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Attalid aesthetics: the Pergamene ‘baroque’ reconsidered

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Nelson, Thomas J 

Abstract

jats:titleAbstract:</jats:title>jats:pIn this paper, I explore the literary aesthetics of Attalid Pergamon, one of the Ptolemies’ fiercest cultural rivals in the Hellenistic period. Traditionally, scholars have reconstructed Pergamene poetry from the city’s grand and monumental sculptural programme, hypothesizing an underlying aesthetic dichotomy between the two kingdoms: Alexandrian ‘refinement’ versus the Pergamene ‘baroque’. In this paper, I critically reassess this view by exploring surviving scraps of Pergamene poetry: an inscribed encomiastic epigram celebrating the Olympic victory of a certain Attalus (jats:italicIvP</jats:italic> I.10) and an inscribed dedicatory epigram featuring a speaking Satyr (jats:italicSGO</jats:italic> I.06/02/05). By examining these poems’ sophisticated engagements with the literary past and contemporary scholarship, I challenge the idea of a simple opposition between the two kingdoms. In reality, the art and literature of both political centres display a similar capacity to embrace both the refined and the baroque. In conclusion, I ask how this analysis affects our interpretation of the broader aesthetic landscape of the Hellenistic era and suggest that the literature of both capitals belongs to a larger system of elite poetry which stretched far and wide across the Hellenistic world.</jats:p>

Description

Keywords

Pergamon, Attalids, Aesthetics, Baroque, Alexandria

Journal Title

The Journal of Hellenic Studies

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0075-4269
2041-4099

Volume Title

140

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Rights

All rights reserved
Sponsorship
AHRC (1494660)
The project was supported by the Golden Web Foundation and the Arts and Humanities Research Council.