De Inconexis Continuum - A Study of the Late Antique Latin Wedding Centos
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Date
2011-05-06
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Abstract
The kind of literature that is called cento is studied in this thesis with a special focus on
two late antique Latin wedding poems, Cento Nuptialis written by Ausonius in the late
4th century A.D., and Epithalamium Fridi probably written in Carthage some hundred
years later. These two poems are the only late antique Latin centos which belong to the
same genre; they are therefore investigated with the aim of showing how centos
belonging to the same genre may relate in different ways to both their text of origin and
their genre.
The method used is based on the belief that centos are best described as ‘open
works,’ with a wide ‘field of possibilities.’ In the analyses a hermeneutical approach is
applied, and the Model Reader’s interpretations are in focus.
The two wedding centos relate in different ways to text of origin and genre.
Associations which forecast the events of the part of the poem called Imminutio, a
‘notion of combat’, and the double circumstances lying behind the composition of the
poem are found crucial for the interpretation of Cento Nuptialis. The humour of the
Imminutio part is explained as a result of incongruity between cento, text of origin and
genre-expectations. In Epithalamium Fridi, it is shown that the text of origin is sub-
ordinated to the panegyric scope of the epithalamium of occasion.
Some general conclusions are cautiously suggested. These concern: various kinds of
reinterpretation of the text of origin through the lens of a cento; different kinds of
guidance for the interpretation of a cento; and different functions for which centos may
be particularly apt, e.g. subversive and humorous poems.
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cento, cento poetry, Cento Nuptialis, Epithalamium Fridi, wedding poetry, epithalamia, late antique Latin poetry, Ausonius, Luxorius, Open works