Eros as 'Pteros': Allegorical Mythology in Plato's Phaedrus
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Eros as 'Pteros' : Allegorical Mythology in Plato's Phaedrus. / Kluge, Sofie.
I: Orbis Litterarum, Bind 65, Nr. 5, 2010, s. 347-371.Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskrift › Tidsskriftartikel › Forskning › fagfællebedømt
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Eros as 'Pteros'
T2 - Allegorical Mythology in Plato's Phaedrus
AU - Kluge, Sofie
PY - 2010
Y1 - 2010
N2 - While most experts agree that myth plays an important role in Plato’s dialogues, the more exact nature of this role keeps haunting Platonic studies. Critical perspectives have changed over the years, yet two essential positions keep prevailing, equally interlacing their interpretation of Plato’s view of myth with an estimation of his own qualities as a literary author: on one hand, negligence of the intrinsic aesthetico-philosophical interest of Platonic myth and unreserved or qualified subordination of poetic mythos to philosophical logos; on the other hand, recognition of the significance of Plato’s myths and relaxation of the dichotomy of philosophy and myth conducing in some cases even to evaluation of poetic myth over philosophical dialectic. In order to appreciate the fundamental interaction of literature and philosophy in these myths, I suggest that we approach them armed with the tools of close textual analysis and a redefined concept of allegory — frequently employed in relation to Platonic myth, albeit generally in a thoroughly negative or, at best, imprecise way. On the basis of a close reading of the myth in Phaedrus 246a-256e, key passage to understanding the status of myth in Plato’s work, I tie Platonic writing to an allegorical aesthetics intricately entwined with the philosophical core of the dialogue.
AB - While most experts agree that myth plays an important role in Plato’s dialogues, the more exact nature of this role keeps haunting Platonic studies. Critical perspectives have changed over the years, yet two essential positions keep prevailing, equally interlacing their interpretation of Plato’s view of myth with an estimation of his own qualities as a literary author: on one hand, negligence of the intrinsic aesthetico-philosophical interest of Platonic myth and unreserved or qualified subordination of poetic mythos to philosophical logos; on the other hand, recognition of the significance of Plato’s myths and relaxation of the dichotomy of philosophy and myth conducing in some cases even to evaluation of poetic myth over philosophical dialectic. In order to appreciate the fundamental interaction of literature and philosophy in these myths, I suggest that we approach them armed with the tools of close textual analysis and a redefined concept of allegory — frequently employed in relation to Platonic myth, albeit generally in a thoroughly negative or, at best, imprecise way. On the basis of a close reading of the myth in Phaedrus 246a-256e, key passage to understanding the status of myth in Plato’s work, I tie Platonic writing to an allegorical aesthetics intricately entwined with the philosophical core of the dialogue.
KW - Faculty of Humanities
KW - myte
KW - allegori
KW - filosofi
KW - kunst/litteratur
KW - Platon
KW - myth
KW - allegory
KW - philosophy
KW - aesthetics
KW - Plato
KW - Phaedrus
U2 - 10.1111/j.1600-0730.2010.00990.x
DO - 10.1111/j.1600-0730.2010.00990.x
M3 - Journal article
VL - 65
SP - 347
EP - 371
JO - Orbis Litterarum
JF - Orbis Litterarum
SN - 0105-7510
IS - 5
ER -
ID: 32486165