
Published online:
31 October 2023
Published in print:
17 December 2008
Online ISBN:
9781383046007
Print ISBN:
9780199560349
Contents
Chapter
1 ‘The English Homer’: Shakespeare, Longinus, and English ‘Neoclassicism’
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Pages
37–54
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Published:December 2009
Cite
Hopkins, David, '‘The English Homer’: Shakespeare, Longinus, and English ‘Neoclassicism’', Conversing with Antiquity: English Poets and the Classics, from Shakespeare to Pope (Oxford , 2008; online edn, Oxford Academic, 31 Oct. 2023), https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199560349.003.0002, accessed 3 May 2025.
Abstract
Discussions of the relations between English writers and the classics have, whatever the precise nature of their larger assumptions or local conclusions, generally focused on the impact of classical literature and culture on those English writers’ work, whether by considering the broader effects of classical education and scholarship, or the specific responses of English writers to particular classical authors and themes. But the reception of the classics is also a topic which can have important implications when considering the afterlife of certain English writers themselves.
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