
The Homeric Simile In Comparative Perspectives: Oral Traditions From Saudi Arabia To Indonesia Investigates Both The Construction Of The Homeric Simile And The Performance Of Homeric Poetry From Neglected Comparative Perspectives, Offering A Revealing Exploration Of What Made The Epics Such Powerful Examples Of Verbal Artistry. Divided Into Two Parts, The Volume First Considers Similes In Five Modern-day Oral Poetries - Rajasthani Epic, South Sumatran Epic, Kyrgyz Epic, Bosniac Epic, And Najdi Lyric Poems From Saudi Arabia - And Studies Successful Performances By Still Other Verbal Artists, Such As Egyptian Singers Of Epic, Turkish Minstrels, And Chinese Storytellers. By Applying These Findings To The Homeric Epics, The Second Part Presents A New Take On How The Homeric Poet Put Together His Similes And Alters Our Understanding Of How The Poet Displayed His Competence As A Performer Of Verbal Art And Interacted With His Poetic Peers And Predecessors. Engaging Intensively With A Diverse Array Of Scholarship From Outside The Field Of Classical Studies, From Folkloristics To Cognitive Linguistics, This Truly Interdisciplinary Volume Transforms How We View Not Only A Central Feature Of Homeric Poetry But Also The Very Nature Of Homeric Performance.
This volume investigates the construction and performance of the Homeric simile by situating it within a broad, cross-cultural framework of global oral traditions. Prof. Jonathan L. Ready, a scholar of classical literature, synthesizes findings from folkloristics, cognitive linguistics, and comparative literature to challenge traditional interpretations of Homeric artistry. By analyzing modern oral poetries alongside the Iliad and the Odyssey, the author argues that the Homeric poet’s competence was defined by specific performance strategies and interactions with a wider tradition of verbal art.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the field of classics recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of oral-formulaic theory and comparative poetics. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which requires a foundational understanding of Homeric scholarship to fully appreciate the comparative arguments presented.
Page Count:
336
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192523473
ISBN-13:
9780192523471
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!