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The Oxford Critical Guide to Homer's Odyssey - - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

The Oxford Critical Guide to Homer's Odyssey - - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

The Oxford Critical Guide to Homer''s Odyssey brings together internationally recognized experts to provide commentary style essays for non-specialists on each book of the Homeric epic. The introduction provides a broad overview of the historical and mythographical backgrounds to the Odyssey along with brief discussions of the major thematic and scholarly concerns of the poem. The introduction can stand alone as a guide to reading the Odyssey, while it also prepares readers for the deeper discussions of the individual books. Twenty-four scholars, selected for their expertise and earlier publications, contributed essays aimed at guiding readers through different approaches to the poem. Each essay offers a summary of the plot of an individual book followed by a discussion of interpretive issues and its relationship with the epic as a whole. The essays were written and edited with a view towards providing accessibility to epic and epic scholarship to audiences from all backgrounds. While each chapter follows basic guidelines, their authors also add new insights and analyses to classic Homeric controversies. This collection provides an essential resource to engaging with Homer''s epic from beginning to end or on a book-by-book basis for readers who have limited access to the original language and for researchers looking to learn more about scholarly approaches to Homer. New interpretations of the Odyssey offered by established scholars, moreover, make this collection a must-read for current researchers as well.

DKK 296.00
1

The Making of the Odyssey - Martin Litchfield (emeritus Fellow West - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Homer's Odyssey - - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Travel and Home in Homer's Odyssey and Contemporary Literature - Carol Dougherty - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Travel and Home in Homer's Odyssey and Contemporary Literature - Carol Dougherty - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Travel and Home in Homer''s Odyssey and Contemporary Literature brings Homer''s Odyssey together with contemporary literary texts ranging from Rebecca West''s The Return of the Soldier to Marilynne Robinson''s Housekeeping and Cormac McCarthy''s The Road to produce new readings that reframe, reorient, and ultimately revise aspects of Homer''s iconic story of travel and home. While some novels share with the Odyssey a celebration of the creative process of improvisation to rethink the relationship between home and travel, others draw upon nostalgia - our complicated longing for home - to unsettle the inevitability of return. Rather than offering an explicit retelling of Homer''s poem, each of these novels prompts us to revisit the relationship between travel and home that Odysseus and Penelope embody to ask new questions of that well-read text. Does travel reinforce or destabilize our notion of home? Are mobility and domesticity irrevocably gendered, or can we imagine a world in which Penelope travels and Odysseus stays home? Just as Odysseus continually reinvents his own identity with each new encounter, both abroad and at home, so too we, as readers, participate in an improvisatory interpretive experiment of our own. This volume sets out a new model for reading ancient and contemporary texts together - one that challenges the conventional chronological assumptions inherent in many works of classical reception. No longer a stable text to which we as readers return time and again to find it the same, the Odyssey, together with the novels with which it engages, changes and adapts with each new literary encounter.

DKK 678.00
1

Homer and the Odyssey - Suzanne Said - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

The Odyssey - Homer - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

The Odyssey - Homer - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

The Odyssey - Homer - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Homer, Odyssey I - Simon (independent Scholar Pulleyn - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Homer, Odyssey I - Simon (independent Scholar Pulleyn - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Since their composition almost 3,000 years ago the Homeric epics have lost none of their power to grip audiences and fire the imagination: with their stories of life and death, love and loss, war and peace they continue to speak to us at the deepest level about who we are across the span of generations. That being said, the world of Homer is in many ways distant from that in which we live today, with fundamental differences not only in language, social order, and religion, but in basic assumptions about the world and human nature. This volume offers a detailed yet accessible introduction to ancient Greek culture through the lens of Book One of the Odyssey, covering all of these aspects and more in a comprehensive Introduction designed to orient students in their studies of Greek literature and history. The full Greek text is included alongside a facing English translation which aims to reproduce as far as feasible the word order and sound play of the Greek original and is supplemented by a Glossary of Technical Terms and a full vocabulary keyed to the specific ways that words are used in Odyssey I. At the heart of the volume is a full-length line-by-line commentary, the first in English since the 1980s and updated to bring the latest scholarship to bear on the text: focusing on philological and linguistic issues, its close engagement with the original Greek yields insights that will be of use to scholars and advanced students as well as to those coming to the text for the first time.

