Buch, Englisch, Band 490, 264 Seiten, Format (B × H): 158 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 549 g
Reihe: Mnemosyne, Supplements / Mnemosyne, Supplements, Late Antique Literature
Writing Pre-Homeric Poetry in Late Antiquity
Buch, Englisch, Band 490, 264 Seiten, Format (B × H): 158 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 549 g
Reihe: Mnemosyne, Supplements / Mnemosyne, Supplements, Late Antique Literature
ISBN: 978-90-04-71384-0
Verlag: Brill
Is it possible to be better than Homer? For most literary critics in late antiquity, the answer was an unequivocal no, but the anonymous author of the Argonautika by Orpheus disagreed. This book, the first English monograph on this late antique epic poem, demonstrates that the idea of competing with Homer is central to the Argonautika by Orpheus.
Through a series of case-studies on the poem’s diction and compositional technique, it proposes a novel approach. Since the mythological bard Orpheus is ostensibly the poem’s author, readers are invited to view it from two perspectives simultaneously: as a late antique epic modelled on Homer’s works, but also a prehistorical model for Homer’s works.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Orpheus the Poet
1 The Many Faces of Orpheus
2 Orpheus of Kroton—a Red Herring
3 The Argonautika as Part of Orpheus’ Oeuvre
4 Double Vision
5 Ps-Orpheus as Imitator and Inspiration for Homer and Apollonios
6 Ps-Orpheus and Homer
7 Ps-Orpheus and Apollonios
Edition and Translation: The Argonautika by Orpheus
Part1 Formulaic Language: Between Tradition and Innovation
1 Personal Epithets: Epic Jason, Tragic Medea
1 Epic Hero Jason
2 Medea
3 Conclusions
2 Epithets for ‘Ship’: The ‘Swift’ and the ‘Sluggish’ Argo
1 Homeric-Archaic Epithets
2 Epithets Inspired by Archaic Poetry
3 Apollonian Epithets
4 Other Epithets
5 Conclusions
3 Introductions to Direct Speeches: An Old and a New Formulaic Language
1 Homeric-Archaic Speech Introductions
2 Other Speech Introductions
3 Conclusions
Part2 Rewriting the Epic Tradition: Homer and Apollonios
4 Competing with Homer
1 Metapoetics
2 The Iliad as a Sequel
3 Orpheus the Eyewitness and Homer the Liar
4 Conclusions
5 Rewriting Apollonios
1 Introduction of Kyzikos
2 Hospitality
3 The Mountain Monsters
4 Night-Time Battle and Death of Kyzikos
5 Tiphys’ Dream
6 Rhea’s Wrath
7 The Funeral Games
8 Kleite and Rhea
9 Conclusions
Final Thoughts
Bibliography
Index