Friday, August 30, 2013
Writing Myth: Mythography in the Ancient World cover

Classics professors Stephen Trzaskoma and R. Scott Smith have co-edited a new collection of essays.

Writing Myth: Mythography in the Ancient World

Series: Studies in the History and Anthropology of Religion, 4 
edited by Stephen Trzaskoma and R. Scott Smith
Peeters Publishers, 2013

From the publisher: This collection of essays brings innovative perspectives to the study of ancient mythography, that is, the writings of Greeks and Romans about their own mythical traditions. It treats a range of sources from the beginnings of myth criticism in the 5th century BCE to the end of antiquity in the 5th century CE, highlighting mythography's centrality to ancient views of myth and moving beyond seeing mythographic texts as valuable primarily for the preservation of details about traditional stories. Important individual mythographers are treated (e.g., Ps.-Apollodorus and Hyginus), but throughout there is an emphasis on the connections of mythography with more literary genres, such as epic, and more prestigious prose genres, such as historiography and geography. This makes the volume of interest for those who work on myth in Greek and Roman society, but also for anyone working on ancient intellectual history more broadly, including those who study rhetoric, education, literary composition, art and ancient scholarly traditions.

Available at the publisher's website.