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Author Burrow, Colin, author

Title Imitating authors : Plato to futurity / Colin Burrow
Edition First edition
Published Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2019
©2019

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Description 1 online resource
Contents From mimēsis to imitatio: before and after Plato -- Building bodies: imitation and the Roman rhetorical tradition -- Dreamitation: Lucretius, Homer, Virgil -- Petrarchan transformations -- Adaptive imitation: Ciceronians, courtiers, and Quixotes -- Formal imitation: the 'leaden-headed Germans' and their English heirs -- Ben Jonson: formal imitation -- Milton: modelling the ancients -- Imitation in the age of literary property: Pope to Wordsworth -- The Promethean moment: Mary Shelley and Milton's monstrous progeny -- Posthuma postscript: poems more durable than brass
Summary Imitating Authors analyses the theory and practice of imitatio (the imitation of one author by another) from early Greek texts right up to recent fictions about clones and artificial humans. At its centre lie the imitating authors of the English Renaissance, including Ben Jonson and the most imitated imitator of them all, John Milton. Imitating Authors argues that imitation is not simply a matter of borrowing words, or of alluding to an earlier author. Imitators learn practices from earlier writers. They imitate the structures and forms of earlier writing in ways that enable them to create a new style which itself could be imitated. That makes imitation an engine of literary change. Imitating Authors also shows how the metaphors used by theorists to explain this complex practice fed into works which were themselves imitations, how those metaphors changed, and how they have come to influence present-day anxieties about imitation human beings and artificial forms of intelligence. It explores relationships between imitation and authorial style, its fraught connections with plagiarism, and how emerging ideas of genius and intellectual property changed how imitation was practised. Imitating Authors includes detailed discussion of authors who imitated (notably Virgil, Lucretius, Petrarch, Cervantes, Ben Jonson, Milton, Pope, Wordsworth, Mary Shelley, and Kazuo Ishiguro) and of the theory of imitating authors in Plato, Cicero, Quintilian, Longinus, Castiglione, the Ciceronian controversies of the sixteenth century, in legal and philosophical discourses of the Enlightenment, and in recent discussions about computer-generated poems
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Online resource; title from web page (Oxford Scholarship Online, viewed on May 6, 2020)
Subject Imitation in literature.
Literature -- Adaptations
Literature -- History and criticism.
BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY -- Literary.
Imitation in literature
Literature
Genre/Form Adaptations
Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9780192575142
0192575147