• Issue 7 • 2022 • Classics and Canonicity

    Issue 7 • 2022 • Classics and Canonicity


Published in December 2021, the previous issue of the Journal of Latin Cosmopolitanism and European Literatures was dedicated to the far-reaching influence of Johann Joachim Winckelmann (1717-1768) in creating a classical norm to study and value art in Western Europe. The papers collected in that issue reflected on the various ways in which Winckelmann’s classicizing tendency has affected the interpretation of art over the centuries, with a special focus on those works that have been considered not to meet aesthetic categories developed by the German art critic. 

The present issue (Spring 2022) turns to Winckelmann’s influence in the field of literary studies, where the existence of a normative standard has led to equally selective interpretations of literary works, styles and genres that, although often appreciated within their time or context of origin, were said by later critics not to meet the standards of the new classical norm. Each of the articles critically questions the concept of literary normativity and thus indicates the prejudices and biases which authors, texts and even whole periods have faced up until the present day.

Editorial


Editorial Note

Louis Verreth

2022-06-24 Issue 7 • 2022 • Classics and Canonicity

Articles


Writing in a World of Strangers: The Invention of Jewish Literature Revisited

Irene Zwiep

2022-06-24 Issue 7 • 2022 • Classics and Canonicity

A Critical Juncture: “Later” Latin Literature, the Newest Late Antiquity, and the Period of the Western Classic

Mark Vessey

2022-06-24 Issue 7 • 2022 • Classics and Canonicity

The Ordeal of a Sixth-Century Josef K: Boethius’ De Consolatione Philosophiae as a Modernist Drama

Piet S. Gerbrandy

2022-06-24 Issue 7 • 2022 • Classics and Canonicity

Response Piece


Ins and Outs and Opened and Closed

Danuta Shanzer

2022-06-24 Issue 7 • 2022 • Classics and Canonicity