HESIOD'S HOLISTIC AUTHORITY IN NEOPLATONIST EXEGESIS
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Wood, Connor Purcell
Abstract
jats:pThe Neoplatonist scholarch Proclus defined three categories of poetry: inspired, ‘middle’ and mimetic. Traditionally it has been thought that he considered only Homer to have excelled in all three, while other poets could fulfil one or at most two functions. It will be shown that Proclus also conceived of Hesiod as excelling in all three types and thereby assimilated Hesiodic authority to Homeric. He also considered Orpheus but assigned his poetry to just one category, not all three. In doing this, he increased his own authority as a teacher-hierophant, contributing to the dialogue between pagan Platonism and Christianity over the inspiration of texts.</jats:p>
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Keywords
47 Language, Communication and Culture, 4705 Literary Studies, Biotechnology
Journal Title
The Cambridge Classical Journal
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Journal ISSN
1750-2705
2047-993X
2047-993X
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Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
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None