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Dumb Beasts in Hallowed Tombs : Swedish Funerary Poetry for Animals 1670–1760

Möller, Daniel LU (2015)
Abstract
The study examines a hitherto neglected genre in Swedish poetry of the 17th and 18th centuries: the animal epitaph. From 1670 to 1760 a considerable number of such poems were composed by several of the leading poets of the day. Besides tracing the history of the genre back to its origins in the ancient Greek epigram, I am chiefly concerned with the functions that the writing of such epigrams had in 17th and 18th-century Sweden. Two questions are addressed: (1) In what contexts were the poems written? (2) Why were they written, and for what purposes? The short answer is that they were written because they could promote careers; they could serve as covert ways of paying homage to noblemen and royalty; they could also be instrumental in... (More)
The study examines a hitherto neglected genre in Swedish poetry of the 17th and 18th centuries: the animal epitaph. From 1670 to 1760 a considerable number of such poems were composed by several of the leading poets of the day. Besides tracing the history of the genre back to its origins in the ancient Greek epigram, I am chiefly concerned with the functions that the writing of such epigrams had in 17th and 18th-century Sweden. Two questions are addressed: (1) In what contexts were the poems written? (2) Why were they written, and for what purposes? The short answer is that they were written because they could promote careers; they could serve as covert ways of paying homage to noblemen and royalty; they could also be instrumental in criticizing those in power, or cloak the treatment of politically sensitive topics; they provided a means of educating, entertaining, or comforting the reader, whether a courtier, a member of an order, or a private citizen. The eight chapters of the dissertation are devoted to a discussion of individual poems and authors deemed to be of especial significance. Thus, the courtier Erik Lindschöld’s epitaphs on dogs served to celebrate peripheral events in court life while at the same time enabling the poet to pay his respects to his patroness, the queen dowager Hedvig Eleonora. The learned admiral Werner von Rosenfelt’s “Complaint on the Death of a Very Accomplished Parrot” was intended to teach and amuse; the same goes for the poetic efforts of Germund Cederhielm and Sophia Elisabet Brenner, the Swedish Sappho (who, as a woman, could not hope for preferment but might qualify for monetary rewards). Christoffer Leijoncrona’s epitaph on the bear brought down by Charles XI aims to bestow fame on the king both as hunter and ruler while Israel Holmström’s epitaph on Charles XII’s dog Pompe – the magnum opus of Swedish animal epitaphs – is a personal homage to the king, in which the coarse martial witticisms appropriate to army life serve the purpose of undaunted and humorous flattery. Olof von Dalin’s innovative epitaphs served as a vehicle for censuring the inferior brand of occasional verse produced by his contemporaries and castigated by him. By writing deliberately ‘bad’ occasional verse, Dalin was able to level hard-hitting criticism against his competitors. To a greater extent than any of his contemporaries, Dalin combines different elements of content and form in his epitaphs, which were considered to be politically and aesthetically daring.

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The dissertation, originally published in Swedish in 2011, may be ordered from Peter Lang Verlag, "Dumb Beasts in Hallowed Tombs: Swedish Funerary Poetry for Animals 1670–1760" (2015): http://www.peterlang.de/index.cfm?event=cmp.ccc.seitenstruktur.detailseiten&seitentyp=produkt&pk=85143&concordeid=265925 (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Book/Report
publication status
published
subject
keywords
animal studies, animal epitaph, funerary poetry, epitaph culture, early modern literature, occasional poetry, rhetoric, baroque, panegyric, erotic poetry, court poetry, imitatio, decorum, 17th and 18th century Sweden, Charles XI, Charles XII, Israel Holmström, Sophia Elisabet Brenner, Olof von Dalin
pages
372 pages
publisher
Peter Lang Publishing Group
ISBN
9783631659250
project
Fänad i helgade grifter. Svensk djurgravpoesi 1670–1760 (Dumb Beasts in Hallowed Tombs: Swedish Funerary Poetry for Animals 1670–1760)
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
c6891f10-fbcf-4ed8-aa71-5adcefd38e7d (old id 5204799)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 11:16:51
date last changed
2018-11-21 21:03:48
@book{c6891f10-fbcf-4ed8-aa71-5adcefd38e7d,
  abstract     = {{The study examines a hitherto neglected genre in Swedish poetry of the 17th and 18th centuries: the animal epitaph. From 1670 to 1760 a considerable number of such poems were composed by several of the leading poets of the day. Besides tracing the history of the genre back to its origins in the ancient Greek epigram, I am chiefly concerned with the functions that the writing of such epigrams had in 17th and 18th-century Sweden. Two questions are addressed: (1) In what contexts were the poems written? (2) Why were they written, and for what purposes? The short answer is that they were written because they could promote careers; they could serve as covert ways of paying homage to noblemen and royalty; they could also be instrumental in criticizing those in power, or cloak the treatment of politically sensitive topics; they provided a means of educating, entertaining, or comforting the reader, whether a courtier, a member of an order, or a private citizen. The eight chapters of the dissertation are devoted to a discussion of individual poems and authors deemed to be of especial significance. Thus, the courtier Erik Lindschöld’s epitaphs on dogs served to celebrate peripheral events in court life while at the same time enabling the poet to pay his respects to his patroness, the queen dowager Hedvig Eleonora. The learned admiral Werner von Rosenfelt’s “Complaint on the Death of a Very Accomplished Parrot” was intended to teach and amuse; the same goes for the poetic efforts of Germund Cederhielm and Sophia Elisabet Brenner, the Swedish Sappho (who, as a woman, could not hope for preferment but might qualify for monetary rewards). Christoffer Leijoncrona’s epitaph on the bear brought down by Charles XI aims to bestow fame on the king both as hunter and ruler while Israel Holmström’s epitaph on Charles XII’s dog Pompe – the magnum opus of Swedish animal epitaphs – is a personal homage to the king, in which the coarse martial witticisms appropriate to army life serve the purpose of undaunted and humorous flattery. Olof von Dalin’s innovative epitaphs served as a vehicle for censuring the inferior brand of occasional verse produced by his contemporaries and castigated by him. By writing deliberately ‘bad’ occasional verse, Dalin was able to level hard-hitting criticism against his competitors. To a greater extent than any of his contemporaries, Dalin combines different elements of content and form in his epitaphs, which were considered to be politically and aesthetically daring.<br/><br/>--<br/><br/>The dissertation, originally published in Swedish in 2011, may be ordered from Peter Lang Verlag, "Dumb Beasts in Hallowed Tombs: Swedish Funerary Poetry for Animals 1670–1760" (2015): http://www.peterlang.de/index.cfm?event=cmp.ccc.seitenstruktur.detailseiten&amp;seitentyp=produkt&amp;pk=85143&amp;concordeid=265925}},
  author       = {{Möller, Daniel}},
  isbn         = {{9783631659250}},
  keywords     = {{animal studies; animal epitaph; funerary poetry; epitaph culture; early modern literature; occasional poetry; rhetoric; baroque; panegyric; erotic poetry; court poetry; imitatio; decorum; 17th and 18th century Sweden; Charles XI; Charles XII; Israel Holmström; Sophia Elisabet Brenner; Olof von Dalin}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Peter Lang Publishing Group}},
  title        = {{Dumb Beasts in Hallowed Tombs : Swedish Funerary Poetry for Animals 1670–1760}},
  year         = {{2015}},
}