Epic as Translation: From Song to Text, and Back Again

MUSIC 545S

Examines practices of translation, imitation, reception, and adaptation between epic poetry and related literary and performance genres (e.g., chivalric romance, Baroque tragedy, and early opera). Navigates the histories of epic's local and global resonances, from antiquity to early modern Europe. Studies the representations of cultural unity and difference, intertextuality and intermediality, and the changing audiences between literature and performance. Enhanced attention to questions and transgressions of linguistic and national 'origins' between genre theory and practice. Materials include works by Virgil, Petrarch, Ariosto, Tasso, Camões, Corneille, Monteverdi, Lully, and Purcell.

Notes

Course is owned by ROMST and crosslisted with Music

Instructor: Kathleen Driscoll, kate.driscoll@duke.edu

Curriculum Codes
  • CCI
  • ALP
Cross-Listed As
  • ITALIAN 545S
  • LIT 585S
  • MEDREN 645S
  • ROMST 545S
Typically Offered
Fall and/or Spring