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Corinna

Corinna or Korinna (Ancient Greek: Κόριννα, romanizedKorinna) was an ancient Greek lyric poet from Tanagra in Boeotia. Although ancient sources portray her as a contemporary of Pindar (born c. 518 BC), not all modern scholars accept the accuracy of this tradition. When she lived has been the subject of much debate since the early twentieth century, proposed dates ranging from the beginning of the fifth century to the late third century BC.

Corinna of Tanagra, c. 1893, by Frederic Leighton

Corinna's works survive only in fragments: three substantial sections of poems are preserved on second-century AD papyri from Egypt; several shorter pieces survive in quotations by ancient grammarians. They focus on local Boeotian legends, and are distinctive for their mythological innovations. Corinna's poetry often reworks well-known myths to include details not known from any other sources. Though respected in her hometown, Tanagra, and popular in ancient Rome, modern critics have often regarded her as parochial and dull; her poetry is nonetheless of interest as she is one of the few female poets from ancient Greece whose work survives.

Life

 
According to ancient tradition, Corinna was a pupil of Myrtis of Anthedon, with whom she sits in this painting by Ernst Stückelberg.

Corinna was from Tanagra[a] in Boeotia.[4] The Suda, a tenth-century encyclopedia, records that she was the daughter of Acheloodorus and Procratia, and was nicknamed Myia (Μυῖα, "the fly").[1] According to ancient tradition, she lived during the fifth century BC.[5] She was supposed to have been a contemporary of Pindar, either having taught him, or been a fellow-pupil of Myrtis of Anthedon with him.[b][7] Corinna was said to have competed with Pindar, defeating him in at least one poetry competition, though some sources claim five.[c][7][9]

Since the early twentieth century, scholars have been divided over the accuracy of the traditional chronology of Corinna's life.[10] One of the first scholars to question this was Edgar Lobel,[11] who in 1930 concluded that there is no reason to believe she predated the orthography used on the Berlin papyrus, on which fragments of two of her poems are preserved.[d][14] The debate over Corinna's date has dominated scholarship since,[15] and the evidence remains inconclusive.[16] Sceptics of the traditional chronology argue that there is no ancient mention of Corinna before the first century BC, and that the orthography of her surviving poetry was not established until after the mid-fourth century.[17] This is the most common view,[18] with Martin Litchfield West[19] and David A. Campbell[20] among those who believe a late date for Corinna. Campbell concludes that a third-century date is "almost certain".[21]

The alternative view, accepting the traditional fifth-century date, is set forth by scholars such as Archibald Allen and Jiří Frel.[22] If the traditional date is correct, the lack of ancient reference to Corinna before the first century, and the later orthography, could both be explained by her being of only local interest before the Hellenistic period. According to this theory, when she was rediscovered and popularised in the Hellenistic period her poetry would have been re-spelled into contemporary Boeotian orthography, as her original fifth-century orthography was too unfamiliar to a third-century audience.[23] An apparent terminus ante quem is established by the second-century AD theologian Tatian, who says in his Address to the Greeks that the fourth-century sculptor Silanion made a portrait-statue of Corinna.[24] A Roman-era copy of a fourth-century statue in the Musée Vivenel in Compiègne, France, is identified by an inscription on the base as depicting Corinna, and is widely accepted by archeologists as a copy of Silanion's sculpture.[25] Philologists continue to regard this attribution with what Thea S. Thorsen describes as "unwarranted scepticism".[26] West, for instance, accepts that the Compiègne statuette is a copy of a fourth-century work, but suggests that it was not originally intended to depict Corinna, only gaining that association in the Roman period.[27] Thorsen argues that the sculpture was always intended as an image of Corinna, noting that the figure is shown with five scrolls that match the five books of poetry attributed to Corinna in antiquity.[26]

Poetry

 
Corinna: The Lyric Muse, c. 1855, by William Brodie

Corinna, like Pindar, wrote choral lyric poetry – as demonstrated by her invocation of Terpsichore, the Muse of dance and chorus, in one of her fragments.[28] According to the Suda, she wrote five books of poetry.[20] Her works were collected in a Boeotian edition in the late third or early second century BC, and later Hellenistic and Roman texts of Corinna derived from this.[29] This Boeotian edition was produced in a scholarly format, with titles for the poems; it may have also included accent marks and hypotheses, but is unlikely to have included line numbers.[30]

Corinna wrote in a literary dialect, which had features of her Boeotian vernacular,[31] along with similarities to the language of epic both in morphology and in her choice of words;[32] Daniel Berman describes it as "epic written as Boeotian".[33] If Corinna was a contemporary of Pindar, this use of the local vernacular as a literary language is archaic – though the earlier poets Alcman and Stesichorus wrote in literary dialects based on their own vernaculars, the fifth-century choral poets Pindar and Bacchylides both wrote in Doric despite it not being their local dialect. On the other hand, if she is to be located closer to the Hellenistic period, parallels can be found in the poetry of Theocritus, who also used features of his native dialect in the Idylls.[34]