DKK 278.00
1

A Commentary on Homer's Odyssey: Volume I: Introduction and Books I-VIII - - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

The Poet's Odyssey - George Hugo Tucker - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

A Commentary on Homer's Odyssey: Volume III: Books XVII-XXIV - Manuel Fernandez Galiano - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Para-Narratives in the Odyssey - Maureen Alden - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Arete and the Odyssey's Poetics of Interrogation - Justin Arft - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Arete and the Odyssey's Poetics of Interrogation - Justin Arft - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Arete and the Odyssey''s Poetics of Interrogation explores how the enigmatic Phaeacian queen, Arete, is at the heart of an epic-scale "poetics of interrogation" used throughout the Odyssey to negotiate Odysseus'' kleos, or epic renown. Arete''s interrogation of Odysseus has been especially problematic in scholarship, but diachronic and synchronic analysis of similar interrogations across Indo-European, Orphic, and Greek epigrammatic corpora show that the "stranger''s interrogation" is a formula that demands performance and negotiation of status. Within the Odyssey, this interrogation is part of an intraformular network used to generate kleos, and the queen''s question initiates the longest and most complex negotiation of Odysseus'' status in epic and memory. Arete''s role as interrogator not only explains her strange authority and resonance with both Penelope and comparative afterlife figures, but it also establishes a gendered, agonistic tension between she and her husband, Alkinoos, that influences the structure, genre, and narratology of performances across the Phaeacian episode. This book reinterprets the Odyssey''s central episode and challenges several assumptions about Nausikaa and Alkinoos'' famed hospitality, even demonstrating how the Apologue is organized as a response to competing inquiries into Odysseus'' fundamental status in tradition. The Odyssey ultimately navigates away from Odysseus'' public reputation and roots his status in private memories, and Arete''s carefully arranged interventions signal the larger process by which the Odyssey immortalizes Odysseus in poetry as a nostos hero. The queen and her question invite new applications of oral poetics that shed light on the structure, composition, and reperformance of the Odyssey.

DKK 1092.00
1

The Choice of Odysseus - Dr Sarah Van Der Laan - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

The Choice of Odysseus - Dr Sarah Van Der Laan - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

The Choice of Odysseus demonstrates how the Odyssey provided Renaissance authors and readers with a poetic ethics—tools for living developed in poetry—to navigate the challenges of their age. As they endured schisms, ruptures, and failures of ideals, readers and poets turned to the Odyssey for narratives of recovery and aftermath. Sarah Van der Laan reconstructs Renaissance readings of the Odyssey from myriad sources. Situating major works by Petrarch, Poliziano, Ariosto, Tasso, Spenser, Monteverdi, and Milton in these Odyssean contexts, she recovers a powerful Renaissance tradition of Odyssean epic. Renaisance poets adopted the Odyssey as an epic model that supplements and even opposes the Virgilian epic model of conquest and imperial foundation. For Renaissance readers and authors, the Odyssey renders heroic other kinds of lived experience: the necessity of facing the world and its challenges with only human wisdom and reason; the ability to integrate traumatic detours and reversals into a vision of a successful and accomplished self; the recovery of a private life and personal desires painfully suspended for public service. Emphasizing marriage, reconciliation, homecoming, and the return to private life and private desires as suitably heroic matter for epic and powerful conventions for narrative and poetic closure, the Renaissance Odyssey and the epics and operas it inspired confer a uniquely heroic status on experience for men and women alike.

