Kapitel
Lizenziert
Nicht lizenziert
Erfordert eine Authentifizierung
Publications by Franco Montanari
Sie haben derzeit keinen Zugang zu diesem Inhalt.
Sie haben derzeit keinen Zugang zu diesem Inhalt.
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- 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
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- 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