Description

Book Synopsis
Shortlisted for the Runciman Award 2013

Homer''s poetry is widely recognized as the beginning of the literary tradition of the West and among its most influential canonical texts. Outlining a series of key themes, ideas, and values associated with Homer and Homeric poetry, Homer: A Guide for the Perplexed explores the question of the formation of the Iliad and the Odyssey - the so-called ''Homeric Problem''. Among the main Homeric themes which the book considers are origin and form, orality and composition, heroic values, social structure, and social bias, gender roles and gendered interpretation, ethnicity, representations of religion, mortality, and the divine, memory, poetry, and poetics, and canonicity and tradition, and the history of Homeric receptions.
Drawing upon his extensive knowledge of scholarship on Homer and early epic, Ahuvia Kahane explores contemporary critical and philosophical questions relating to Homer and the Homeric tradition, and examines h

Trade Review
Ahuvia Kahane provides a highly accessible and lucid survey covering a wide range of central aspects with an unobtrusive authority: metre, enjambment and ring composition are all here, clearly explained, but so is the latest archaeology from Hissarlik, the latest thinking on the historical setting...This is an excellent introduction to Homer aimed at students and general readers who want to understand the power and problems of Homeric poetry. It’s a book from which even those who feel themselves reasonably familiar with the poems are likely to learn new things. -- Professor Tony Spawforth, Chairman of the Judges, The Anglo-Hellenic League's Runciman Award 2013

Table of Contents
Introductory Note; 1. The Figures of Homeric Poetry; 2. Homeric Histories; 3. The Poet and the Making of the Poems; 4. Homer's Poetic Language; 5. Proems, Tales and Plots; 6. The Iliad; 7. The Odyssey; 8. Boundaries and Social Worlds; 9. Mortality and the Divine; Bibliography; Index.

Homer A Guide for the Perplexed

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    A Paperback by Professor Ahuvia Kahane

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      View other formats and editions of Homer A Guide for the Perplexed by Professor Ahuvia Kahane

      Publisher: Continuum Publishing Corporation
      Publication Date: 1/13/2012 12:12:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781441100108, 978-1441100108
      ISBN10: 1441100105

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Shortlisted for the Runciman Award 2013

      Homer''s poetry is widely recognized as the beginning of the literary tradition of the West and among its most influential canonical texts. Outlining a series of key themes, ideas, and values associated with Homer and Homeric poetry, Homer: A Guide for the Perplexed explores the question of the formation of the Iliad and the Odyssey - the so-called ''Homeric Problem''. Among the main Homeric themes which the book considers are origin and form, orality and composition, heroic values, social structure, and social bias, gender roles and gendered interpretation, ethnicity, representations of religion, mortality, and the divine, memory, poetry, and poetics, and canonicity and tradition, and the history of Homeric receptions.
      Drawing upon his extensive knowledge of scholarship on Homer and early epic, Ahuvia Kahane explores contemporary critical and philosophical questions relating to Homer and the Homeric tradition, and examines h

      Trade Review
      Ahuvia Kahane provides a highly accessible and lucid survey covering a wide range of central aspects with an unobtrusive authority: metre, enjambment and ring composition are all here, clearly explained, but so is the latest archaeology from Hissarlik, the latest thinking on the historical setting...This is an excellent introduction to Homer aimed at students and general readers who want to understand the power and problems of Homeric poetry. It’s a book from which even those who feel themselves reasonably familiar with the poems are likely to learn new things. -- Professor Tony Spawforth, Chairman of the Judges, The Anglo-Hellenic League's Runciman Award 2013

      Table of Contents
      Introductory Note; 1. The Figures of Homeric Poetry; 2. Homeric Histories; 3. The Poet and the Making of the Poems; 4. Homer's Poetic Language; 5. Proems, Tales and Plots; 6. The Iliad; 7. The Odyssey; 8. Boundaries and Social Worlds; 9. Mortality and the Divine; Bibliography; Index.

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