Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-wq484 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T20:50:21.608Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Key Topics

from Part I - Homeric Song and Text

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 February 2020

Corinne Ondine Pache
Affiliation:
Trinity University, San Antonio
Casey Dué
Affiliation:
University of Houston
Susan Lupack
Affiliation:
Macquarie University, Sydney
Robert Lamberton
Affiliation:
Washington University, St Louis
Get access
Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Further Reading

For the text see Wölke 1978; Glei 1984; Fusillo 1988; and West 2003b. For a discussion of date and authorship, see Ludwich 1896; Rzach 1913; Bliquez 1977; and West 2003b. For the literary nature of parody and is cultural context, see Schibli 1983; Most 1993; Olson and Sens 1999; Sens 2005; Scodel 2008a; and Kelly 2009. For translation and commentary, see Christensen and Robinson 2018.

Further Reading

Minchin 2007; Sammons 2010.

Further reading

Oppenheim 1956; Rankin 1962; Russo 1982; Morris 1983; Knox and Russo 1989; Pratt 1994; Amory 1966; Noegel 2000; Rozokoki 2001; de Smidt 2006; Brillante 2009.

Further Reading

On Didymus and the Homeric editions he consulted, see West 2001, 50‒73. On the “city editions,” see Citti 1966 and West 2001, 67‒72 (with bibliography). On the meaning of ekdosis in antiquity see van Groningen 1963. For a survey of what an ancient Alexandrian edition looked like, see Montanari 2002, 120‒27; Schironi 2018, 49‒62.

Further Reading

For ekphrasis as an art form and as a genre of description, see Friedländer 1912, Spitzer 1955, Perutelli 1978, Barthes 1986, Fowler 1991, Krieger 1992, Webb 1999, and Elsner 2002. For ekphrasis in Epic, see Kurman 1974. For Achilles’ shield, see Atchity 1978, Hardie 1985, Byre 1992‒1993, Becker 1995, Rabel 1997, Scully 2003.

Further Reading

For Proclus and Photius, see Severyns 1928 and 1938, and West 2013; For the development of the epic cycle, see Davies 1989, and West 2013; Fantuzzi and Tsagalis 2014; For the texts of the Epic Cycle, see Davies 1988 and Bernabé 1987; for differences between Homer and the poems of the Epic Cycle, see Griffin 1977 and Burgess 2001. For the influence of cyclic poems on the Iliad and the Odyssey see Kullman 1960 and Montanari et al. 2012.

Further Reading

For analogical formulae, see Lord [1960] 2000, Russo 1966, Hainsworth 1968, Ingalls 1976, and Minton 1965. Cf. Russo 1997, 243‒52. For the contextual meaning debate, see Whallon 1969, Vivante 1982, and Sacks 1987. For Homeric composition and language, see Visser 1987, Foley 1988 and Bakker 1997. For oral culture, see Lord [1960] 2000, Finnegan 1977, Ong 1982, Havelock 1982, and Gentili 1988.

Further Reading

For general discussions of gods in epic, see Calhoun 1937; Griffin 1980; Erbse 1986; Richardson 1993, 25‒33; and Kearns 2004. For ancient traditions of interpretation, see Lamberton 1986. For ritual and Homeric gods, see Otto 1954; Burkert [1977] 1985; and Cook 1995. For the gods’ relationship to Greek society, see Adkins 1972; and Yamagata 1994; for continuities between Hesiodic and Homeric representations of the divine, see Clay [1989] 2006 (on the Hymns); Clay 2003; and Graziosi and Haubold 2005; for the relationship between human agency and the divine realm, see Dodds [1951] 1997; Snell [1946] 1960; Gill 1996; and Allan 2006. For the narrative functions of the gods, see Lowe 2000; Pucci 2002; and Heiden 2002.

Further Reading

Graziosi 2002; Collins 2004; Nagy 2009b; Koning 2010; González 2013 and 2016

Further Reading

Finley [1954] 1979; Lord [1960] 2000; Thalmann 1998; Nagler 1990; Scully 1990; Bonifazi 2009; Bakker 2013.

Further Reading

The classic statement on comparative method is Meillet [1925] 1967. For an introduction to PIE, Indo-European languages, and Indo-European culture see Fortson 2010. The classic comprehensive investigation of Indo-European culture through its vocabulary is Benveniste 1973. On Indo-European poetics see the extended treatment in Watkins 1995, brief summary in Katz 2010. For a discussion of the Indo-European context of Greek epic, the methodology and the benefits of its study, see Katz 2005. For a concise introduction to Indo-European myth in Homer, see Nagy 1990b (chapter 1). For a general survey of Indo-European poetry and myth see Puhvel 1987, West 2007. A controversial and influential theory of Indo-European myth and society is Dumézil 1968‒1973. For a more theoretical discussion of approaches to Indo-European mythology, see Jackson 1999. On the Indo-European heritage of the Greek concept of the hero, see Nagy 2005. On various aspects of Indo-European mythology in Homer, see Muellner [1976] 2016, 1996, Nagy [1979] 1999, 1990b, Frame 1978 and 2009, Jamison 1994, 1996, 1999, 2001, Boedeker 1974, Watkins 1979, 1995, Steets 1993, Edmunds 2016, Platte 2017, Walsh 2005, and Compton 2006. On Celtic parallels to Penelope and Damayanti, see McCone 1990, and Dooley 2006.

