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  • - Studies in Mycenaean Texts, Language and Culture in Honor of Jose Luis Melena Jimenez
     
    380,-

    TA-U-RO-QO-RO takes up problems of script and language representation and textual interpretation, ranging from the use of punctuation marks and numbers in the Linear B to personal names and place names reflecting the ethnic composition of Mycenaean society and the dialects spoken during the proto-Homeric period of the late Bronze Age.

  • - Greek Priests and Religious Officials from Homer to Heliodorus
    av Beate Dignas
    270,-

    "What is a Greek priest?" This volume, which has its origins in a symposium at the Center for Hellenic Studies, Washington, DC, focuses on the question through several lenses: the visual representation of cult personnel, priests as ritual experts, variations of priesthood, ideal concepts and their transformation, and the role of manteis.

  • - Soldiers in Menander
    av Wilfred E. Major
    316,-

    Love in the Age of War explores soldier characters that were at the center of many of Menander's plays. While later traditions turned these characters into clowns, Wilfred Major details how Menander portrayed the soldiers as challenging and complex men who struggle to find a place in society, and whose stories may resonate more powerfully today.

  • - Exploring Particle Use across Genres
    av Anna Bonifazi
    496,-

    From 2010 to 2014, the Classics Department at the University of Heidelberg set out to trace over two millennia of research on Greek particles within and beyond ancient Greek. Particles in Ancient Greek Discourse builds on this scholarship and analyzes particle use across five genres: epic, lyric, tragedy, comedy, and historiography.

  • - Eros and Dialogue in Classical Athenian Literature
    av Andrew Scholtz
    260,-

    Writing to a friend, Horace describes him as fascinated by "the discordant harmony of the cosmos, its purpose and power." Scholtz takes this notion of "discordant harmony" and argues for it as an aesthetic principle where classical Athenian literature addresses politics in the idiom of sexual desire.

  • - Telling Time in the Iliad
    av Lorenzo F. Garcia
    296,-

    Homeric Durability investigates the concepts of time and decay in the Iliad. Through a framework informed by phenomenology and psychology, Lorenzo Garcia argues that, in moments of pain and sorrow, the Homeric gods are themselves defined by human temporal experience, and so the epic tradition cannot but imagine its own eventual disintegration.

  • - Heroic Reference and Ritual Gestures in Time and Space
    av Claude Calame
    270,-

    The Ancient Greeks not only spoke of time unfolding in a specific space, but also projected the past upon the future in order to make it active in the social practice of the present. This book shows how the Ancient Greeks' collective memory was based on a remarkable faculty for the creation of ritual and narrative symbols.

  • - A Literary Study
    av Scott Fitzgerald Johnson
    270,-

    The Life and Miracles of Thekla offers a unique view on the reception of classical and early Christian literature in Late Antiquity. This study examines the Life and Miracles as an intricate example of Greek writing and attempts to situate the work amidst a wealth of similar literary forms from the classical world.

  •  
    490,-

    Investigating ritual in Greece from cross-disciplinary and transhistorical perspectives, this book offers novel readings of the pivotal role of ritual in Greek traditions by exploring a broad spectrum of texts, art, and social practices.

  • - Herodotus and the Languages of Barbarians
    av Rosaria Vignolo Munson
    190,-

    In Greek thought, barbaroi are utterers of unintelligible or inarticulate sounds. What importance does the text of Herodotus's Histories attribute to language as a criterion of ethnic identity? The answer to this question illuminates the empirical foundations of Herodotus's pluralistic worldview.

  • - Competition and Performance in Greek Poetry
    av Derek Collins
    258,-

    This study provides for the first time an in-depth examination of a central mode of Greek poetic competition-capping, which occurs when speakers or singers respond to one another in small numbers of verses, single verses, or between verse units themselves.

  • - Philosophical and Religious Perspectives in Late Antiquity
     
    400,-

    This volume integrates philosophical and religious perspectives on the relation between body and soul. Focusing on the transformative period of the first six centuries CE, one hears echoes of Plato and Aristotle. The polyphonic-but not dissonant-dialogue is created by an international group of scholars in ancient philosophy, theology, and religion.

  • av Christian Jacob
    270,-

    Christian Jacob presents a completely fresh and unique reading of Athenaeus's Sophists at Dinner (ca. 200 ce), a text long mined merely for its testimonies to lost classical poets. Connecting the world of Hellenistic erudition with its legacy among Hellenized Romans, Jacob helps the reader navigate the many intersecting paths in this enormous work.

  • - Multiformity and Tradition in the Homeric Epics
    av Casey Due
    336,-

    Casey Due, coeditor of the Homer Multitext, explores both the traditionality and multiformity of the Iliad. Due argues this multiform nature gives us glimpses of the very long history of the text, access to even earlier Iliads, and a greater awareness of the mechanisms by which such a remarkable epic poem could be composed in performance.

  • - Poetics and Presence in the Iliad and Odyssey
    av Katherine Kretler
    316,-

    Katherine Kretler plumbs the virtues of the Homeric poems as scripts for solo performance. What is lost in the journey from the stage to the page? The book focuses on the performer not as transparent mediator, but as one haunted by multiple stories, bringing suppressed voices to the surface.

