Modern Homeric scholarship is distinguished by a dazzling
diversity of approaches. That diversity is brilliantly displayed in
this volume, in which nine well-known classicists approach the
Homeric poems from the various perspectives of archaeology,
economic history, philosophy, literary criticism, linguistics, and
Byzantine history.
Several essays are primarily concerned with what the Homeric
poems teach us about the past. Richard Hope Simpson, for example,
reviews the controversy sparked by his and John F. Lazenby's 1970
argument that the Catalogue of Ships in the Iliad accurately
reflects the geography of Mycenean Greece. Using archaeology as
just one of his starting points, Gregory Nagy reflects upon the
death and funeral of Sarpedon as described in the Iliad. Our
understanding of the word ate is enhanced by E. D. Francis, who
closely examines its prehistory.
Norman Austin's elegant and original discussion of tone in the
Odyssey's Cyclops tale is animated by both psychoanalytic theory
and his work with two practitioners of optometric visual training.
Writing of Odysseus, James M. Redfield dubs that hero "the economic
man" and links certain tensions in the Odyssey to the actual
economic concerns of Greece in the late eighth century BC. Both Ann
L. T. Bergren and Mabel L. Lang concern themselves with problems of
narrative in the Homeric epics.
Like Hope Simpson, C. J. Rowe updates a controversy--in this
instance, the many objections raised to Arthur Adkins' influential
1960 study of moral values in Homer. Gareth Morgan provides a
fascinating glimpse of the Homeric scholarship of another day by
focusing on the work of the astonishing John Tzetzes in
twelfth-century Byzantium.
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