TY - BOOK AU - Alekou,Stella AU - Antoniadis,Theodore AU - Aresi,Laura AU - Casanova-Robin,Hélène AU - Gibson,Bruce AU - Harrison,Stephen AU - Harrison,Stephen J. AU - Hogenmüller,Boris AU - Jenkyns,Richard AU - Kirstein,Robert AU - Kitsou,Stamatia AU - Neger,Margot AU - Panayotakis,Costas AU - Selliaas Thorsen,Thea AU - Tzounakas,Spyridon TI - The Reception of Ancient Cyprus in Western Culture T2 - Trends in Classics - Supplementary Volumes , SN - 9783110996654 AV - DS54.6 .R43 2023 U1 - 939.37 23/eng/20230307 PY - 2022///] CY - Berlin, Boston : PB - De Gruyter, KW - Antikes Zypern KW - Europäische Rezeption KW - Latein KW - Mythologie KW - Ancient Cypriot identity KW - Cypriot mythology KW - European reception of Cyprus KW - Latin literature N1 - Frontmatter --; Preface and Acknowledgements --; Contents --; Introduction --; Part I: Cyprus in Latin Literature --; Cyprus and its Myths on the Roman Stage --; Venus on Cyprus: Interlinked Lists of Aphrodite’s Cypriot Sanctuaries in Latin Poetry --; Idalion, Satrachus and the Annales of Volusius: The Reception of Cyprus in the Carmina Catulli --; Nil desperandum …. cras ingens iterabimus aequor (Hor. Carm. 1.7): The Foundation of Salamis by a Bastard Archer as an Exemplum in Latin Literature --; Balance and Excess in Ovid’s Pygmalion Story --; Was Cyprus Special? The Case of Two Latin Poets --; Infamem nimio calore Cypron: Ancient Epigrams on Flacci in Cyprus --; The Digression on Cyprus in Claudian’s Epithalamium de nuptiis Honorii et Mariae --; Part II: Cyprus after Antiquity --; Venus and Adonis from Enheduanna to Shakespeare: The Significance of Ovid’s Cypriot Metamorphoses --; Pilgrims, Merchants and Lovers: The Island of Cyprus in Boccaccio’s Decameron (via Ovid’s Metamorphoses) --; Venus of Paphos in the Latin Poetry of the Quattrocento --; Ovid’s ‘Good’ Women: The Cypriot Exemplum Against the Background of the Statue (R)evolution --; Osmosis between High Genres: Ovid’s Tragic Formation of Myrrha’s Tale (Met. 10.298–502) and its Reception in Alfieri’s Homonymous Tragedy --; Travel, Classical Traditions and Empire: Western Travellers to Cyprus in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries --; List of Contributors --; General Index --; Index Locorum; restricted access; Issued also in print N2 - The reception of ancient Cyprus in the Western world has not received much attention in scholarship, despite the fact that significant literary and extra-literary evidence presented by European intellectuals and artists explicitly or implicitly refers to the history of Cyprus, as well as to the myths and art produced on it or inspired by its landscape. This is a neglect that this volume wishes to address, by re-establishing the literary thread of the representation of ancient Cyprus beyond generic, spatial and temporal limits, and by thus shedding light on its depiction throughout the centuries, from the ancient Roman to the Western world up until modern times. The volume’s central thesis is that a number of Cypriot traditions constitute a unique example of intercultural and multi-level fusions of diverse European civilizations. By investigating the various and often contradictory ways in which Cyprus was represented in Latin literature and beyond, the volume treats its multifaceted reception as a vastly complex matter, and suggests that even though the island has always been an outlier, it has often been explored in literature as an intellectual landscape and a precious pathway between at times conflictual yet compatible worlds UR - https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110984309 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/isbn/9783110984309 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/document/cover/isbn/9783110984309/original ER -