Slater, 'Greek Literary Theory after Aristotle: A collection of papers in honour of D.M. Schenkveld', Bryn Mawr Classical Review 9510
URL = http://hegel.lib.ncsu.edu/stacks/serials/bmcr/bmcr-9510-slater-greek
@@@@95.10.1, Abbenes et al., edd., Greek Literary Theory after Aristotle
J.G.J. Abbenes, S.R. Slings and I. Sluiter (edd.), Greek
Literary Theory after Aristotle: A collection of papers in honour
of D.M. Schenkveld. Amsterdam: 1995. Pp. xviii + 329. $40.00.
ISBN 90-5383-365-X.
Reviewed by W.J. Slater -- McMaster University
A list of Schenkveld's publications are followed by 15 papers
from a conference in his honour in April 1994, with three
indices. The speed of publication is commendable, but even so,
the important work of Obbink, for example, is missing. The papers
range very widely from the technicalities of Philodemus papyri to
the Homeric D-scholia on one side and more aesthetic and
philosophical issues on the other. The audience must have felt
itself severely challenged by the level set by some speakers;
nonetheless there is much here to interest those who struggle
with the remnants of literary theory in antiquity, and, perhaps
because the papers were orally delivered, they make with one or
two exceptions relatively easy reading, and all the papers are in
good English. The worst mistake I found--principle for
principal--was in Fortenbaugh's essay. To be commended is the
editors' willingness to print even longish Greek quotations, as
well as a translation.
The contents are:
W. Fortenbaugh, Theophrastus, Source no. 709 HS&G
P. Swiggers - A. Wouters, Poetics and Grammar: From Technique
to Techne
L. Montefusco, Cicero and the Division of Virtue
J. Wisse, Greeks, Romans, and the Rise of Atticism
J. Porter, Oi kritikoi: A Reassessment
D. Innes, Longinus: Structure and Unity
Z. Ritook, Some Aesthetic Views of Dio Chrysostom and Their
Sources
F. Montanari, The Mythographus Homericus
S.R. Slings, Protreptic in Ancient Theories of Philosophical
Literature
I. Sluiter, The Poetics of Medicine
P. Struck, Allegory, Aenigma, and Anti-Mimesis
J.G.M. van Dijk, Greek Fable Theory after Aristotle
J. Bremer, Menander Rhetor on Hymns
R. Jackson, Late Platonist Poetics: Olympiodorus and the myth
of Plato's Gorgias
T. Conley, Practice to Theory: Byzantine Poetrics [sic]
Fortenbaugh deals with a story in Theophrastus about Tirythian
laughter, and surveys what seem to me wildly improbable
possibilities about its relevance for the work On Comedy.
He concludes more reasonably but not unexpectedly that
Theophrastus had an interest in laughter aroused by speech, and
that his lecturing style profited from this. I do not however
believe that peristasis can mean the same as
peripeteia.
Swiggers and Wouters are preparing an edition with commentary of
Dionysius Thrax's Techne grammatike and not surprisingly
we get a very technical discussion of the place of lexis
in grammatical theory, and so in poetics. They show the
similarity of theory from Aristotle to Dionysius Halicarnassus,
and argue for the value of looking at problems like this in terms
of historical development of a theory.
Montefusco's discussion of Cicero's divisions of virtue is sadly
out of place here and too compressed to be of value; it might
just be comprehensible by someone steeped in the arid scholastic
subdivisions produced by rhetorical and philosophic theorists. It
has nothing to do with literary theory. On the other hand Wisse's
discussion of Atticism is one of the best introductions to the
subject I have seen. It is particularly valuable because this is
an area much distorted by the authority and prejudice of
Wilamowitz, and the failure of some recent writers on the subject
to dig themselves out of the "jungle," as Wisse calls it. Wisse
writes with admirable lucidity, as befits a commentator on the
De Oratore. I summarize his argument. Roman Atticism began
between 60 and 55, and the movement--which was a somewhat
unfocussed reaction against traditional Hellenistic rhetoric,
labelled as "Asianism" by detractors--increased even after the
death of Calvus in 54/3 and included Brutus. Not long after 30
B.C. Dionysius of Halicarnassus hails the victory of Atticism,
and attributes this new "classicism" to the good taste of the
Romans. So went the theory, but as Wisse says, it need not be
true. Wisse advances from suggestions by Bowersock and Kennedy
and argues that the Atticist movement was Roman in inspiration,
and that on our present evidence Calvus and his friends
originated this movement as well as the neoteric poetics. It
became Greek by virtue of the strong Greek-Roman intellectual
"network" at Rome. This is a convincing picture. One small
caveat: Wisse p.77 emends to phronimon tes poleos in
Dionysius' preface as impossible to interpret. Not so. "The
better part" of the city seems to be a good Roman idea at the
time, cf. Hor., Epod. 16.15 and 37, and Dionysius is
translating it into Greek.
Porter asks why Philodemus' euphonist kritikoi do not seem
to exist as a class elsewhere, and seeks to reconstruct Crates'
views on "sound and sense." The reviewer is disadvantaged by not
having available Janko's forthcoming reconstruction of "On Poems"
to which we are referred. Even so, the admission (p.87) that
"only a radically incomplete sketch will be possible" is only too
true. When we find (p.103) that the identity of the
"kritikoi" "is bound to be irretrievable," one wonders why
they should not be treated like Wisse's Asianists, and vanish
into thin air. "Inventing the barbarian" has always been an smug
tool of academic polemic, as well as of elegiac poetry, and
trying to see the "critics" through the literary smog of Crates'
polemics and Philodemus' fragments induces all too easily despair
bordering on indifference.