Poems

About forty fragments of Corinna's poetry survive,[e] more than any ancient woman poet except for Sappho,[36] though no complete poems of hers are known.[9] The three most substantial fragments are preserved on pieces of papyrus discovered in Hermopolis and Oxyrhynchus in Egypt, dating to the second century AD; many of the shorter fragments survive in citations by grammarians interested in Corinna's Boeotian dialect.[9]

Two fragments of Corinna's poetry are preserved on the same papyrus (P.Berol. 13284), now in the collection of the Berlin State Museums. The first of these tells the story of a singing contest between the mountains Cithaeron and Helicon. The surviving portion includes the ending of one of the mountain's songs,[f] the gods voting on the winner of the contest, and the losing mountain, Helicon, throwing down a boulder in anger.[38] The second poem preserved on this papyrus tells of the daughters of the river-god Asopus. It mostly consists of a prophet, Acraephen, telling Asopus how his daughters were abducted by the gods, and that they will go on to give birth to many heroes; the papyrus ends with a highly fragmentary portion in which Asopus appears to be reconciled to his daughters' fate, and he responds "happily".[39] The third substantial fragment of Corinna's poetry, preserved on a papyrus in the Sackler Library of the University of Oxford (P.Oxy. 2370), invokes the muse of dance and choral poetry, Terpsichore. It is usually thought to be from a partheneion, a kind of poem performed by a chorus of young women for a public occasion.[40] West suggests that it was written as an introductory poem for Corinna's collection.[41]

Style

 
Part of P.Berol. 13284, on which Corinna's poems on the "Contest of Helicon and Cithaeron" and the "Daughters of Asopus" are preserved

Corinna's language is clear, simple, and generally undecorated,[42] and she tends to use simple metrical schemes.[4] Her poetry focuses more on the narrative than on intricate use of language.[43] Her use of lyric poetry to tell mythic narratives is similar to that of Stesichorus.[44] Corinna's poetry is often ironic or humorous in tone, in contrast with the serious tone of her Boeotian compatriot Pindar.[45]

Corinna's poetry is almost entirely concerned with myth.[46] According to a story recounted by Plutarch in On the Glory of the Athenians, she considered myth the proper subject for poetry, rebuking Pindar for not paying sufficient attention to it.[47] Pindar was said to have responded to this criticism by filling his next ode with mythical allusions, leading Corinna to advise him, "Sow with the hand, not with the sack."[48] Corinna's poetry concentrates on local legends,[49] with poems about Orion, Oedipus, and the Seven against Thebes.[50] Her "Orestes"[g] is possibly an exception to her focus on Boeotian legends.[21] Her poetry often reworks mythological tradition[51] – according to Derek Collins, "the most distinctive feature of Corinna's poetry is her mythological innovation"[52] – frequently including details which are otherwise unknown.[53] These reworkings often present gods and heroes in a more positive light than in more common versions of the myths.[54]

Two of Corinna's most substantial fragments, the "Daughters of Asopus" and "Terpsichore" poems, demonstrate a strong interest in genealogy.[55] This genealogical focus is reminiscent of the works of Hesiod, especially the Catalogue of Women, though other lost genealogical poetry is known from the archaic period – for instance by Asius of Samos and Eumelus of Corinth.[56] The third major surviving fragment of Corinna's poetry, on the contest between Mount Cithaeron and Mount Helicon, seems also to have been influenced by Hesiod, who also wrote an account of this myth.[57]

Marilyn B. Skinner argues that Corinna's poetry is part of the tradition of "women's poetry" in ancient Greece, though it differs significantly from Sappho's conception of that genre.[58] She considers that although it was written by a woman, Corinna's poetry tells stories from a patriarchal point of view,[58] describing women's lives from a masculine perspective.[59] Anne Klinck suggests that "a certain feminine irony is detectable" in Corinna's works,[60] and John Heath argues that in the "Terpsichore" poem Corinna deliberately emphasises her position as a woman poet.[61] Diane Rayor argues that although Corinna's poetry does not directly challenge patriarchal traditions, it is still "woman-identified", focusing on women's experiences and being written for a female audience.[62]

Performance context

The circumstances in which Corinna's poetry was performed are uncertain, and have been the subject of much scholarly debate. At least some of her poetry was probably performed for a mixed-gender audience, though some may have been intended for a specifically female audience.[63] Skinner suggests that Corinna's songs were composed for performance by a chorus of young girls in religious festivals, and were related to the ancient genre of partheneia.[28] The poems may have been performed at cult celebrations in the places which appear in her poetry. Possible settings include the Mouseia at Thespia, proposed by West, and at the festival of the Daedala at Plataea, suggested by Gabriele Burzacchini.[64]

