................................................................... 165 Chariots in the Vergilian Underworld ............................................................................. 179 The Ship Race and Communal Pietas ............................................................................. 187 viii The Good Helmsman: Palinurus and Aeneas .................................................................. 202 5 Latium, its King and Charioteers: The Beginning of the War ............................................... 225 The Arrival of the Trojans in Latium: Conflicting Signs ................................................ 227 Ocean Storms of Latin War Frenzy ................................................................................. 250 The Latin Catalogue and Aeschylus’ Seven Against Thebes .......................................... 263 Equine Finale: Virbius, Turnus and Camilla ................................................................... 276 The Heroes’ Shields: Io the Victim, Augustus the Helmsman ........................................ 290 6 The Augustan Helmsman and Despotic Charioteer: Divergence and Unity ......................... 303 Cybele and the Aeneid’s Ship of State ............................................................................ 305 The War Chariot and the Tyrant ...................................................................................... 325 Aeneas Victor and the Latin Charioteers ......................................................................... 336 The Voyage of Turnus ..................................................................................................... 354 7 The Ethos of the Leaders in Public Speech ........................................................................... 361 Aeneas ............................................................................................................................. 363 Turnus .............................................................................................................................. 373 8 The Helmsman and Charioteer in Book 12: Reversal ............................................................ 403 Thracian Turnus .............................................................................................................. 405 The Chariot and the Palace .............................................................................................. 414 The Chariot and the City ................................................................................................. 426 Another Storm and a New Charioteer ............................................................................. 440 The Theban Maidens Worst Fear .................................................................................... 445 The Wild Olive and the Sea ............................................................................................ 452 9 Conclusion ............................................................................................................................. 465 REFERENCES…….. ................................................................................................................................ 476 APPENDICES A Chariots in the Aeneid ............................................................................................................ 492

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emblematic images in the Aeneid's first half (Ch. 4), Juno's affiliation with the .. It is striking, then, that no Latin or Rutulian ever sails in a ship, with the
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