Autore:
Fornaro, Sotera Titolo:
L’insostenibile leggerezza dell’amore: Elena nel fr. 16 di SaffoPeriodico:
EsteticaAnno:
2025 - Fascicolo:
1 - Pagina iniziale:
37 - Pagina finale:
49T his paper examines Sappho’s fragment 16, one of the most celebrated compositions of archaic Greek lyric poetry, beginning with the "priamel"-like question posed at its opening: what is the most beautiful thing on the dark earth? The poetic voice does not offer a subjective or original response, but rather invokes a truth already known and universally accepted: what one loves. To illustrate this maxim, the figure of Helen is evoked – she who abandons daughter, parents, and husband to follow Paris. Yet the example is not immediately transparent: the object of desire is not Helen, but Paris, whose irresistible beauty compels Helen’s action. Helen thus becomes a paradigmatic figure of the mobility of desire. The paper argues that the notion of "kalliston" is embedded within an epic system of shared values and imagery, and does not articulate a distinctly «feminine» ethic (love) in opposition to a «masculine» one (war and arms). Through the paradigm of Helen, Sappho develops a poetics of movement: beauty and love are figured as what recedes, disappears, and leaves a void. A comparative reading of the "Iliad" and the first stasimon of Aeschylus’ "Agamemnon" shows how love and war share structural features – suddenness, violence, and destructive power. Ultimately, the paper underscores that beauty – whether embodied in armies or in beloved individuals – is inseparable from its fleeting nature. What is beautiful is also what is lost. The «unbearable lightness of love» thus consists in the awareness of desire’s transience: poetry becomes the space where absence takes form, and where what is most beautiful coincides with what, in vanishing, leaves an irreparable void.
SICI: 2039-6635(2025)1<37:LLDENF>2.0.ZU;2-4
Testo completo:
https://www.rivisteweb.it/download/article/10.14648/118572Testo completo alternativo:
https://www.rivisteweb.it/doi/10.14648/118572Esportazione dati in Refworks (solo per utenti abilitati)
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