Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 264
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-8476-9424-2 • Paperback • May 1999 • $63.00 • (£48.00)
Miriam Carlisle and Olga Levaniouk are doctoral candidates in Classical Philology at Harvard University.
Chapter 1 Foreword
Chapter 2 Introduction
Part 3 Multigeneric Homer
Chapter 4 The Wrath of Helen: Self-Blame and Nemesis in the Iliad
Chapter 5 Odysseus and the Phaeacians
Chapter 6 Thersites, Odysseus, and the Social Order
Chapter 7 Homeric Fictions: Pseudo-words in Homer
Part 8 Diachronic Homer
Chapter 9 Penelope and the Penelops
Chapter 10 Odysseus Back Home and Back from the Dead
Part 11 Visual Homer
Chapter 12 Artemis and the Lion: Two Similes in Odyssey 6 159
Chapter 13 Homer's Leopard Simile
Part 14 Textual Homer
Chapter 15 Homeros ekainopoese: Theseus, Aithra, and Variation in Homeric Myth-Making
Chapter 16 Bibliography
Chapter 17 Index of Homeric Passages
Chapter 18 General Index
The book is illuminating.
— The Journal of Hellenic Studies
The high level of creativity displayed here is bracing. For graduate students, the volume as a whole should serve as an inspiring example of how innovative student work in Homeric studies can be.
— Religious Studies Review
A rish work offered by everyone of the nine contributors...Anyone interested in seeing more deeply into how Homer worked (what—or whoever one takes Homer to be) will likely read it with uniform interest from cover to cover.
— Michael N. Nagler, University of California, Berkeley; Bryn Mawr Classical Review