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Ignorant Narrators in Greek Tragedy

  • Ruth Scodel
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Narratology and Interpretation
This chapter is in the book Narratology and Interpretation

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents v
  3. Introduction 1
  4. I. Ancient Predecessors of Narratology
  5. The Theory and Practice of Narrative in Plato 15
  6. The Trojan Oration of Dio Chrysostom and Ancient Homeric Criticism 43
  7. Narratological Concepts in Greek Scholia 63
  8. II. Narratology – New Concepts
  9. Metalepsis in Ancient Greek Literature 87
  10. Homer, Odysseus, and the Narratology of Performance 117
  11. Speech Act Types, Conversational Exchange, and the Speech Representational Spectrum in Homer 137
  12. Philosophical and Structuralist Narratologies – Worlds Apart? 153
  13. III. Narratology and the Interpretation of Epic and Lyric Poetry
  14. Chance or Design? Language and Plot Management in the Odyssey. Klytaimnestra άλοχος μυηστή έμήσατο 177
  15. Arete’s Words: Etymology, Ehoie-Poetry and Gendered Narrative in the Odyssey 213
  16. Narratology, Deixis, and the Performance of Choral Lyric. On Pindar’s First Pythian Ode 241
  17. Apollonius Rhodius as an (anti-)Homeric Narrator: Time and Space in the Argonautica 275
  18. ‘Snapshots’ of Myth: The Notion of Time in Hellenistic Epyllion 293
  19. Aeneid 5.362 – 484: Time, Epic and the Analeptic Gauntlets 321
  20. IV. Narratology and the Interpretation of Tragedy
  21. Sophocles and the Narratology of Drama 337
  22. Layered Stories in Aeschylus’ Persians 357
  23. Narrative Technique in the Parodos of Aeschylus’ Agamemnon 377
  24. Knowing a Story’s End: Future Reflexive in the Tragic Narrative of the Argive Expedition Against Thebes 399
  25. Ignorant Narrators in Greek Tragedy 421
  26. V. Narratology and the Interpretation of Historiography
  27. Names and Narrative Techniques in Xenophon’s Anabasis 451
  28. The Perils of Expectations: Perceptions, Suspense and Surprise in Polybius’ Histories 481
  29. Seeing through Caesar’s Eyes: Focalisation and Interpretation 507
  30. History beyond Literature: Interpreting the ‘Internally Focalized’ Narrative in Livy’s Ab urbe condita 527
  31. Fame’s Narratives. Epic and Historiography 555
  32. Backmatter 573
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