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Building on numerous original close readings of works by Homer, Hesiod, and other ancient Greek poets, Richard P. Martin articulates a broad and precise poetics of archaic Greek verse. The ancient Greek hexameter poetry of such works as the Iliad and the Odyssey differ from most modern verbal art because it was composed for live, face-to-face performance, often in a competitive setting, before an audience well versed in mythological and ritual lore. The essays collected here span Martin's acclaimed career and explore ways of reading this poetic heritage using principles and evidence from the comparative study of oral traditions, literary and speech-act theories, and the ethnographic record.
Among topics analyzed in depth are the narrative structures of Homer's epics, the Hesiodic Works and Days, and the Homeric Hymn to Apollo; the characterization of poetic and musical performers within the poems; the social context for verses ascribed to the legendary singer Orpheus; the significance of various rituals as stylized by poetic performances; and the interrelations, at the level of diction and theme, among the major genres of epic and hymn, as well as "genres of speaking" such as lament, praise, advice, and proverbial wisdom.
Richard P. Martin is the Antony and Isabelle Raubitschek Professor of Classics at Stanford University. Among his many books are Classical Mythology and The Language of Heroes.
IntroductionPart I: Epic Genre and Technique1. Epic as Genre2. Similes and Performance3. Formulas and Speeches: The Usefulness of Parry's Method4. Wrapping Homer Up: Cohesion, Discourse, and Deviation in the IliadPart II: Mythic Hymnists, Historical Performers5. Apollo's Kithara and Poseidon's Crash-Test: Ritual and Contest in the Evolution of Greek Aesthetics6. The Senses of an Ending: Myth, Ritual, and Poetic Exodia in Performance7. Synchronic Aspects of Homeric Performance: The Evidence of the Hymn to Apollo8. Rhapsodizing Orpheus9. Golden Verses: Voice and Authority in the TabletsPart III: Hesiodic Constructions10. Hesiod and the Didactic Double11. Hesiod's Metanastic Poetics12. Hesiod, Odysseus, and the Instruction of Princes13. Pulp Epic: The Catalogue and the ShieldPart IV: The Backward Look14. Keens from the Absent Chorus: Troy to Ulster15. Telemachus and the Last Hero Song16. Until It Ends: Varieties of Iliadic Anticipation17. Distant Landmarks: Homer and Hesiod
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