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Poetry and Number in Graeco-Roman Antiquity

Part of the Cambridge Classical Studies series
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Poetry and mathematics might seem to be worlds apart.

Nevertheless, a number of Greek and Roman poets incorporated counting and calculation within their verses.

Setting the work of authors such as Callimachus, Catullus and Archimedes in dialogue with the less well-known isopsephic epigrams of Leonides of Alexandria and the anonymous arithmetical poems preserved in the Palatine Anthology, the book reveals the various roles that number played in ancient poetry.

Focussing especially on counting and arithmetic, Max Leventhal demonstrates how the discussion, rejection or enacting of these two operations was bound up with wider conceptions of the nature of poetry.

Practices of composing, reading, interpreting and critiquing poetry emerge in these texts as having a numerical component.

The result is an illuminating new way of approaching Greek and Latin poetry - and one that reaches across modern disciplinary divisions.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1009293443 / 9781009293440
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
880.09
25/05/2022
United Kingdom
English
248 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
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