Reception

 
Ancient marble sculpture of Corinna, possibly a copy of Silanion's bronze mentioned by Tatian

Corinna was well-regarded by the people of ancient Tanagra, her hometown. Pausanias reports that there was a monument to her in the streets of the town – probably a statue – and a painting of her in the gymnasium.[65] Tatian writes in his Address to the Greeks that Silanion had sculpted her.[h][24] In the early Roman Empire, Corinna's poetry was popular.[4] The earliest mention of Corinna is by the first-century BC poet Antipater of Thessalonica, who includes her in his selection of nine "mortal muses".[66] Ovid gives his lover the pseudonym Corinna in his Amores, often believed to be a reference to the Tanagran poet.[67] She is also named by Propertius as a model for Cynthia, and by Statius along with Callimachus, Lycophron, and Sophron.[68] Alexander Polyhistor wrote a commentary on her work.[69]

In the nineteenth century, Corinna was still remembered as a poetic authority, Karl Otfried Müller presenting her as a preeminent ancient poet and citing the stories of her competition against Pindar.[70] Modern critics have tended to dismiss Corinna's work, considering it dull.[71] For instance, West describes Corinna as more gifted than most local poets, but lacking the originality that would put her on the same level as Bacchylides or Pindar.[72] Athanassios Vergados argues that Corinna's poor reception among modern critics is due to her focus on local Boeotian traditions rather than broader subject matter, giving her a reputation of parochialism and thus limited quality.[24] More recently, critics have begun to see Corinna's poetry as engaging with Panhellenic mythical and literary traditions, rewriting them to give Boeotian characters a more prominent role.[73] Corinna's work has also been of interest to feminist literary historians as one of the few extant examples of ancient Greek women's poetry.[4]

Notes

  1. ^ The Suda says she came from Tanagra or Thebes;[1] Pausanias says Tanagra.[2] Most scholars accept Tanagra as Corinna's home.[3]
  2. ^ The Vita Pindari Metrica claims Corinna taught Pindar;[6] the Suda that she studied under Myrtis.[1]
  3. ^ Pausanias says once;[2] the Suda and Aelian five times.[1][8]
  4. ^ Lobel dates this to 350–250 BC.[12] Denys Page argues for a later date, between 225 and 175 BC.[13]
  5. ^ Denys Page includes thirty-eight in his edition;[35] Ian Plant says "perhaps as many as forty-two" fragments survive.[9]
  6. ^ It is uncertain which mountain is singing in the surviving portion of the poem, but it is generally thought to be Cithaeron.[37]
  7. ^ Fragment 690 in Denys Page's Poetae Melici Graeci
  8. ^ As Silanion was active in the fourth century BC, this report is problematic for those scholars who believe that Corinna dates to the third century, and the existence of the statue Tatian reports has been doubted; Athanassios Vergados describes such doubts as unjustifiable.[24]

References

  1. ^ a b c d Suda κ 2087, "Corinna"
  2. ^ a b Pausanias, Description of Greece 9.22.3
  3. ^ Berman 2010, p. 41.
  4. ^ a b c d Skinner 1983, p. 9.
  5. ^ West 1990, p. 553.
  6. ^ Vita Pindari Metrica 9 f.
  7. ^ a b Allen & Frel 1972, p. 26.
  8. ^ Claudius Aelianus, Varia Historia 13.25
  9. ^ a b c d Plant 2004, p. 92.
  10. ^ Collins 2006, p. 19.
  11. ^ Thorsen 2020, n. 76.
  12. ^ Lobel 1930, p. 356.
  13. ^ Page 1963, p. 67.
  14. ^ Lobel 1930, p. 365.
  15. ^ Thorsen 2020, p. 16.
  16. ^ Vergados 2017, pp. 243–244.
  17. ^ Campbell 1992, pp. 1–2.
  18. ^ Kousoulini 2016, p. 107.
  19. ^ West 1990.
  20. ^ a b Campbell 1992, pp. 1–3.
  21. ^ a b Campbell 1992, p. 3.
  22. ^ Collins 2006, p. 19, n. 6.
  23. ^ Page 1963, p. 69.
  24. ^ a b c d Vergados 2017, p. 244.
  25. ^ Thorsen 2020, pp. 11–12.
  26. ^ a b Thorsen 2020, p. 11.
  27. ^ West 1970, p. 280.
  28. ^ a b Skinner 1983, p. 11.
  29. ^ West 1970, p. 277.
  30. ^ West 1970, pp. 277–278.
  31. ^ Page 1963, p. 65.
  32. ^ Berman 2010, pp. 54–55.
  33. ^ Berman 2010, p. 55.
  34. ^ Berman 2010, p. 56.
  35. ^ Page 1963, pp. 9–45.
  36. ^ Balmer 1996, p. 33.
  37. ^ Heath 2017, p. 99, n. 44.
  38. ^ Henderson 1995, p. 33.
  39. ^ McPhee 2018, pp. 200–201.
  40. ^ Heath 2017, p. 84.
  41. ^ West 1970, p. 283.
  42. ^ Campbell 1967, p. 410.
  43. ^ Larmour 2005, p. 46.
  44. ^ Rayor 1993, pp. 220–221.
  45. ^ Larmour 2005, p. 47.
  46. ^ Heath 2017, p. 103.
  47. ^ Collins 2006, p. 26.
  48. ^ Smyth 1963, p. 337.
  49. ^ West 1990, p. 555.
  50. ^ Snyder 1991, pp. 44–45.
  51. ^ Larmour 2005, p. 29.
  52. ^ Collins 2006, p. 21.
  53. ^ Heath 2017, p. 104.
  54. ^ McPhee 2018, p. 204.
  55. ^ Larson 2002, p. 50.
  56. ^ Larson 2002, p. 49.
  57. ^ Collins 2006, pp. 26–28.
  58. ^ a b Skinner 1983, p. 10.
  59. ^ Skinner 1983, p. 15.
  60. ^ Klinck 2008, p. 153.
  61. ^ Heath 2017, p. 96.
  62. ^ Rayor 1993, p. 222.
  63. ^ Larmour 2005, p. 25.
  64. ^ Larmour 2005, p. 37.
  65. ^ Snyder 1991, p. 42.
  66. ^ Snyder 1991, p. 43.
  67. ^ Heath 2013, p. 157.
  68. ^ Thorsen 2020, p. 3.
  69. ^ Vergados 2017, p. 245.
  70. ^ Thorsen 2020, pp. 15–16.
  71. ^ Skinner 1983, p. 17.
  72. ^ West 1970, p. 286.
  73. ^ McPhee 2018, p. 199.

