
Written Texts Of The Iliad And The Odyssey Achieved An Unprecedented Degree Of Standardization After 150 Bce, But What About Homeric Texts Prior To The Emergence Of Standardized Written Texts? Orality, Textuality, And The Homeric Epics Sheds Light On That Earlier History By Drawing On Scholarship From Outside The Discipline Of Classical Studies To Query From Three Different Angles What It Means To Speak Of Homeric Poetry Together With The Word Text. Part I Utilizes Work In Linguistic Anthropology On Oral Texts And Oral Intertextuality To Illuminate Both The Verbal And Oratorical Landscapes Our Homeric Poets Fashion In Their Epics And What The Poets Were Striving To Do When They Performed. Looking To Folkloristics, Part Ii Examines Modern Instances Of The Textualization Of An Oral Traditional Work In Order To Reconstruct The Creation Of Written Versions Of The Homeric Poems Through A Process That Began With A Poet Dictating To A Scribe. Combining Research Into Scribal Activity In Other Cultures, Especially In The Fields Of Religious Studies And Medieval Studies, With Research Into Performance In The Field Of Linguistic Anthropology, Part Iii Investigates Some Of The Earliest Extant Texts Of The Homeric Epics, The So-called Wild Papyri. By Looking At Oral Texts, Dictated Texts, And Wild Texts, This Volume Traces The Intricate History Of Homeric Texts From The Archaic To The Hellenistic Period, Long Before The Emergence Of Standardized Written Texts, In A Comparative And Interdisciplinary Study That Will Benefit Researchers In A Number Of Disciplines Across The Humanities. Jonathan L. Ready. Includes Bibliographical References And Indexes.
This volume investigates the complex transition of the Homeric epics from oral performance to standardized written text by analyzing the period prior to 150 BCE. Jonathan L. Ready, a scholar in classical studies, synthesizes methodologies from linguistic anthropology, folkloristics, and religious studies to examine how oral traditions were captured and transformed into written artifacts. The work argues that understanding the pre-standardization history of the Iliad and the Odyssey requires a multi-disciplinary approach to the concepts of orality and textuality.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the field of classics and oral tradition recognize this work as a significant interdisciplinary contribution to Homeric studies. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the author's rigorous application of anthropological frameworks to ancient texts.
Page Count:
0
Publication Date:
1900-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press,
ISBN-10:
0191872822
ISBN-13:
9780191872822
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