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Virginity and representation in the Greek novel and early Greek poetry

Posted on:2014-01-23Degree:Ph.DType:Thesis
University:University of Toronto (Canada)Candidate:Ciocani, Vichi EugeniaFull Text:PDF
GTID:2455390008462482Subject:Ancient languages
Abstract/Summary:
The question asked by this thesis is twofold: first, what is the relevance and purpose of the generic prominence of the motif of pialpharhothetaepsilonupsilonialpha in the Greek novels of the first centuries A.D., and secondly, what is the broader significance of female virginity in ancient Greek literature. In order to answer this double question, the first part of the thesis examines in detail a number of literary texts from Early Greek Literature in which the theme of pialpharhothetaepsilonupsilonialpha is a central concern. Thus, a close reading of Homer's Odyssey reveals the crucial role played by pialpharhothetaepsilonupsilonialpha in mapping imaginary spaces such as Scheria. A close reading of Sappho sheds light on the sense of continuation that exists between a girl's premarital stage and her wedding and marriage, which will prompt a definition of Greek marriage as "the symbolic preservation of pialpharhothetaepsilonupsilonialpha." In contrast, by focusing on unsuccessful, distorted weddings and marriages, Greek tragedy nonetheless upholds the necessity of a smooth, unbroken transition between virginity and the wedded state in order that a successful marriage be possible. The chapter on Aeschylus' Suppliants focuses on the incomprehensibility of the concept of pialpharhothetaepsilonupsilonialpha from a non-Greek point of view, that of the pre-Greek daughters of Danaus and their suitors. The second half of the thesis moves forward five centuries and examines the generic relevance of pialpharhothetaepsilonupsilonialpha in the Greek novels. Most of these novels (including fragments) are interested in this theme, which appears to be associated with the double affiliation of the novels to fictional literature (generically in verse) and referential literature (generically in prose). Moreover, these novels stress the continuity between the premarital stage and marriage, as the discordant accounts of Lycaenion and the main narrator at the end of Longus' novel about the effect of the wedding on the pialpharhothetaepsilonupsilonosigma imply. The final chapters devoted to Longus, Achilles Tatius, and Heliodorus highlight the complex connections between the virginity of the female protagonist, the descriptions of nature or created objects, the interest in the text as artifact and the auctorial distancing.
Keywords/Search Tags:Greek, Virginity
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