Works cited

  • Allen, Archibald; Frel, Jiri (1972). "A Date for Corinna". The Classical Journal. 68 (1): 26–30. JSTOR 3296024.
  • Balmer, Josephine (1996). Classical Women Poets. Newcastle-upon-Tyne: Bloodaxe Books. ISBN 1-85224-342-2.
  • Berman, Daniel W. (2010). "The Language and Landscape of Korinna". Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies. 50 (1): 41–62.
  • Campbell, D. A. (1967). Greek Lyric Poetry: a Selection. New York: Macmillan.
  • Campbell, D. A. (1992). Greek Lyric Poetry IV: Bacchylides, Corinna, and Others. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-99508-6.
  • Collins, Derek (2006). "Corinna and Mythological Innovation". The Classical Quarterly. 56 (1): 19–32. doi:10.1017/S0009838806000036. JSTOR 4493385. S2CID 171018980.
  • Heath, John (2013). "Why Corinna?". Hermes. 141 (2): 155–170. doi:10.25162/hermes-2013-0015. JSTOR 43652844. S2CID 252453257.
  • Heath, John (2017). "Corinna's 'Old Wives' Tales'". Harvard Studies in Classical Philology. 109: 83–130. JSTOR 44863954.
  • Henderson, W. J. (1995). "Corinna of Tanagra on Poetry". Acta Classica. 38: 29–41. JSTOR 24594521.
  • Klinck, Anne L. (2008). Women's Songs in Ancient Greece. Montreal & Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 978-0-7735-3448-3.
  • Kousoulini, Vasiliki (2016). "Panhellenic and Epichoric Elements in Corinna's Catalogues". Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies. 56 (1): 82–110.
  • Larmour, David H.J. (2005). "Corinna's Poetic Metis and the Epinikian Tradition". In Greene, Ellen (ed.). Women Poets in Ancient Greece and Rome. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. pp. 25–58. ISBN 0-8061-3664-2.
  • Larson, Jennifer (2002). "Corinna and the Daughters of Asopus". Syllecta Classica. 13: 47–62. doi:10.1353/syl.2002.0006. S2CID 161788185.
  • Lobel, Edgar (1930). "Corinna". Hermes. 65 (3): 356–365. JSTOR 4474178.
  • McPhee, Brian D. (2018). "Mythological Innovations in Corinna's Asopides Poem (fr.654.ii–iv PMG)". Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies. 58 (2): 198–222.
  • Page, Denys L. (1963) [1953]. Corinna. London: The Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies.
  • Plant, I. M. (2004). Women Writers of Ancient Greece and Rome: an Anthology. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-3621-9.
  • Rayor, Diane (1993). "Korinna: Gender and the Narrative Tradition". Arethusa. 26 (3): 219–231. JSTOR 26309654.
  • Skinner, Marilyn B. (1983). "Corinna of Tanagra and her Audience". Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature. 2 (1): 9–20. doi:10.2307/464203. JSTOR 464203.
  • Smyth, Herbert Weir (1963). Greek Melic Poets (4th ed.). New York: Biblo and Tannen. ISBN 978-0-8196-0120-9.
  • Snyder, Jane McIntosh (1991). The Woman and the Lyre: Women Writers in Classical Greece and Rome. Carbondale: SIU Press. ISBN 978-0-8093-1706-6.
  • Thorsen, Thea S. (2020). "'Divine Corinna': Pre-Twentieth Century Receptions of an Artistic Authority" (PDF). EuGeStA. 10.
  • Vergados, Athanassios (2017). "Corinna". In Sider, David (ed.). Hellenistic Poetry: A Selection. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. pp. 243–263. ISBN 978-0-472-05313-1.
  • West, Martin L. (1970). "Corinna". The Classical Quarterly. 20 (2): 277–287. doi:10.1017/S0009838800036235. JSTOR 637425. S2CID 246875832.
  • West, Martin L. (1990). "Dating Corinna". The Classical Quarterly. 40 (2): 553–557. doi:10.1017/S0009838800043172. JSTOR 639119. S2CID 246874256.

