Imperial Geographies in Tibullan Elegy

Eilis Loftus
Sunday 18 July 2021

By Alison Keith

Abstract: This paper explores the extent and significance of “imperial geographies” in Tibullan elegy. I document the contemporary currency of the toponyms of Mediterranean geography in Tibullus’ elegies 1. 3, 1. 7, 2.2, and 2.3 and argue Tibullus’ invocation of these sites is intimately correlated with both Roman imperialism and the poet’s own Callimachean commitments. By incorporating non-Latin vocabulary into its artistic matrix, Tibullus’ poetry participates, in its very linguistic texture, in the larger imperial projects of Augustan Rome while simultaneously illustrating its aesthetic engagement with Alexandrian poetics.

Published in The Classical World, Vol. 107, No. 4 (2014), pg. 477-492

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