The University of Wisconsin Press


Classics / Literature & Criticism




Silence in Catullus
Benjamin Eldon Stevens

Wisconsin Studies in Classics
Patricia A. Rosenmeyer, Laura McClure, and Mark Stansbury-O'Donnell, Series Editors


“Accords much needed and long overdue attention to the many and arresting references in the Catullan poetic corpus to oral activity: from the lips and teeth to the throat and larynx, both with and without sound.”
—Judith P. Hallett, University of Maryland, College Park

Both passionate and artful, learned and bawdy, Catullus is one of the best-known and critically significant poets from classical antiquity. An intriguing aspect of his poetry that has been neglected by scholars is his interest in silence, from the pauses that shape everyday conversation to linguistic taboos and cultural suppressions and the absolute silence of death.
           
In Silence in Catullus, Benjamin Eldon Stevens offers fresh readings of this Roman poet’s most important works, focusing on his purposeful evocations of silence. This deep and varied “poetics of silence” takes on many forms in Catullus’s poetic corpus: underscoring the lyricism of his poetry; highlighting themes of desire, immortality-in-culture, and decay; accenting its structures and rhythms; and, Stevens suggests, even articulating underlying philosophies. Combining classical philological methods, contemporary approaches to silence in modern literature, and the most recent Catullan scholarship, this imaginative examination of Catullus offers a new interpretation of one of the ancient world’s most influential and inimitable voices.

Benjamin Eldon Stevens is a visiting assistant professor of classics at Trinity University in San Antonio.


Praise:

“A valuable addition to scholarship on Catullus and Latin poetry. By calling attention to what is not, should not, or simply cannot be said in poetic speech, it reveals paradoxical but intimate relationships between the words we say and the silences surrounding them that give them meaning.”
Classical Review

“Stevens's multifaceted approach allows for us to begin to appreciate this understudied side of Catullus and to gain a deeper understanding of his poetics. To borrow an old dictum from the musical realm: music is not simply made by the sounds that are made; it is made by the interplay between the sounds and their intervening silences. Stevens has showed us how to hear the silences in Catullus's melody; it's up to us to listen for them.”
Bryn Mawr Classical Review




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Of Related Interest
The cover of Mulroy's translation of Catullus's complete works.The Complete Poetry of Catullus
Catullus
Translated and with commentary by David Mulroy

"Mulroy's is a marvelous contribution to Catullus translations and studies. Catullus' angry or comic (sometimes both) poems directed at the movers and shakers of his era are rendered here with wit and Roman realism, and the famous love poems to Lesbia are charming and immediate." —Kelly Cherry, author of Rising Venus: Poems

 



PAPERBACK ORIGINAL
December 2013
LC: 2013010420 PA
354 pp.   6 x 9  

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Paper $34.95 s
ISBN 978-0-299-29664-3
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