A Metaphor to Build Empires: Imitatio and the Politics of Representation in European Humanism
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.59992/IJESA.2024.v3n7p3الكلمات المفتاحية:
Imitatio، Imitation in the Renaissance، Poetry and Humanist Education، Literature and Empire، Renaissance Literature and the Classics، Renaissance Criticismالملخص
In Western criticism and philosophy, Renaissance discussions of imitation have often been seen as both a legacy of Greece and Rome, and as the foundation of modern theories of art and literature. This investigation shows that the discussions of imitation that spread throughout the Renaissance were indeed adopted from Latin Roman discussions of poetry and rhetoric, but they have no connection to the famous Greek philosophical concepts of mimesis/imitation that are found in the work of Plato and Aristotle. Indeed, European concepts of imitatio/ imitation, as this study shows, developed their conceptual potential before Plato’s and Aristotle’s discussions of mimesis became familiar in Europe. Furthermore, Renaissance discussions of imitation were not theories of art and literature, as is commonly believed. They were simply an educational pedagogy that organized the appropriation of the canons of description of classical Latin into the vernaculars. The peculiarity and the scale of this pedagogy become evident when located within its geopolitical context. In the early modern era, neither the dead Latin language nor the vernaculars were equipped to manage the wealth or the administrative and cultural needs of ascending European states. Like Rome at the height of its power, European states were emerging empires in need of a language and a culture. And just like the Romans resorted to the imitation of Greek masterpieces in order to develop their language, Europeans advocated the imitation of Latin masterpieces to develop their vernaculars. But while the Romans resorted to imitatio often with resentment and bitterness at the impossibility to match the Greek achievement, European humanists considered imitatio to have been a resounding success [sic]. By adopting the Roman practice of imitatio, European cultures appropriated and internalized Roman ambivalence without solving or even identifying it.
المراجع
- Armitage, D. 1988. Literature and Empire. In: The Oxford History of the British Empire, vol. I: The Origins of Empire, pp. 99-123. Ed, Nicholas Canny, Oxford University Press.
- Bolgar, R.R. 1954. The Classical Heritage and Its Beneficiaries. Cambridge University Press.
- Bray, R. 1927. La formation de la Doctrine Classique en France. Librairie Hachette: Paris.
- Canny, N. 1973. The Ideology of English Colonisation. William and Mary Quarterly. 30: 575-98.
- Canny, N. 2001. Making Ireland British: 1580-1650. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Cottino-Jones, M. 1999. Literary-Critical Developments in Sixteenth and Seventeenth Century Italy. In: The Cambridge History of Literary Criticism, vol. 3: The Renaissance, pp. 566-77. Ed: Glyn P. Norton, Cambridge University Press.
- Cronk, N. 1999. Aristotle, Horace, and Longinus: The Conception of Reader Response. In The Cambridge History of Literary Criticism, vol. 3: The Renaissance, pp. 199-204.
- Ed: Glyn P. Norton, Cambridge University Press.
- Draper, J.W. 1921. Aristotelian ‘Mimesis’ in Eighteenth Century England. PMLA. vol. 36, no. 3: 372-400.
- du Bellay, J. 1936. La défense et l’illustration de la langue française. Nelson Editeur: Paris.
- Gravelle, S. 1988. The Latin-Vernacular Question. Journal of the History of Ideas. 49: 367-86.
- Gray, H. 1963. Renaissance Humanism: The Pursuit of Eloquence. Journal of the History of Ideas. 24: 497-514
- Greene, T. 1982. Light in Troy: Imitation and Discovery in Renaissance Poetry. Yale University Press: New Haven and London.
- Hale, J.R. 1971. Sixteenth-Century Explanations of War and Violence. Past and Present. 51: 3-26.
- Herrick, M.T. 1946. The Fusion of Horatian and Aristotelian Criticism, 1531-1555. University of Illinois Press: Urbana.
- Kraemer, J. 1986. Humanism in the Renaissance of Islam: The Cultural Revival during the Buyid Age. Brill: Leiden.
- Kristeller, P. 1961. Renaissance Thought: The Classic, Scholastic and Humanist Strains. Harper: New York.
- Mabrack, R. 1999. Plato’s Dream of Sophistry. University of South Carolina.
- Moss, A. 1999. Literary Imitation in the Sixteenth Century: Writers and Readers, Latin and French. In: The Cambridge History of Literary Criticism, Vol. 3: The Renaissance, pp. 107-18. Ed: Glyn P. Norton, Cambridge University Press.
- Moss, A. 1999. Humanist Education. In The Cambridge History of Literary Criticism Vol. 3: The Renaissance, pp. 145-54. Ed: Glyn P. Norton, Cambridge University Press.
- Peletier, J. 1930. L’art poetique. Les Belles Lettres: Paris.
- Petrarca. 1975. Rerum familiarium libri I-XIII. New York State University Press.
- Pigman G.W. 1990. Neo-Latin Imitation of the Latin Classics. In: Latin Poetry and the Classical Tradition: Essays in Medieval and Renaissance Literature. Eds: Goodman & Murray, Clarendon Press: Oxford.
- Pigman, G.W. 1980. Versions of Imitation in the Renaissance. Renaissance Quarterly. vol. 33, no. 1: 1-32.
- Racine, L. 1808. Réflexions sur la poésie. In: Oeuvre de Louis Racine. Ed: Julian L. Geoffrey, Paris.
- Reiss, Timothy. 1982. Power, Poetry and the Resemblance of Nature. In: Mimesis: From Mirror to Method. Ed: John Lyons and Stephen Nichols, The University Press of New England: Hanover and London.
- Schutze, M. 1920. The Fundamental Ideas in Herder’s thought. Modern Philology. vol. 18, no. 2: 65-78.
- Stevens, L.C. 1950. How the French Humanists of the Renaissance Learned Greek. PMLA. 65: 240-48.
- Tatarkiewicz, W. 1980. A History of Six Ideas: An Essay in Esthetics. Polish Scientific Publishers: Warszawa.
- Turner, F.M. 1981. The Greek Heritage in Victorian Britain. Yale University Press: New Haven & London.
- Waswo, R. 1999. “Theories of Language” In the Cambridge History of Literary Criticism, vol. 3: The Renaissance, pp. 25-35. Ed: Glyn P. Norton, Cambridge University Press.
- Waswo, R. 1999. The Rise of the Vernaculars. In: The Cambridge History of Literary Criticism, vol. 3: The Renaissance, pp. 409-16. Ed: Glyn P. Norton, Cambridge University Press.
- Weinbrot, H.D. 1985. ‘An Ambition to Excell’: The Aesthetics of Emulation in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries. The Huntington Library Quarterly. 48: 121-139.
- Wickham, G. 1995. Neo-Classical Drama and the Reformation in England. In Classical Drama and Its Influence. Ed: M. J. Anderson, Methuen.
- Wulf and Gebauer. 1995. Mimesis: Culture, Art, Society. Trans: Don Reneau, University of California Press.