Archives: Chapters

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Conclusion

Conclusion The aim of this book has been to offer a systematic and comprehensive presentation of the function of space in the Iliad. To this end, and following Nünning’s theoretical model, four different aspects of space were studied, of which the first two (simple story space and embedded story space) pertain to […]

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Chapter 8. Ecphrastic Space

Chapter 8. Ecphrastic Space By the term ecphrastic space, I refer to: (1) the “external” or “physical” space or material on which the depiction is placed; and (2) the “internal” space or spaces mentioned in the various narrative snapshots of the ecphrasis, which consists of the individual locations of an imagined story-world […]

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Chapter 7. Described Objects

Chapter 7. Described Objects In this chapter I will deal with the various spatial aspects of object description in the Iliad. The selected examples are chosen because these objects are described at some length, and are therefore most suitable for analysis and interpretation. In order to avoid unnecessary repetition, I have opted […]

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Part IV. Descriptive Space

Part IV. Descriptive Space Description constitutes a rather restricted mode of discourse within Homeric poetry, where narration is preeminent. [1] In the Iliad, this unequal distribution between narration and description becomes even more obvious than in the Ody ssey, [2] since descriptive passages, around twenty-four in number, refer to various objects that […]

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Chapter 5. Simile Space and Narrative Space

Chapter 5. Simile Space and Narrative Space In the Iliad, place is most often delineated within the context of the Homeric similes, rather than in narrative. [1] Previous scholarship has emphasized two distinct but equally important aspects of Iliadic Gleichnisorte (“simile spaces”): their use as a way of making intratextual references, and […]

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Chapter 4. The Troad and Lycia

Chapter 4. The Troad and Lycia Since the Trojans are fighting in their own country, it is hardly surprising that places in Asia Minor are less often narratively exploited than specific areas of mainland Greece. A few places in the wider Troad, though, are thematized, as they are either tied to the […]