Elaine Fantham
University of Toronto
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American Journal of Philology | 1999
Elaine Fantham
UNTIL THE PUBLICATION of Philip Hardie’s important new discussion “Fame and Defamation in the Aeneid: The Council of Latins” (1998), Virgil’s extended treatment of the Latin council had passed a generation of relative neglect—neglect all the more surprising because the debate occupies a quarter of the eleventh book.1 But then the book itself is generally treated as a lowering of tension, a diversion of focus from the heroic business of male combat to an exchange of rhetoric and the ancillary exploits of the woman warrior Camilla. And despite his long– standing interest in Virgil’s Iliad (e.g., 1984), K. W. Gransden’s recent commentary on book 11 (1991) shows little interest in Virgil’s sophisticated narrative technique. Virgil’s writing in this book is no less serious than in its neighbors, and deserves further scrutiny. The Camilla narrative has begun to receive its due, but the rhetoric of the extended council, which includes Turnus’ longest speech and the second longest formal speech in the Aeneid, has usually been passed over as alien to the concerns of epic.2 This is certainly not Hardie’s approach, though it is motivated in part by the same negative attitude toward rhetoric. For him the debate is primarily a starting point for a more far–reaching inquiry into the
Communication Studies | 1984
Elaine Fantham
Classical Quarterly | 1979
Elaine Fantham
Archive | 2009
Elaine Fantham
Classical Review | 2011
Elaine Fantham
American Journal of Philology | 2009
Elaine Fantham
Classical Review | 2007
Elaine Fantham
Classical Review | 2006
Elaine Fantham
Classical Review | 2006
Elaine Fantham
Classical Review | 2005
Elaine Fantham