This edition, commentary, and accompanying essays focus on the
tenth book of the "Iliad," which has been doubted, ignored, and
even scorned. Casey Due and Mary Ebbott use approaches based on
oral traditional poetics to illuminate many of the interpretive
questions that strictly literary approaches find unsolvable. The
introductory essays explain their textual and interpretive
approaches and explicate the ambush theme within the whole Greek
epic tradition. The critical texts (presented as a sequence of
witnesses, including the tenth-century Venetus A manuscript and
select papyri) highlight the individual witnesses and the
variations they offer. The commentary demonstrates how the
unconventional Iliad 10 shares in the oral traditional nature of
the whole epic, even though its poetics are specific to its
nocturnal ambush plot.
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