External links

  • "Korinna 1 (PMG 655)". Diotíma. Translated by Rayor, Diane. Retrieved 13 February 2022.
  •   Works by or about Corinna at Wikisource

corinna, other, uses, disambiguation, korinna, ancient, greek, Κόριννα, romanized, korinna, ancient, greek, lyric, poet, from, tanagra, boeotia, although, ancient, sources, portray, contemporary, pindar, born, modern, scholars, accept, accuracy, this, traditio. For other uses see Corinna disambiguation Corinna or Korinna Ancient Greek Korinna romanized Korinna was an ancient Greek lyric poet from Tanagra in Boeotia Although ancient sources portray her as a contemporary of Pindar born c 518 BC not all modern scholars accept the accuracy of this tradition When she lived has been the subject of much debate since the early twentieth century proposed dates ranging from the beginning of the fifth century to the late third century BC Corinna of Tanagra c 1893 by Frederic Leighton Corinna s works survive only in fragments three substantial sections of poems are preserved on second century AD papyri from Egypt several shorter pieces survive in quotations by ancient grammarians They focus on local Boeotian legends and are distinctive for their mythological innovations Corinna s poetry often reworks well known myths to include details not known from any other sources Though respected in her hometown Tanagra and popular in ancient Rome modern critics have often regarded her as parochial and dull her poetry is nonetheless of interest as she is one of the few female poets from ancient Greece whose work survives Contents 1 Life 2 Poetry 2 1 Poems 2 2 Style 2 3 Performance context 3 Reception 4 Notes 5 References 6 Works cited 7 External linksLife Edit According to ancient tradition Corinna was a pupil of Myrtis of Anthedon with whom she sits in this painting by Ernst Stuckelberg Corinna was from Tanagra a in Boeotia 4 The Suda a tenth century encyclopedia records that she was the daughter of Acheloodorus and Procratia and was nicknamed Myia Myῖa the fly 1 According to ancient tradition she lived during the fifth century BC 5 She was supposed to have been a contemporary of Pindar either having taught him or been a fellow pupil of Myrtis of Anthedon with him b 7 Corinna was said to have competed with Pindar defeating him in at least one poetry competition though some sources claim five c 7 9 Since the early twentieth century scholars have been divided over the accuracy of the traditional chronology of Corinna s life 10 One of the first scholars to question this was Edgar Lobel 11 who in 1930 concluded that there is no reason to believe she predated the orthography used on the Berlin papyrus on which fragments of two of her poems are preserved d 14 The debate over Corinna s date has dominated scholarship since 15 and the evidence remains inconclusive 16 Sceptics of the traditional chronology argue that there is no ancient mention of Corinna before the first century BC and that the orthography of her surviving poetry was not established until after the mid fourth century 17 This is the most common view 18 with Martin Litchfield West 19 and David A Campbell 20 among those who believe a late date for Corinna Campbell concludes that a third century date is almost certain 21 The alternative view accepting the traditional fifth century date is set forth by scholars such as Archibald Allen and Jiri Frel 22 If the traditional date is correct the lack of ancient reference to Corinna before the first century and the later orthography could both be explained by her being of only local interest before the Hellenistic period According to this theory when she was rediscovered and popularised in the Hellenistic period her poetry would have been re spelled into contemporary Boeotian orthography as her original fifth century orthography was too unfamiliar to a third century audience 23 An apparent terminus ante quem is established by the second century AD theologian Tatian who says in his Address to the Greeks that the fourth century sculptor Silanion made a portrait statue of Corinna 24 A Roman era copy of a fourth century statue in the Musee Vivenel in Compiegne France is identified by an inscription on the base as depicting Corinna and is widely accepted by archeologists as a copy of Silanion s sculpture 25 Philologists continue to regard this attribution with what Thea S Thorsen describes as unwarranted scepticism 26 West for instance accepts that the Compiegne statuette is a copy of a fourth century work but suggests that it was not originally intended to depict Corinna only gaining that association in the Roman period 27 Thorsen argues that the sculpture was always intended as an image of Corinna noting that the figure is shown with five scrolls that