Events

GE Salon – Death Becomes Her: The Suicide of Cleopatra in Literature and Art

Share
Print
Date:

18 Feb 2011

Time:

7-9p.m.

Venue:

LT1, Science Centre, CUHK

Biography of Speaker:

Prof. Robert Gurval Visiting Fulbright Scholar 2010-11, Office of University General Education, The Chinese University of Hong Kong; Department of Classics, University of California, Los Angeles

Enquiries:

26098955

Synopsis of Lecture:

The suicide of Cleopatra has bequeathed to western culture one of the most famous and memorable death scenes in literature, drama and the visual arts of painting, sculpture and film. The traditional story derives chiefly from the rich narrative of Plutarch’s biography of Mark Antony. Its action is driven by multiple themes of deception, deliberation, and death. The climactic moment, of course, is the bite of the asp. Surveying the literary and visual representations of Cleopatra’s dramatic death, from Horace’s celebrated Cleopatra Ode to the HBO cable network series Rome, this lecture will explore the potent symbolism of the suicide in classical antiquity and subsequent eras. It will try to answer the question whether her final act of dying by the serpent’s bite redeems Cleopatra and death becomes her.

Remarks:

Delivered in English.

Free admission, all are welcome.

Enquiry:rcge@cuhk.edu.hk

———————————- Organized by:

Research Centre for General Education,

Office of University General Education, CUHK

Sponsored by:

Edwin S. L. Cheng Research Fund for General Education and Philosophy