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Homer's People: Epic Poetry and Social Formation

by: Haubold, J.

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Category: Cambridge Classical Studies / Texts and Commentaries / Greek and Latin Classics
Code: 7745
ISBN-13: 9780521770095 / 978-0-521-77009-5
ISBN-10: 0521770092 / 0-521-77009-2
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication Date: 2000
Publication Place: Cambridge
Binding: Cloth
Pages: 240
Book Condition: New
Comments: Cambridge Classical Studies

This book examines the role and character of Homer's people, laoi, in Homeric story-telling, arguing that Homeric poetry is crucially concerned with the people as a basis for communal life. Both The Iliad and The Odyssey are read as sustained meditations on the processes involved in protecting and destroying the people. The investigation draws on a wide range of approaches from formulaic analysis to the study of early performance contexts. From a close reading of the Homeric epics, Homer's people emerge as a community without effective social structures. When this is viewed from the perspective of Homeric performances in the polis, a contrast between Homer's laoi and the founding people of ritual emerges. While the former typically perish, the survival of the latter is secured by the establishment of successful institutions.

Was the first major study of this topic
Fresh insights into the contribution made by Homer's poems to life in the Greek city-state
Detailed study of both The Iliad and The Odyssey

Table of Contents
Introduction
1. Laoi in early Greek hexameter poetry
2. Homer's people
3. Laos epic in performance
Appendix A. Epic formulae
Appendix B. Ritual formulae.

 
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Homer's People: Epic Poetry and Social Formation

by: Haubold, J.

  • ISBN-13: 9780521770095 / 978-0-521-77009-5
  • ISBN-03: 0521770092 / 0-521-77009-2
  • Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2000

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