match the five books of poetry attributed to Corinna in antiquity 26 Poetry Edit Corinna The Lyric Muse c 1855 by William Brodie Corinna like Pindar wrote choral lyric poetry as demonstrated by her invocation of Terpsichore the Muse of dance and chorus in one of her fragments 28 According to the Suda she wrote five books of poetry 20 Her works were collected in a Boeotian edition in the late third or early second century BC and later Hellenistic and Roman texts of Corinna derived from this 29 This Boeotian edition was produced in a scholarly format with titles for the poems it may have also included accent marks and hypotheses but is unlikely to have included line numbers 30 Corinna wrote in a literary dialect which had features of her Boeotian vernacular 31 along with similarities to the language of epic both in morphology and in her choice of words 32 Daniel Berman describes it as epic written as Boeotian 33 If Corinna was a contemporary of Pindar this use of the local vernacular as a literary language is archaic though the earlier poets Alcman and Stesichorus wrote in literary dialects based on their own vernaculars the fifth century choral poets Pindar and Bacchylides both wrote in Doric despite it not being their local dialect On the other hand if she is to be located closer to the Hellenistic period parallels can be found in the poetry of Theocritus who also used features of his native dialect in the Idylls 34 Poems Edit About forty fragments of Corinna s poetry survive e more than any ancient woman poet except for Sappho 36 though no complete poems of hers are known 9 The three most substantial fragments are preserved on pieces of papyrus discovered in Hermopolis and Oxyrhynchus in Egypt dating to the second century AD many of the shorter fragments survive in citations by grammarians interested in Corinna s Boeotian dialect 9 Two fragments of Corinna s poetry are preserved on the same papyrus P Berol 13284 now in the collection of the Berlin State Museums The first of these tells the story of a singing contest between the mountains Cithaeron and Helicon The surviving portion includes the ending of one of the mountain s songs f the gods voting on the winner of the contest and the losing mountain Helicon throwing down a boulder in anger 38 The second poem preserved on this papyrus tells of the daughters of the river god Asopus It mostly consists of a prophet Acraephen telling Asopus how his daughters were abducted by the gods and that they will go on to give birth to many heroes the papyrus ends with a highly fragmentary portion in which Asopus appears to be reconciled to his daughters fate and he responds happily 39 The third substantial fragment of Corinna s poetry preserved on a papyrus in the Sackler Library of the University of Oxford P Oxy 2370 invokes the muse of dance and choral poetry Terpsichore It is usually thought to be from a partheneion a kind of poem performed by a chorus of young women for a public occasion 40 West suggests that it was written as an introductory poem for Corinna s collection 41 Style Edit Part of P Berol 13284 on which Corinna s poems on the Contest of Helicon and Cithaeron and the Daughters of Asopus are preserved Corinna s language is clear simple and generally undecorated 42 and she tends to use simple metrical schemes 4 Her poetry focuses more on the narrative than on intricate use of language 43 Her use of lyric poetry to tell mythic narratives is similar to that of Stesichorus 44 Corinna s poetry is often ironic or humorous in tone in contrast with the serious tone of her Boeotian compatriot Pindar 45 Corinna s poetry is almost entirely concerned with myth 46 According to a story recounted by Plutarch in On the Glory of the Athenians she considered myth the proper subject for poetry rebuking Pindar for not paying sufficient attention to it 47 Pindar was said to have responded to this criticism by filling his next ode with mythical allusions leading Corinna to advise him Sow with the hand not with the sack 48 Corinna s poetry concentrates on local legends 49 with poems about Orion Oedipus and the Seven against Thebes 50 Her Orestes g is possibly an exception to her focus on Boeotian legends 21 Her poetry often reworks mythological tradition 51 according to Derek Collins the most distinctive feature of Corinna s poetry is her mythological innovation 52 frequently including details which are otherwise unknown 53 These reworkings often present gods and heroes in a more positive light than in more common versions of the myths 54 Two of Corinna s most substantial fragments the Daughters of Asopus and Terpsichore poems demonstrate a strong interest in genealogy 55 This genealogical focus is reminiscent of the works of Hesiod especially the