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Backing into the Future: The Classical Tradition and Its Renewal »

Book cover image of Backing into the Future: The Classical Tradition and Its Renewal by Bernard Knox

Authors: Bernard Knox
ISBN-13: 9780393331172, ISBN-10: 0393331172
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Norton, W. W. & Company, Inc.
Date Published: February 1994
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: Bernard Knox

Book Synopsis

Bernard Knox, "the foremost classicist of our time" (Maynard Mack), presents a collection of illuminating essays on diverse topics, united by their common defense of the classics, by their common concern that renewal and innovation go hand in hand with tradition, and by Knox's wit, humanity, and elegant prose. Backing into the Future opens with a group of essays on individual "Poets and Heroes" of antiquity (exploring such topics as Homer's masterly psychological insight into the character of Achilles, the playful and startlingly obscene poetry of Catullus, and Ovid's poetry of exile). The book then spirals gracefully outward to "Men, Gods, and Cities" (including essays on the Delphic Oracle, the brief and glorious appearance of Athenian democracy in fifth-century Athens, the "quarrel" between Greek tragedy and Greek philosophy, and Caligula - an emperor who has been, Knox argues, the victim of centuries of bad press). The collection closes with reflections on "Renewals" - the survival and transformation of the classics into the present age - reflections that include critiques of Derek Walcott's brilliant narrative poem Omeros and T. E. Lawrence's fascinating translation of the Odyssey, as well as thoughts on the problems of teaching the classics today. Backing into the Future encompasses the many lives of Bernard Knox - classicist, historian, literary critic, and defender of the humanities - a man who has brought the world of ancient Greece and Rome to life for the uninitiated reader and scholar alike.

Publishers Weekly

Eminent classicist Knox mines history for insights into the renewal of cultural traditions in this miscellany of 18 previously published essays, reviews and lectures. In a panoramic survey of ``the Athenian century'' (fifth century B.C.), he assesses the achievements of Greek democracy. In another piece Knox ( The Oldest Dead White European Males ) muses on the Achilles of Homer's Iliad , whose stubborn attachment to an ideal image of self was his downfall. There is an engaging essay on Roman poet Ovid's fruitful exile afer emperor Augustus banished him to what is now Romania, and a meditation on how Plato, Socrates and Sophocles answered the question, ``How shall we live?'' Knox gauges modern encounters with classical tradition, such as T. E. Lawrence's immersion in Greek literature and philosophy, refracted through his travels in Arabia, and Derek Walcott's epic poem Omeros , which appropriates Homeric tradition to tell the saga of villagers in his native Caribbean island of St. Lucia. (Feb.)

Table of Contents

Foreword11
IPoets and Heroes17
Godlike Achilles19
What Did Achilles Look Like?48
Caviar to the General56
The Poet as Prophet70
Passion and Playfulness86
The Poet in Exile106
IIMen, Gods, and Cities125
The Athenian Century127
The God as Prophet153
How Should We Live?163
Poet and Polis191
And in Better Condition220
Philosopher and Polls244
Two Emperors252
Los Olvidados264
IIIRenewals281
Odysseus of Arabia283
On Two Fronts300
America's Rome318
Geistosgeschichte and Quatsch323
Achilles in the Caribbean333
Index343

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