  • - From Ancient Greek Times to Now
    av Gregory Nagy
    360,-

    Gregory Nagy analyzes metonymy as a mental process that complements metaphor. If metaphor is a substitution of something unfamilar for something familiar, metonymy connects something familiar with something else already familiar. Nagy offers close readings of over one hundred examples of metonymy in the arts of Greek and other cultures.

  • - Number Symbolism in Platonism and Early Christianity
    av Joel Kalvesmaki
    306,-

    In the second century, some Gnostic Christians used numerical structures to describe God, interpret the Bible, and frame the universe. The Theology of Arithmetic explores the rich variety of number symbolism used by gnosticizing groups and their orthodox critics, and shows how earlier neo-Pythagorean and Platonist thought influenced this theology.

  • - The Original One Hundred and Fifty-Four Poems
    av C. P. Cavafy
    306,-

    This volume comprises the entire body of work by the artist widely considered a master of modern Greek poetry. Published in the original Greek, with a new English translation by Stratis Haviaris on each facing page, and with a foreword by Seamus Heaney, this is Cavafy, familiar and fresh, seen through new eyes, yet instantly recognized.

  • - Performative Pause in Homeric Prosody
    av Ronald J. J. Blankenborg
    356,-

    Audible Punctuation focuses on the pause in Homer's Iliad and Odyssey, both as a compositional feature and as a performative aspect of delivery. Ronald Blankenborg's analysis of metrical, rhythmical, syntactical, and phonological phrasing shows that the text of the Homeric epic allows for different options for performative pause.

  • - Epic Rivalries and the Appropriation of Mythical Pasts
    av Elton T. E. Barker
    360,-

    This book examines moments in the Iliad and Odyssey where Theban characters and themes come to the fore. By using evidence from Hesiod and fragmentary sources attributed to Theban tradition, Barker and Christensen explore Homer's appropriation of Theban motifs of strife and distribution to promote his tale of the sack of Troy and the returns home.

  • - Histories, Ideologies, Structures
     
    360,-

    Despite their crucial role, the Helots of Sparta remain essentially invisible in our ancient sources and peripheral and enigmatic in modern scholarship. This book is devoted to a much-needed reassessment of Helotry and of its place in the history and sociology of unfree labor.

  • - Tradition and Innovations
     
    316,-

    One of the most significant contributors to late antique literary culture, Eusebius of Caesarea has received only limited attention as a writer and thinker in his own right. Focusing on the full range of Eusebius's works, the new studies in Eusebius of Caesarea will change how classicists, theologians, and historians think about this major figure.

  • - (Mis)Identity and the Polis in Oedipus Tyrannus
    av Efimia D. Karakantza
    316,-

    Oedipus's major handicap in life is not knowing who he is. Unlike the majority of modern and postmodern readings of Oedipus Tyrannus, Efimia Karakantza's text focuses on the question of identity. The quest to piece together Oedipus's identity is the long, painful, and intricate procedure of recasting his life into a new narrative.

  • - Ancient and Modern Readings of a Lost Contribution to Ancient Scholarship
    av Alexandra Trachsel
    316,-

    Trachsel's work represents the first treatment dedicated to Demetrios of Scepsis in over a century. She offers a thorough analysis of the ancient and modern reactions to Demetrios's research into the Iliad and the Trojan landscape and provides new evidence about the impressively wide range of other topics Demetrios's work may have contained.

  • - Reading Characterization in Homer
    av Andrew Porter
    316,-

    Andrew Porter explores characterization in Homer, from an oral-traditional point of view, through the resonance of words, themes, and "back stories" from the past and future. He analyzes Agamemnon's character traits in the Iliad, including his qualities as a leader, against events such as his tragic homecoming in the Odyssey.

  • - The Homeric Education of a Little Prince
    av J. C. B. Petropoulos
    316,-

    As scholars have remarked, the word kleos in the "Iliad" and the "Odyssey" alike refers to something more substantive and complex than 'fame' or 'glory'. This book presents a meditation on this concept as expressed and experienced in the adult society Telemachos find himself in.

  • av Malcolm Davies
    270,-

  • av Laura M. Slatkin
    316,-

    Explores the superficially minor role of Thetis in the Iliad. This volume features six additional essays, which cover a range of topics in the study of the Greek Epic: the workings of genre in Hesiod and Homer; the poetics of exchange; and the nature of enmity and friendship. It also includes a study of the Hesiodic Catalog of Women.

  • av William Brockliss
    346,-

    William Brockliss, responding to George Lakoff's and Mark Johnson's analysis of metaphor, explores the Homeric poets' use of concrete concepts drawn from the Greek natural environment to aid their audiences' understanding of abstract concepts. In particular, he considers Homeric images associating flowers with deception, disorder, and death.

  • - From Homer to Paul Celan
    av Jean Bollack
    376,-

    The Art of Reading is the first-long overdue-collection of essays by the French classical philologist and humanist Jean Bollack to be published in English. As the scope of the collection shows, Bollack felt equally at home thinking in depth about both the classics of Greek poetry and philosophy and modern, including contemporary, poetry.

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