Catalogue of Women though other lost genealogical poetry is known from the archaic period for instance by Asius of Samos and Eumelus of Corinth 56 The third major surviving fragment of Corinna s poetry on the contest between Mount Cithaeron and Mount Helicon seems also to have been influenced by Hesiod who also wrote an account of this myth 57 Marilyn B Skinner argues that Corinna s poetry is part of the tradition of women s poetry in ancient Greece though it differs significantly from Sappho s conception of that genre 58 She considers that although it was written by a woman Corinna s poetry tells stories from a patriarchal point of view 58 describing women s lives from a masculine perspective 59 Anne Klinck suggests that a certain feminine irony is detectable in Corinna s works 60 and John Heath argues that in the Terpsichore poem Corinna deliberately emphasises her position as a woman poet 61 Diane Rayor argues that although Corinna s poetry does not directly challenge patriarchal traditions it is still woman identified focusing on women s experiences and being written for a female audience 62 Performance context Edit The circumstances in which Corinna s poetry was performed are uncertain and have been the subject of much scholarly debate At least some of her poetry was probably performed for a mixed gender audience though some may have been intended for a specifically female audience 63 Skinner suggests that Corinna s songs were composed for performance by a chorus of young girls in religious festivals and were related to the ancient genre of partheneia 28 The poems may have been performed at cult celebrations in the places which appear in her poetry Possible settings include the Mouseia at Thespia proposed by West and at the festival of the Daedala at Plataea suggested by Gabriele Burzacchini 64 Reception Edit Ancient marble sculpture of Corinna possibly a copy of Silanion s bronze mentioned by Tatian Corinna was well regarded by the people of ancient Tanagra her hometown Pausanias reports that there was a monument to her in the streets of the town probably a statue and a painting of her in the gymnasium 65 Tatian writes in his Address to the Greeks that Silanion had sculpted her h 24 In the early Roman Empire Corinna s poetry was popular 4 The earliest mention of Corinna is by the first century BC poet Antipater of Thessalonica who includes her in his selection of nine mortal muses 66 Ovid gives his lover the pseudonym Corinna in his Amores often believed to be a reference to the Tanagran poet 67 She is also named by Propertius as a model for Cynthia and by Statius along with Callimachus Lycophron and Sophron 68 Alexander Polyhistor wrote a commentary on her work 69 In the nineteenth century Corinna was still remembered as a poetic authority Karl Otfried Muller presenting her as a preeminent ancient poet and citing the stories of her competition against Pindar 70 Modern critics have tended to dismiss Corinna s work considering it dull 71 For instance West describes Corinna as more gifted than most local poets but lacking the originality that would put her on the same level as Bacchylides or Pindar 72 Athanassios Vergados argues that Corinna s poor reception among modern critics is due to her focus on local Boeotian traditions rather than broader subject matter giving her a reputation of parochialism and thus limited quality 24 More recently critics have begun to see Corinna s poetry as engaging with Panhellenic mythical and literary traditions rewriting them to give Boeotian characters a more prominent role 73 Corinna s work has also been of interest to feminist literary historians as one of the few extant examples of ancient Greek women s poetry 4 Notes Edit The Suda says she came from Tanagra or Thebes 1 Pausanias says Tanagra 2 Most scholars accept Tanagra as Corinna s home 3 The Vita Pindari Metrica claims Corinna taught Pindar 6 the Suda that she studied under Myrtis 1 Pausanias says once 2 the Suda and Aelian five times 1 8 Lobel dates this to 350 250 BC 12 Denys Page argues for a later date between 225 and 175 BC 13 Denys Page includes thirty eight in his edition 35 Ian Plant says perhaps as many as forty two fragments survive 9 It is uncertain which mountain is singing in the surviving portion of the poem but it is generally thought to be Cithaeron 37 Fragment 690 in Denys Page s Poetae Melici Graeci As Silanion was active in the fourth century BC this report is problematic for those scholars who believe that Corinna dates to the third century and the existence of the statue Tatian reports has been doubted Athanassios Vergados describes such doubts as unjustifiable 24 References Edit a b c d Suda k 2087 Corinna a b Pausanias Description of Greece 9 22 3 Berman 2010 