Ronsard and the Ghost of Astyanax

This article examines the emergence and transformation of Francion’s epic character in Ronsard’s works from 1550 to 1578. This study of Francion’s genesis in Ronsard’s works relies on the close reading of the variations of the ‘Ode de la paix’ and the beginning of the Franciade, as well as on the an...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Roulliere, A
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Taylor and Francis 2020
_version_ 1797071872427294720
author Roulliere, A
author_facet Roulliere, A
author_sort Roulliere, A
collection OXFORD
description This article examines the emergence and transformation of Francion’s epic character in Ronsard’s works from 1550 to 1578. This study of Francion’s genesis in Ronsard’s works relies on the close reading of the variations of the ‘Ode de la paix’ and the beginning of the Franciade, as well as on the analysis of the myth’s reception before and after 1572. In the 1550 ‘Ode de la paix’, the memory of the Virgilian intertext directly undermines the epic hero’s identity since he is presented as Hector’s only son, who in the classical tradition is named Astyanax and dies in Troy. Drawing on the problematic memory of Astyanax, the author studies how Francion’s fragile identity illustrates the complexity of the Renaissance concept of imitation and the difficulty of creating a national myth for France.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T22:59:31Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:6196a989-4b7f-4d99-96f3-27c486bd03f6
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-06T22:59:31Z
publishDate 2020
publisher Taylor and Francis
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:6196a989-4b7f-4d99-96f3-27c486bd03f62022-03-26T18:01:05ZRonsard and the Ghost of AstyanaxJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:6196a989-4b7f-4d99-96f3-27c486bd03f6EnglishSymplectic ElementsTaylor and Francis2020Roulliere, AThis article examines the emergence and transformation of Francion’s epic character in Ronsard’s works from 1550 to 1578. This study of Francion’s genesis in Ronsard’s works relies on the close reading of the variations of the ‘Ode de la paix’ and the beginning of the Franciade, as well as on the analysis of the myth’s reception before and after 1572. In the 1550 ‘Ode de la paix’, the memory of the Virgilian intertext directly undermines the epic hero’s identity since he is presented as Hector’s only son, who in the classical tradition is named Astyanax and dies in Troy. Drawing on the problematic memory of Astyanax, the author studies how Francion’s fragile identity illustrates the complexity of the Renaissance concept of imitation and the difficulty of creating a national myth for France.
spellingShingle Roulliere, A
Ronsard and the Ghost of Astyanax
title Ronsard and the Ghost of Astyanax
title_full Ronsard and the Ghost of Astyanax
title_fullStr Ronsard and the Ghost of Astyanax
title_full_unstemmed Ronsard and the Ghost of Astyanax
title_short Ronsard and the Ghost of Astyanax
title_sort ronsard and the ghost of astyanax
work_keys_str_mv AT roullierea ronsardandtheghostofastyanax