Archives: Chapters

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3. Homer and his Genealogy

Chapter Three: Homer and his genealogy I 3ⓢ1. The Homēridai of Chios I§141 I return to the cursory reference to Chios as the setting for a quadrennial thusia ‘festival’ honoring Homer in the narrative of Vita 2 (307–8). As we saw, this reference is pertinent to the context of a Homeric […]

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2. Homer outside his Poetry

Chapter Two: Homer outside his poetry I 2ⓢ1. Homer in the Life of Homer traditions I§55 So far, we have been considering the concept of Homer as defined by the Homeric Hymn to Apollo and by the epics attributed to Homer. Now we will see that there is further definition to […]

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1. Homer and the Athenian Empire

Chapter One: Homer and the Athenian empire I 1ⓢ1. The Athenian empire I§13 I offer here an overview of what we know about the Athenian empire in the era of the democracy in the fifth century BCE. The basic facts can be found in the history of Thucydides, who highlights what […]

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Introduction

Introduction Introduction §1 This book Homer the Preclassic, which is based on the Sather Classical Lectures of spring 2002, covers the preclassical era of Homeric reception. It is complemented by a twin book, Homer the Classic (2009), which covers the classical era. Between the two of them, Homer the Classic and […]

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Preface

Preface [In this on-line version, the page-numbers of the printed version are indicated within braces (“{” and “}”). For example, “{69|70}” indicates where p. 69 of the printed version ends and p. 70 begins. These indications will be useful to readers who need to look up references made elsewhere to the printed […]

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Bibliography

Bibliography Abrahams, R. 1970. Deep Down in the Jungle, Rev. ed. Chicago: Aldine. ———. 1976. “The Complex Relations of Simple Forms.” In Ben-Amos 1976, pp. 193–214 ———. 1983. The Man-of-Words in the West Indies: Performance and the Emergence of Creole Culture. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press ———. 1985. Review […]

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Conclusion. The Poet as Hero

The Poet as Hero: A Conclusion {231} Contact and distance. In these terms, I have approached Homer’s Iliad, in an attempt to overcome the long years in which the poem has been a text, to regain some sense of the poem as performance. I have claimed that the poet had a word […]

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5. The Expansion Aesthetic

Chatper 5. The Expansion Aesthetic {206} The changes made in formulaic patterns by the addition of words, or by melding with other patterns, can be seen at a number of points in Achilles’ longest speech. I shall concentrate on a few groups of lines that offer the best examples of the technique. […]