p 41 a b c d Skinner 1983 p 9 West 1990 p 553 Vita Pindari Metrica 9 f a b Allen amp Frel 1972 p 26 Claudius Aelianus Varia Historia 13 25 a b c d Plant 2004 p 92 Collins 2006 p 19 Thorsen 2020 n 76 Lobel 1930 p 356 Page 1963 p 67 Lobel 1930 p 365 Thorsen 2020 p 16 Vergados 2017 pp 243 244 Campbell 1992 pp 1 2 Kousoulini 2016 p 107 West 1990 a b Campbell 1992 pp 1 3 a b Campbell 1992 p 3 Collins 2006 p 19 n 6 Page 1963 p 69 a b c d Vergados 2017 p 244 Thorsen 2020 pp 11 12 a b Thorsen 2020 p 11 West 1970 p 280 a b Skinner 1983 p 11 West 1970 p 277 West 1970 pp 277 278 Page 1963 p 65 Berman 2010 pp 54 55 Berman 2010 p 55 Berman 2010 p 56 Page 1963 pp 9 45 Balmer 1996 p 33 Heath 2017 p 99 n 44 Henderson 1995 p 33 McPhee 2018 pp 200 201 Heath 2017 p 84 West 1970 p 283 Campbell 1967 p 410 Larmour 2005 p 46 Rayor 1993 pp 220 221 Larmour 2005 p 47 Heath 2017 p 103 Collins 2006 p 26 Smyth 1963 p 337 West 1990 p 555 Snyder 1991 pp 44 45 Larmour 2005 p 29 Collins 2006 p 21 Heath 2017 p 104 McPhee 2018 p 204 Larson 2002 p 50 Larson 2002 p 49 Collins 2006 pp 26 28 a b Skinner 1983 p 10 Skinner 1983 p 15 Klinck 2008 p 153 Heath 2017 p 96 Rayor 1993 p 222 Larmour 2005 p 25 Larmour 2005 p 37 Snyder 1991 p 42 Snyder 1991 p 43 Heath 2013 p 157 Thorsen 2020 p 3 Vergados 2017 p 245 Thorsen 2020 pp 15 16 Skinner 1983 p 17 West 1970 p 286 McPhee 2018 p 199 Works cited EditAllen Archibald Frel Jiri 1972 A Date for Corinna The Classical Journal 68 1 26 30 JSTOR 3296024 Balmer Josephine 1996 Classical Women Poets Newcastle upon Tyne Bloodaxe Books ISBN 1 85224 342 2 Berman Daniel W 2010 The Language and Landscape of Korinna Greek Roman and Byzantine Studies 50 1 41 62 Campbell D A 1967 Greek Lyric Poetry a Selection New York Macmillan Campbell D A 1992 Greek Lyric Poetry IV Bacchylides Corinna and Others Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 99508 6 Collins Derek 2006 Corinna and Mythological Innovation The Classical Quarterly 56 1 19 32 doi 10 1017 S0009838806000036 JSTOR 4493385 S2CID 171018980 Heath John 2013 Why Corinna Hermes 141 2 155 170 doi 10 25162 hermes 2013 0015 JSTOR 43652844 S2CID 252453257 Heath John 2017 Corinna s Old Wives Tales Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 109 83 130 JSTOR 44863954 Henderson W J 1995 Corinna of Tanagra on Poetry Acta Classica 38 29 41 JSTOR 24594521 Klinck Anne L 2008 Women s Songs in Ancient Greece Montreal amp Kingston McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 978 0 7735 3448 3 Kousoulini Vasiliki 2016 Panhellenic and Epichoric Elements in Corinna s Catalogues Greek Roman and Byzantine Studies 56 1 82 110 Larmour David H J 2005 Corinna s Poetic Metis and the Epinikian Tradition In Greene Ellen ed Women Poets in Ancient Greece and Rome Norman University of Oklahoma Press pp 25 58 ISBN 0 8061 3664 2 Larson Jennifer 2002 Corinna and the Daughters of Asopus Syllecta Classica 13 47 62 doi 10 1353 syl 2002 0006 S2CID 161788185 Lobel Edgar 1930 Corinna Hermes 65 3 356 365 JSTOR 4474178 McPhee Brian D 2018 Mythological Innovations in Corinna s Asopides Poem fr 654 ii iv PMG Greek Roman and Byzantine Studies 58 2 198 222 Page Denys L 1963 1953 Corinna London The Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies Plant I M 2004 Women Writers of Ancient Greece and Rome an Anthology Norman University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0 8061 3621 9 Rayor Diane 1993 Korinna Gender and the Narrative Tradition Arethusa 26 3 219 231 JSTOR 26309654 Skinner Marilyn B 1983 Corinna of Tanagra and her Audience Tulsa Studies in Women s Literature 2 1 9 20 doi 10 2307 464203 JSTOR 464203 Smyth Herbert Weir 1963 Greek Melic Poets 4th ed New York Biblo and Tannen ISBN 978 0 8196 0120 9 Snyder Jane McIntosh 1991 The Woman and the Lyre Women Writers in Classical Greece and Rome Carbondale SIU Press ISBN 978 0 8093 1706 6 Thorsen Thea S 2020 Divine Corinna Pre Twentieth Century Receptions of an Artistic Authority PDF EuGeStA 10 Vergados Athanassios 2017 Corinna In Sider David ed Hellenistic Poetry A Selection Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press pp 243 263 ISBN 978 0 472 05313 1 West Martin L 1970 Corinna The Classical Quarterly 20 2 277 287 doi 10 1017 S0009838800036235 JSTOR 637425 S2CID 246875832 West Martin L 1990 Dating Corinna The Classical Quarterly 40 2 553 557 doi 10 1017 S0009838800043172 JSTOR 639119 S2CID 246874256 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Corinna poetess Korinna 1 PMG 655 Diotima Translated by Rayor Diane Retrieved 13 February 2022 Works by or about Corinna at Wikisource Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Corinna amp oldid 1133022100, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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