Event overview
Professor Barbara Graziosi (Princeton University) offers a new reading of chance, fate, and marriage in the Homeric poem and in Virginia Woolf's first novel, The Voyage Out
The Centre for Comparative Literature's 'Sing in Me, Muse: The Classical, the Critical, and the Creative', a series of talks, workshops, readings, discussions on the social, political and cultural relevance of the classics to our times.
'The chancy story of the Phoenician woman’: Reading Homer with Virginia Woolf
A talk by Barbara Graziosi (in person and online)
(Rescheduled from the original date of 16 March 2023 due to UCU strike. If you had already booked, your ticket is still valid.)
Based on Virginia Stephen’s notes on the Odyssey, Barbara Graziosi offers a new reading of chance, fate, and marriage in the Homeric poem and in Stephen’s first novel, The Voyage Out, written shortly before Stephen married Leonard Woolf. The aim of the exercise is threefold. First, the paper seeks to illuminate Stephen’s careful reading of the Odyssey (and the not so careful recent edition of her notes on it). Second, it shows how both her notes and The Voyage Out articulate a pointedly anti-Aristotelean conception of literature: as a reader of ancient epic and as a writer of new fiction, Stephen dismantles any easy alignment between plot and character, fate and desire. Third, the paper harnesses Stephen’s reading, and her writing, in order to show how Zeus’ plan and chance event, freedom and enslavement, homecoming and homemaking interlock in the Odyssey itself.
The seminar will be jointly chaired by Isobel Hurst and Lucia Boldrini, convenors of the series, and will be followed by drinks for those who attend in person.
Barbara Graziosi is C. Ewing Professor of ancient Greek language and literature at Princeton University. She is best known for her work on Homeric epic, ancient concepts of authorship, and fictional (auto)biography as a mode of reading ancient literature. Her project Living Poets: A New Approach to Ancient Poetry, funded by the European Research Council, argues that the biographies and portraits of ancient classical poets often reveal the faces and lives of their later readers: https://livingpoets.dur.ac.uk/w/Welcome_to_Living_Poets. Among her books are Inventing Homer (Cambridge 2002), which argues that early stories about Homer reveal how archaic and classical audiences imagined the poet and understood his poetry; The Resonance of Epic, written with Johannes Haubold (London 2005), which investigates the relationship between Homeric epic and wider Greek views about the cosmos and its history; and, together with Emily Greenwood, the edited volume Homer in the Twentieth Century: Between World Literature and the Western Canon (Oxford 2007). Her most recent book, Homer (Oxford University Press 2016) has been translated into several languages, to which Chinese is about to be added. Together with Andrea Capra, she has just finished writing Classics, Love, Revolution: The Legacies of Luigi Settembrini, again for Oxford University Press. She regularly contributes to the Times Literary Supplement.
Dates & times
Date | Time | Add to calendar |
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2 Nov 2023 | 6:00pm - 7:30pm |
Accessibility
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