The Leveling Plague: Epigram 241 of Antipater of Sidon in Greek Anthology Book 7

This article briefly explains the scope of the epigrammatic genre and, through personal translation of the original Greek source and its comparison with Latin, English, Spanish and Italian versions, analyzes epigram 241 by Antipater of Sidon, in book 7 of the Greek Anthology, after contextualizing i...

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Autor principal: Difabio, Elbia Haydeé
Formato: Artículo revista
Lenguaje:Español
Publicado: Instituto de Literaturas Modernas 2020
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Acceso en línea:https://revistas.uncu.edu.ar/ojs3/index.php/literaturasmodernas/article/view/3464
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Sumario:This article briefly explains the scope of the epigrammatic genre and, through personal translation of the original Greek source and its comparison with Latin, English, Spanish and Italian versions, analyzes epigram 241 by Antipater of Sidon, in book 7 of the Greek Anthology, after contextualizing it by referring to its author and the genesis of the poem. The methodology to apply is based on philological and historical criticism, involving three successive complementary stages, appropriate to the nature of this literary genre: investigation of the historical-cultural context, textual and philological analysis and hermeneutic study, with some etymological notes at the bottom of the page/ with some etymological notes as footnotes. Since all artistic representation also testifies to the historical context in which the piece of art was created, the hypothesis that guides the study of the epigram is the leveling effect of the plague, which does not distinguish among its victims: it brings together the powerful and the humble, the pharaohs and their subjects, the healthy and the sick and the strong and the weak, and it affects a particular member of the family instead of a different member and people of all ages without distinction. In fact, the conception underlying the hypothesis represents an assumption, as it goes beyond the writer’s aim of poignantly reflecting the deep pain/sorrow experienced by Ptolemy VI Philometor and his sister Cleopatra II upon the death of one of their children.