Homer: Odyssey Books XVII-XVIIICambridge University Press, 10.6.2010 - 242 sivua "Homer's Odyssey tells a familiar story: a hero, a veteran of the Trojan War, returns home after ten trial-filled years of wandering in exotic lands only to find his halls occupied by 108 carousing youths who court his wife in the hope that the lawful husband and master has perished abroad. And yet for all the simplicity of its tale, the poet's technique is brilliantly intricate; from the notorious tease of the opening line which hides the epic hero's name, to the sudden threat of retaliation from the dead suitors' kin in the closing episode, the composition uses flashbacks and internal narratives, dramatic irony, doubling, and retardation devices to keep us wondering how exactly affairs in Ithaca will be resolved. It is a work that, not surprisingly, has exercised a lasting fascination from archaic through to contemporary times, and that has been re-imagined in countless forms, visual, verbal and musical among them. If another study of the Odyssey needs no justification, then the choice to focus on books 17 and 18may prompt the question 'why these?'One reason is the sheer diversity and tonal range of the two books' contents, which run from the burlesque comedy of the boxingmatch between the disguised Odysseus and the parasite Irus to the charged moment when the hero re-enters his home after his twenty years' absence and first sets eyes on his wife. The pathos of the death of the tick-infested Argus, who has kept vigil for his master ever since his departure, is unmistakable, its poignancy sharpened by the entirely different episode preceding it, where Odysseus meets the churlish cowherd Melanthius and is treated to language and threats normally excluded from the epic register"--Provided by publisher (cf OCLC) |
Sisältö
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
ABBREVIATIONS IN THE APPARATUS CRITICUS | 44 |
OMHPOY OYEEEIAE P | 45 |
OMHPOY OYEEEIAE E | 62 |
COMMENTARY | 74 |
BIBLIOGRAPHY | 220 |
235 | |
Muita painoksia - Näytä kaikki
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
abusive Achilles Aegisthus aÉt Alcinous Amphinomus and/or Antinous Aphrodite appears Aristarchus Athena Attic audience beggar book 17 caesura Chantraine character composition context contrast Demodocus derived describes dì ra diction disguise divine earlier echoes eipe elements enjambment epic episode epithet Eumaeus Eurymachus Eurynome Eust expression father frequently further gods Greek H. H. Cer Hephaestus hero hero's heroic Hesiod Homeric Iliad indicates individual instance Introduction Irus Ithaca kaª later llì macov meaning Melanthius Menelaus metrical motif Mycenaean narrative nÓn noun ntev occasions occurs Odysseus oÉd oÉk oral palace Parry peª Penelope Penelope's performance Phaeacians Phemius phrase Pind poem poem's poet poet's position pr¼v refers regularly role scene Scheria scholia similes song speaker speech status suggests suitors syllable t¼n Telemachus term Thalmann Theoc Theoclymenus Thersites tmesis tradition verb vowel words Zeus καὶ