Further Reading

Janko 1982; Powell 1990; Miller 1994; Woodard 1997; Sass 2005; Ernst and Kittler 2006; Jones 2010; González 2013.

Further Reading

Rohde 1925; Snell [1946] 1960; Dodds [1951] 1997 (chapter 5); Onians 1954; Ireland and Steel 1975; Redfield 1975:175‒86; Burkert [1977] 1985; Darcus 1979; Renehan 1979; Vermeule 1979; Darcus 1980; Claus 1981; Kovel 1981; Lescher 1981; Dihle 1982; Bremmer 1983; Darcus Sullivan 1987; Caswell 1990; Pelliccia 1995; Darcus Sullivan 1996; Koziak 1999; Martin and Barresi 2006; Bremmer 2010; Purves 2011a; Dova 2012; Long 2015.

Further Reading

Palmer 1996 (especially chapters 3 and 4); Horrocks 1997; Hackstein 2010; Tribulato 2010; Colvin 2010.

Further Reading

Allen et al. 1936; Notopoulos 1962; Richardson 1974; Càssola 1975; Janko 1982; Sowa 1984; Nagy 1990b; Parker 1991; Rudhardt 1991; Foley 1993; Calame 1995; West 1999; Bakker 2002; Clay [1989] 2006; Richardson 2010; Faulkner 2011; Olson 2012; Vergados 2012.

Further reading

For an introduction to scholia, see Dickey 2007, 11‒16 (on “scholia” as genre) and 18‒23 (on Homeric scholia). On the different components of the Homeric scholia and manuscripts containing them, see Erbse 1969‒1988, I, xi‒lix; for a survey of ancient scholarship on Homer with a discussion of how it was transmitted in the different sources, see Pontani 2005, 42‒103. On the content of the exegetical scholia, see Schmidt 1976; Richardson 1980; Nünlist 2009. For a survey of the different topics discussed in scholia and for a comparison between scholia maiora and hupomnēmata on papyrus, see Schironi 2012. On how to use the scholia of Didymus and Aristonicus to reconstruct Aristarchus’s work on Homer, see Schironi 2015.

Further Reading

Murnaghan 1999; Alexiou 2002; Dué 2002; Tsagalis 2004; Suter 2008.

Further Reading

West 1982; West 1997b; Hackstein 2010.

Further Reading

Strasburger 1954; Taplin 1992; Tracy 1997; de Jong 2004; Louden 2006; Murray 2008; Scodel 2008b; Ready 2011; Tsagalis 2012b; Bakker 2013; Cook 2014; Ready 2014.

Further Reading

Bergren 2008, 79–110; Clay 1983; Danek 1998; Doherty 1995; Dué and Ebbott 2010; Felson and Slatkin 2004; Frame 1978; Goldhill 1990, 1–68; Murnaghan 1987; Nagy [1979] 1999; Peradotto 1990; Pucci 1987; Purves 2006; Schein 1996; Segal [1994] 2001; Slatkin 2008; Zeitlin 1995, chapter 1.

Further Reading

Stanford [1954] 1962; Clay 1983; Edwards 1985; Newton 1987; Katz 1991; Cook 1995; Newton 1997 and 2008; Bakker 2013.

Further Reading

Reisch 1885; Neils 1992; Bentz 1998; Shear 2001 and 2003; Rotstein 2012.

Further Reading

Allen 1924; Burkert 1972b; Nagy 2001; Graziosi 2002.

Further Reading

Rzach 1913; Kurke 1991; Graziosi 2002; Nagy 2010; González 2013.

Further Reading

Moulton 1974; Muellner 1990; Martin 1997; Minchin 2001; Bakker 2005; Ready 2011.

Further Reading

Lohmann 1970; Griffin 1986; Martin 1989; de Jong 2004; Beck 2005; Minchin 2007; Beck 2012a.

Further reading

Scully 1990; Hedreen 2001; Clay 2011; Tsagalis 2012a.

Further Reading

Arend 1933; Lord [1960] 2000, 68–98; Parry 1971, 404–7; Foley 1990, 240–77; Edwards 1992; Jensen 2011, 63–9; Kelly 2014.

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×