Archives: Chapters

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Chapter 3. Greece

Chapter 3. Greece The most frequently mentioned place-names of mainland Greece include Phthia, Argos, Pylos, Thebes, Sparta, Ithaka, Mycenae, and the islands of Lesbos, Lemnos, Skyros, and Crete. [1] Given that each of these toponyms is closely associated either with a single Iliadic hero or with a specific phase of this hero’s […]

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Part II. Home is the Hero: Embedded Story Space

Part II. Home is the Hero: Embedded Story Space The traditional narratological division between narrator and character text entered the field of classics via a monograph on Homer. [1] I. J. F. de Jong’s systematic analysis of Iliadic narrative has shown, once and for all, the importance of adopting the basic distinction […]

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Chapter 2. Framing Spaces

Chapter 2. Framing Spaces The Achaean Camp, Troy, and the World of the Immortals As we saw in chapter 1, the base-level space of the battlefield is part of a set of framing spaces that are deployed around and above it. The Achaean camp and the city of Troy encircle the […]

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Chapter 1. The Base-Level Setting: The Battlefield

Chapter 1. The Base-Level Setting: The Battlefield Reflecting the tripartite structure of Iliadic story space, the plain of Troy represents an extended area lying between the Achaean camp and the city of Troy. [1] Despite the lack of description, it can be further divided into the following subsettings: (1) the battlefield, (2) […]

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Introduction

Introduction The aim of this book is to offer a comprehensive study of space in the Iliad. Space constitutes a wide-ranging area of research, well beyond the limited concepts of landscape or setting. [1] Space in narrative is of prime importance for understanding the inner mechanics of the plot, and covers a […]

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Acknowledgments

Acknowledgments As with many things in life, so with books, ends and beginnings come strangely close. The completion of what started as a research project four years ago makes me think of all those who have helped me bring this book to its present form. Different people have offered different kinds of […]

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Preface

Preface In transcribing Greek names from Homer, I have generally followed modern principles of strict transliteration, for example rendering υ as u, ου as ou, and χ as kh: thus Antilokhos, Ekhemmon, Othruoneus, Thumbraios, and Lukourgos. In the case of some well-known names, however, I have opted to retain more familiar traditional […]

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Bibliography

Bibliography Adema, S. M. 2008. Discourse Modes and Bases: A Study of the Use of Tenses in Vergil’s Aeneid. Amsterdam. Adrados, F. R. 1975. Lingüística indoeuropea. Madrid. ———. 1992. Nueva sintaxis del griego antiguo. Madrid. Ahl, F., and Roisman, H. 1996. The […]