Innes' breezy run through Longinus is a severe disappointment,
especially when she is reduced to listing imagery to show how
Longinus is to be considered a compositional unity. We need first
and foremost to know how "unity" for a Lehrbuch is
different from our own conceptions, before being told of its
existence. No mention of Fuhrmann here. Ritook is not much better
on the sources for some of Dio's "aesthetics"--though that is too
elevated a term to describe them. As far as one can see, these
amount to nothing more sophisticated than the
philosophical/rhetorical platitudes one expects of his time; that
he plundered Aristotle in the original one will not concede
readily. Much more satisfying is Montanari's survey of his work
on the Mythographus Homericus, who is attracting a good
deal of attention lately, as more papyri come to light. Montanari
is working on an edition of the Iliad D-scholia, of which
the MH is a part, and which is needed to complete Erbse's edition
of the Homeric scholia. The MH consists for the Iliad of
about 200 historiae most with subscriptions, for which we
have now eight papyri, the oldest being ca. 100 A.D.; they
demonstrate that the MH existed as an independent book, just like
the glosses now called conveniently the Scholia minora. Some of
us will look forward to having the D-scholia zetemata as
well.
The MH was a mythographical commentary on the Homeric text,
complete with lemmata. It seems highly probable that these were
linked by a diple to the text--I do not understand why
Montanari should think this a "fascinating suggestion" since it
is self-evident that this is why such markers were used. The
papyri show us that we do not have the original work, but a
number of excerpts and epitomes. Sometimes therefore the
subscription was omitted, though it is now acknowledged that
these were in the original text and were genuine. The possibility
of false subscription of course exists, but I think Montanari is
right to discount it on present evidence. He illustrates well how
a historia can be connected with a Zenodotean reading,
though I should call it rather a conjecture, and postulates that
some of the historiae come from "high quality learned
commentaries of the Alexandrian age."
Slings provides a most interesting and very well written summary
of theories of the protreptic genre, which is invariably ethical,
and includes paramythetic. He makes the important deduction that
attempts to harmonize all the different subdivisions left from
antiquity are usually mistaken, and obscure rather than explain.
We should in this kind of study all refrain from "advancing
speculative hypotheses." Sluiter deals with the potentially
interesting question of Galen's literary theories, since Galen
was proud of his own literary skills and commented so extensively
on Hippocrates. But she gets lost in the wilderness of
historiographical theory. A reading of Avenarius' Lukian und
die Geschichtschreibung would have convinced her that there
is nothing in Lucian's "How to write history" that is not
traditional; and the incompetent historians he claims to cite
were not "mushrooming in Rome" or anywhere near it. Galen seems
to me to be using the same commonplaces about theory as we should
expect of any sophist of his time, to justify his own studies.
"If poetic language was a drug for Gorgias," writes Struck,
"Plato wants to ensure that it was a prescription drug." The
Alexandrians on the other hand followed Aristotle, emphasising
clarity. Unfortunately Struck oversimplifies Aristarchus' view
here when he maintains: "Unclarity, now in the form of an
apparent sense that poses problems, is a mark that a line is
un-Homeric, and worthy of deletion or emendation." On the
contrary, Aristarchus first tried various methods of explanation,
in order to clarify, before resorting to conjectural emendation.
This too is Aristotelian in origin, but Struck manages to suggest
that Aristarchus only sought a solution when he could not find a
saisfactory emendation (p.224). Aristarchus' remark (Sch. D on
5.385) that one should understand sc. Homer's stories as myths,
and leave aside "what is outside" is obviously drawn from
Aristotle via Eratosthenes and belongs with his "explaining Homer
from Homer." It is misunderstood by Struck; it prefaces the
D-scholia's long explanation of the myth at that point, --another
example of Alexandrian mythographical interest--which brings in
irrelevant versions from outside Homer. Struck understands
Aristarchus' words as "outside what is actually said" and so
anti-allegorical. That Aristarchus certainly was, but it is not
relevant. There is much to criticize here.
Van Dijk reviews learnedly fable theory and concludes not
surprisingly that most allow rational characters not just animals
and plants. Bremer, who is working on a book about hymns, offers
some thoughts on their history, and reviews the precepts of
Menander Rhetor. But one will not readily concede that paeans and
dithyrambs had no Sitz im Leben in imperial times (p.263); indeed
paianistai are recorded in Sparta, and dithyrambs for
Dionysus continue into Christian times, nor is there any shortage
of hymnodoi and enkomiologoi in imperial cult and
festival before Menander, whose prose Sminthiakos is almost at
the end of the tradition of prose festival encomia, not at the
beginning. As for the statement (p.273) that "the production of
great poetry had dried up entirely," the answer is that we know
from epigraphy that poetry was being sung and played at
innumerable festivals by kitharodes and chorists into the third
century, but that since it is now all lost we are in no position
to say how great it was. Indeed, if Menander is to be dated in
the reign of Diocletian, Christian hymns will soon be replacing
pagan.
The book concludes with an essay on Olympiodorus' theories about
myth in his reading of Plato's Gorgias, and Conley's brief
but amusing survey of Byzantine poetics, which has more of the
Aristophanic in it than this reviewer knew. It is also well and
thoughtfully written, and good lively readable writing
should be the first criterion for such a publication, if the
genre of Festschriften is to have any meaning, and provide us
with a sense of the festive moment which allegedly gave it birth.