DKK 946.00
1

Homeric Epic and its Reception - Seth L. Schein - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Homeric Epic and its Reception - Seth L. Schein - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Homeric Epic and its Reception, comprising twelve chapter--some previously published but revised for this collection, and others appearing here in print for the first time--offers literary interpretations of the Iliad, the Odyssey, and the Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite. While some chapters closely study the diction, meter, style, and thematic resonance of particular passages and episodes in the Iliad and the Odyssey, others follow diverse pathways into the interpretation of the epics, including mythological allusion, intertextuality, the metrics of the Homeric hexameter, and the fundamental contrast between divinity and humanity. Also included are two chapters which focus on the work of Milman Parry and Ioannis Kakridis, founders of the two most fruitful twentieth-century scholarly approaches to Homeric scholarship: the study of the Iliad and the Odyssey as traditional oral formulaic poetry (Parry), and the study of the poems'' adaptations and transformations of traditional mythology, folktales, and poetic motifs in accordance with their distinctive themes and poetic purposes (Kakridis). The volume draws to a close with three chapters which discuss some of the most compelling poetic and critical receptions of the Iliad and the Odyssey since the late nineteenth century, and the institutional reception of the epics in colleges and universities in the United States over the past two centuries. Written over a period of 45 years, this collection reflects the authors long-standing interest in, and scholarly and critical approaches to, the literary interpretation of Homeric poetry.

DKK 939.00
1

Derek Walcott's Encounter with Homer - Rachel D. Friedman - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Derek Walcott's Encounter with Homer - Rachel D. Friedman - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Derek Walcott''s Encounter with Homer puts Derek Walcott''s epic poem Omeros in conversation with Homer, especially the Odyssey, to show how reading them against each other changes our understanding of the poems of both poets. It explores Walcott''s conscious use of the Odyssey and the Homeric persona of Omeros to explore his own deepening relationship with his craft and his identity as a Caribbean poet. Walcott''s ability to serve as the vessel of history for his people and their landscapes rests on his transformation into (and self-perception as) Homer''s contemporary and equal. Central to the project of Omeros is thus an account of his shift from a diachronic to synchronic relationship with Homer: over the course of the poem his poetic persona, the "Poet", and Homer come to occupy the same temporality and creative space.By locating the poems of Walcott and Homer in a zone of vibrant and unexpected encounter, Rachel Friedman demonstrates how they can be seen as mutually informing texts, each made richer in the presence of the other. The argument follows two intertwined thematic threads. The first focuses on the poems'' landscapes and seascapes and the ways in which Omeros reworks the Odyssey''s affective geography. While the Odyssey represents the sea as a dangerous space and valorizes life on land, Walcott reverses this trajectory from sea to land, bearing witness to the painful histories carried in the St Lucian soil and relocating homecoming to the space of the Caribbean Sea, a space which accommodates diasporic histories and the imagining of fluid forms of emplacement. The second thread focuses on Walcott''s poetic persona: his journey in and out of the poem and his positioning of himself as a "tribal poet" like Homer. Central to the project of Omeros is the Poet''s account of the processes by which he becomes the poet who can adequately give voice to the histories of his people and the archipelago they inhabit.

DKK 1198.00
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Women of Substance in Homeric Epic - Lilah Grace Canevaro - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Women of Substance in Homeric Epic - Lilah Grace Canevaro - Bog - Oxford University Press - Plusbog.dk

Women in Greek epic are treated as objects, as commodities to be exchanged in marriage or as the spoils of warfare. However, women in Homeric epic also use objects to negotiate their own agency, subverting the male viewpoint by utilizing on their own terms the very form they themselves are thought by men to embody. Such female objects can transcend their physical limitations and be both symbolically significant and powerfully characterizing. They can be tools of recognition and identification. They can pause narrative and be used agonistically. They can send messages and be vessels for memory.Women of Substance in Homeric Epic offers a new and insightful approach to the Iliad and Odyssey, bringing together Gender Theory and the burgeoning field of New Materialisms, new to classical studies, and thereby combining an approach predicated on the idea of the woman as object with one which questions the very distinction between subject and object. This productive tension leads us to decentre the male subject and to put centre stage not only the woman as object but also the agency of women and objects. The volume comes at a turning point in the gendering of Homeric studies, with the publication of the first English translations by women of the Iliad in 2015 and the Odyssey in 2017, by Caroline Alexander and Emily Wilson respectively. It makes a significant contribution to scholarship by demonstrating that women in Homeric epic are not only objectified, but are also well-versed users of objects; this is something that Homer portrays clearly, that Odysseus understands, but that has often escaped many other men, from Odysseus'' alter ego Aethon in Odyssey 19 to modern experts on Homeric epic.

DKK 1103.00
1