Examples Of Imperialism In The Aeneid

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Leah Feinstein Classical to Renaissance Literature: Text and Traditions April 5th, 2024 The Aeneid as an Anti-Glory-Based Expansionist Tool Virgil repeatedly references The Iliad throughout The Aeneid, appealing to similar events, similes, and characterizations. He uses the audience’s knowledge of the ancient poem to deepen the impact of his own. Virgil characterizes Aeneas and Iulius as members of the Greek army and Aeneas’ enemies as Iliadic Trojan warriors to critique Rome’s expansionist tendencies and its lack of emphasis on cultivating a flourishing cultural scene. Our first introduction to Ascanius, Aeneas’ son and future pre-founder of Rome, connects him with Achilles. After Aeneas sees Troy destroyed by the Greek army, he returns home …show more content…

Virgil furthers this connection by focusing on Carthage’s walls, the core visual marker of the city of Troy. When giving Aeneas a private tour, Dido showed Aeneas her “her Sidonian wealth, her walls prepared” (Virgil 4.75-77). When Carthage starts to weaken, “the menacing huge walls with cranes unmoving stand against the sky. Virgil 4.125-126. Because Dido is Paris and Carthage is Troy, if Troy’s fall was a tragedy, which presumably the Roman descendants of Troy would believe, so too was Carthage’s. Except now, the Trojans are the perpetrators. Moreover, Dido’s simile further garners the audience’s sympathy for Dido, for she is unintentionally destroyed, merely collateral damage created by Juno’s attempts to slow down Aeneas from refounding Troy in Italy. She lacks the dignity of being purposely killed and instead is left abandoned and in pain. This heart-wrenching simile suggests that Virgil wants the audience to sympathize with Aeneas’ enemies rather than Aeneas, further assisting in his critique of Roman society. Aeneas and Turnus’ final battle closely mirrors that of Hector and Achilles, cementing Virgil’s connection between Aeneas and the Trojans with the Iliadic Greeks and Aeneas’ enemies with the Iliadic

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