Image of Hercules by Dracontius: On political interpretation of mythological poems (Romulea 2 & 4)
This paper deals with the problem of political interpretation of the works of Dracontius, a Roman poet of the late 5th century from Carthage. The thesis about the socio-political background of his poems has become increasingly widespread in recent years. The grounds for this are provided by numerous...
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Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration. RANEPA
2024-06-01
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Online Access: | https://steps.ranepa.ru/jour/article/view/173 |
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author | I. M. Nikolsky |
author_facet | I. M. Nikolsky |
author_sort | I. M. Nikolsky |
collection | DOAJ |
description | This paper deals with the problem of political interpretation of the works of Dracontius, a Roman poet of the late 5th century from Carthage. The thesis about the socio-political background of his poems has become increasingly widespread in recent years. The grounds for this are provided by numerous references in his works to contemporary events: the formation of the Vandal kingdom in North Africa, formerly Roman, and the parallel conflict between the old and the new elites. Nevertheless, the author’s view of this conflict and his assessment of its sides remain a matter of debate. The key to solving it largely lies in a proper understanding of the author’s sympathies and antipathies towards his own characters, borrowed from traditional ancient mythological plots, whose behaviour appears to be a projection onto contemporary events. One such character is Hercules. He appears in two poems at once, Romulea 2 and 4. His image in them breaks many stereotypical ideas about the brutal and tragic nature of this hero; the present article is an attempt to provide an explanation for this. I aim to prove that Hercules is represented as an ambivalent model: on the one hand, he is the embodiment of the Roman side in the Roman-Vandal confrontation for a Roman audience, and on the other hand, he is the model of correct behaviour in conflict in principle. In the latter sense the didactic pathos associated with him could also be addressed to Vandals. |
format | Article |
id | doaj-art-d01b3ff58e424bb49effcb0f91d8f086 |
institution | Matheson Library |
issn | 2412-9410 2782-1765 |
language | English |
publishDate | 2024-06-01 |
publisher | Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration. RANEPA |
record_format | Article |
series | Шаги |
spelling | doaj-art-d01b3ff58e424bb49effcb0f91d8f0862025-07-19T15:03:27ZengRussian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration. RANEPAШаги2412-94102782-17652024-06-0110221722410.22394/2412-9410-2024-10-2-217-224172Image of Hercules by Dracontius: On political interpretation of mythological poems (Romulea 2 & 4)I. M. Nikolsky0Российская академия народного хозяйства и государственной службы при Президенте РФThis paper deals with the problem of political interpretation of the works of Dracontius, a Roman poet of the late 5th century from Carthage. The thesis about the socio-political background of his poems has become increasingly widespread in recent years. The grounds for this are provided by numerous references in his works to contemporary events: the formation of the Vandal kingdom in North Africa, formerly Roman, and the parallel conflict between the old and the new elites. Nevertheless, the author’s view of this conflict and his assessment of its sides remain a matter of debate. The key to solving it largely lies in a proper understanding of the author’s sympathies and antipathies towards his own characters, borrowed from traditional ancient mythological plots, whose behaviour appears to be a projection onto contemporary events. One such character is Hercules. He appears in two poems at once, Romulea 2 and 4. His image in them breaks many stereotypical ideas about the brutal and tragic nature of this hero; the present article is an attempt to provide an explanation for this. I aim to prove that Hercules is represented as an ambivalent model: on the one hand, he is the embodiment of the Roman side in the Roman-Vandal confrontation for a Roman audience, and on the other hand, he is the model of correct behaviour in conflict in principle. In the latter sense the didactic pathos associated with him could also be addressed to Vandals.https://steps.ranepa.ru/jour/article/view/173romevandalsdracontiuslatin poetryhercules |
spellingShingle | I. M. Nikolsky Image of Hercules by Dracontius: On political interpretation of mythological poems (Romulea 2 & 4) Шаги rome vandals dracontius latin poetry hercules |
title | Image of Hercules by Dracontius: On political interpretation of mythological poems (Romulea 2 & 4) |
title_full | Image of Hercules by Dracontius: On political interpretation of mythological poems (Romulea 2 & 4) |
title_fullStr | Image of Hercules by Dracontius: On political interpretation of mythological poems (Romulea 2 & 4) |
title_full_unstemmed | Image of Hercules by Dracontius: On political interpretation of mythological poems (Romulea 2 & 4) |
title_short | Image of Hercules by Dracontius: On political interpretation of mythological poems (Romulea 2 & 4) |
title_sort | image of hercules by dracontius on political interpretation of mythological poems romulea 2 4 |
topic | rome vandals dracontius latin poetry hercules |
url | https://steps.ranepa.ru/jour/article/view/173 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT imnikolsky imageofherculesbydracontiusonpoliticalinterpretationofmythologicalpoemsromulea24 |