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Heracles in Homer
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H.-G. Nesselrath
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Preface IV
- Contents V
- Homo faber. Franco Montanari: the Scholar (and the Man) 1
-
Part I: Homer and Homeric Philology
- Bemerkungen zu Homerischen Szenen auf griechischen Vasen 9
- Heracles in Homer 27
- Neoanalysis and Oral Poetry: A Historic Compromise? 37
- The Darkest Hour: Odysseus’ Smile and the Doloneia 51
- Homeric Hermeneutics on the way from Athens to Alexandria 87
- Hybridization of Scholiastic Classes in the Iliadic Corpus 147
- Poetry and Philology. Some Thoughts on the Theoretical Grounds of Aristarchus’ Homeric Scholarship 161
- The Dream Simile in Iliad 22 and Aristarchus’ Formula τῇ κατασκευῇ εὐτελεῖς 173
- Some Further Considerations on Herodicus’ Epigram against the Aristarcheans (SH 494) 185
- From Aristarchus to Vermeer: ἐνώπια παμφανόωντα 191
- Were the Homeric Poems the Work of a Woman? 217
- A Scholion on the Odyssey: Penelope and Eurycleia 235
- Im Dickicht der Quellenforschung: Eine kleine Nachlese zu den Homerzitaten in den Ethnika des Stephanos von Byzanz 253
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Part II: Reception of Homer
- With, or without, Homer: hearing the background in Sappho 269
- Homère chez Pindare : le «paradis» de la deuxième Olympique 293
- On the paraphrase of Iliad 1.012–042 in Plato’s Republic 3.393d–394a 313
- Un «brouillamini» platonicien à propos du «cycéon» homérique (Λ 624–641) 323
- Homer on the Comic Stage 339
- Homer in the Library: Callimachus’ Literary Response to Homeric Philology 363
- Hilfe für den Gott: Zum Verhältnis von Muse, Dichter und Philosoph 389
- „Homer hat gelebt – Homer hat nie gelebt“ 401
- The Primordial Water: Between Myth and Philosophy 417
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Part III: Beyond Homer
- Sharp Objects: Metalepsis and the Madness of Ajax 441
- Euripides’ Reception of the Aeschylean Lycurgeia in the Bacchae: Themes and Concepts 463
- In the Glassy Stream 485
- List of Contributors 501
- Publications by Franco Montanari 507
- Index Locorum 521
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Preface IV
- Contents V
- Homo faber. Franco Montanari: the Scholar (and the Man) 1
-
Part I: Homer and Homeric Philology
- Bemerkungen zu Homerischen Szenen auf griechischen Vasen 9
- Heracles in Homer 27
- Neoanalysis and Oral Poetry: A Historic Compromise? 37
- The Darkest Hour: Odysseus’ Smile and the Doloneia 51
- Homeric Hermeneutics on the way from Athens to Alexandria 87
- Hybridization of Scholiastic Classes in the Iliadic Corpus 147
- Poetry and Philology. Some Thoughts on the Theoretical Grounds of Aristarchus’ Homeric Scholarship 161
- The Dream Simile in Iliad 22 and Aristarchus’ Formula τῇ κατασκευῇ εὐτελεῖς 173
- Some Further Considerations on Herodicus’ Epigram against the Aristarcheans (SH 494) 185
- From Aristarchus to Vermeer: ἐνώπια παμφανόωντα 191
- Were the Homeric Poems the Work of a Woman? 217
- A Scholion on the Odyssey: Penelope and Eurycleia 235
- Im Dickicht der Quellenforschung: Eine kleine Nachlese zu den Homerzitaten in den Ethnika des Stephanos von Byzanz 253
-
Part II: Reception of Homer
- With, or without, Homer: hearing the background in Sappho 269
- Homère chez Pindare : le «paradis» de la deuxième Olympique 293
- On the paraphrase of Iliad 1.012–042 in Plato’s Republic 3.393d–394a 313
- Un «brouillamini» platonicien à propos du «cycéon» homérique (Λ 624–641) 323
- Homer on the Comic Stage 339
- Homer in the Library: Callimachus’ Literary Response to Homeric Philology 363
- Hilfe für den Gott: Zum Verhältnis von Muse, Dichter und Philosoph 389
- „Homer hat gelebt – Homer hat nie gelebt“ 401
- The Primordial Water: Between Myth and Philosophy 417
-
Part III: Beyond Homer
- Sharp Objects: Metalepsis and the Madness of Ajax 441
- Euripides’ Reception of the Aeschylean Lycurgeia in the Bacchae: Themes and Concepts 463
- In the Glassy Stream 485
- List of Contributors 501
- Publications by Franco Montanari 507
- Index Locorum 521