Il bastone sonoro del poeta

The element that links skeptron (“sceptre”)and rabdon (“cane”) in Greek tradition is the authority devolving to the one who holds it, as he becomes an intermediary between the human and divine worlds, the spokesperson of the divinity with the double significance of poet and judge. Sometimes episodes...

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Main Author: Federica Cordano
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Milano University Press 2010-05-01
Series:Aristonothos
Online Access:http://riviste.unimi.it/index.php/aristonothos/article/view/573
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author Federica Cordano
author_facet Federica Cordano
author_sort Federica Cordano
collection DOAJ
description The element that links skeptron (“sceptre”)and rabdon (“cane”) in Greek tradition is the authority devolving to the one who holds it, as he becomes an intermediary between the human and divine worlds, the spokesperson of the divinity with the double significance of poet and judge. Sometimes episodes of myth confuse the particular elements of the two semantic areas in which the “cane” has a key role, thereby broadening the semantic scope of the scene. Two examples: the scepter instead of the lyre is given to Hesiod by the Muses (Theogony, lines 30 ff) and enables him to “eternalize the past and the future”, but also makes himself equal to the basileis, whose objectivity and judgment he challenges; the cane instead of the scepter is what Apollo gives to Hermes in exchange for the lyre (Hymn to Hermes, lines 528 ff.), so that legislative capabilities and poetic – musical competences reinforce the importance of the object precisely through their coexistence.
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spelling doaj.art-ee96a701ea104f528cbdd8c934ec40522024-03-02T07:09:03ZengMilano University PressAristonothos2037-44882385-28952010-05-0101899210.6092/2037-4488/573506Il bastone sonoro del poetaFederica CordanoThe element that links skeptron (“sceptre”)and rabdon (“cane”) in Greek tradition is the authority devolving to the one who holds it, as he becomes an intermediary between the human and divine worlds, the spokesperson of the divinity with the double significance of poet and judge. Sometimes episodes of myth confuse the particular elements of the two semantic areas in which the “cane” has a key role, thereby broadening the semantic scope of the scene. Two examples: the scepter instead of the lyre is given to Hesiod by the Muses (Theogony, lines 30 ff) and enables him to “eternalize the past and the future”, but also makes himself equal to the basileis, whose objectivity and judgment he challenges; the cane instead of the scepter is what Apollo gives to Hermes in exchange for the lyre (Hymn to Hermes, lines 528 ff.), so that legislative capabilities and poetic – musical competences reinforce the importance of the object precisely through their coexistence.http://riviste.unimi.it/index.php/aristonothos/article/view/573
spellingShingle Federica Cordano
Il bastone sonoro del poeta
Aristonothos
title Il bastone sonoro del poeta
title_full Il bastone sonoro del poeta
title_fullStr Il bastone sonoro del poeta
title_full_unstemmed Il bastone sonoro del poeta
title_short Il bastone sonoro del poeta
title_sort il bastone sonoro del poeta
url http://riviste.unimi.it/index.php/aristonothos/article/view/573
work_keys_str_mv AT federicacordano ilbastonesonorodelpoeta