Archives: Chapters

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8. The Odyssey, pp.158–185

Chapter 8. The Odyssey In reading the Odyssey or the Iliad we are at a distinct disadvantage because we are reading isolated texts in a tradition. The comparison with other traditions shows us very clearly that songs are not isolated entities, but that they must be understood in terms of other songs […]

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4. The Theme, pp.69–98

Chapter 4. The Theme Formulas and groups of formulas, both large and small, serve only one purpose. They provide a means for telling a story in song and verse. The tale’s the thing. Anyone who reads through a collection of oral epic from any country is soon aware that the same […]

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3. The Formula, pp.30–67

Chapter 3. The Formula There came a time in Homeric scholarship when it was not sufficient to speak of the “repetitions” in Homer, of the “stock epithets,” of the “epic clichés” and “stereotyped phrases.” Such terms were either too vague or too restricted. Precision was needed, and the work of Milman Parry […]

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Part I. The Theory 1. Introduction, pp.3–12

Chapter 1. Introduction [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 […]

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Abbreviations

Abbreviations Frequently Used in the Notes AJA: American Journal of Archaeology HSCP: Harvard Studies in Classical Philology AJP: American Journal of Philology Parry: The Milman Parry Collection in the Harvard College Library TAPhA: Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association Parry and Lord: Serbocroation Heroic Songs […]

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Foreword, pp.xxxv–xxxvii

Foreword This book is about Homer. He is our Singer of Tales. Yet, in a larger sense, he represents all singers of tales from time immemorial and unrecorded to the present. Our book is about these other singers as well. Each of them, even the most mediocre, is as much a part […]