Homer's Divine Audience: The Iliad's Reception on Mount Olympus
Autor Tobias Myersen Limba Engleză Hardback – 30 iun 2019
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780198842354
ISBN-10: 019884235X
Pagini: 246
Ilustrații: 2 black-and-white illustrations
Dimensiuni: 147 x 223 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 019884235X
Pagini: 246
Ilustrații: 2 black-and-white illustrations
Dimensiuni: 147 x 223 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
Myers ... offers many sharp and useful points on its relation to audience perspectives.
Homer's Divine Audience makes an important contribution to the study of the Iliad's engagement with its audience. On the whole, I found Myers' approach to be sound, his readings perceptive, his discernment ofthe Iliad's deployment of various paradigms of spectacle illuminating and his analysis of the gods' role as mediators of the Iliad's story convincing.
This is a thoughtful and persuasive account of divine spectatorship in the Iliad and, particularly, of the role of Zeus as the poet's collaborator. M. builds on a wide range of existing scholarship — on the role of the divine audience, on performance and involvement, and on the capacity of epic to transcend time — to develop his argument.
Homer's Divine Audience reads beautifully, with clear prose and persuasive arguments.
Homer's Divine Audience makes an important contribution to the study of the Iliad's engagement with its audience. On the whole, I found Myers' approach to be sound, his readings perceptive, his discernment ofthe Iliad's deployment of various paradigms of spectacle illuminating and his analysis of the gods' role as mediators of the Iliad's story convincing.
This is a thoughtful and persuasive account of divine spectatorship in the Iliad and, particularly, of the role of Zeus as the poet's collaborator. M. builds on a wide range of existing scholarship — on the role of the divine audience, on performance and involvement, and on the capacity of epic to transcend time — to develop his argument.
Homer's Divine Audience reads beautifully, with clear prose and persuasive arguments.
Notă biografică
Tobias Myers is Assistant Professor of Classics at Connecticut College and holds degrees from the University of Colorado at Boulder and Columbia University. His research focuses primarily on Homer, with additional interests in Greco-Roman literature more broadly, magic and religion, and the history of ideas. Among other topics, he has written on addresses in Theocritus' bucolica, the 'literary cosmology' of Theocritus 2, and the spatio-temporal paradoxes of Iliadic battle scenes. His current projects include a study of Odyssean conceptions of self-knowledge and an attempt to situate Homeric conceptions of time within the larger history of the idea of eternity in the Western tradition.