In his Confessions, Augustine echoes the fuga sui theme from Lucretius, Horace and Seneca. Unlike his pagan predecessors, however, there is no longer any real antithesis between mutatio loci and mutatio animi; the opposition shifts in fact entirely into the space of the soul, and lies in the two directions in which this space can be travelled: away from God or towards God. Augustine also differs from pagan models in the representation of this inner wandering, marked by a forced and ‘paradoxical’ syntax.

Quis locus est in me? Linguaggio e spazi della fuga sui nelle Confessioni di Agostino

Bruna Pieri
2021

Abstract

In his Confessions, Augustine echoes the fuga sui theme from Lucretius, Horace and Seneca. Unlike his pagan predecessors, however, there is no longer any real antithesis between mutatio loci and mutatio animi; the opposition shifts in fact entirely into the space of the soul, and lies in the two directions in which this space can be travelled: away from God or towards God. Augustine also differs from pagan models in the representation of this inner wandering, marked by a forced and ‘paradoxical’ syntax.
2021
Lucrezio, Seneca e noi. Studi per Ivano Dionigi
431
441
Bruna Pieri
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/861142
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