Startseite Altertumswissenschaften & Ägyptologie 34 The Hippias Minor and the Traditions of Homeric Criticism
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34 The Hippias Minor and the Traditions of Homeric Criticism

  • Richard Hunter
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© 2021 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Munich/Boston

© 2021 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Munich/Boston

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  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Preface V
  3. Contents VII
  4. List of the Original Publication Venues XI
  5. List of Papers not Included in the Present Collection XIII
  6. Part I: Archaic and Classical Greek Literature
  7. 1 Alcibiades the Laughter-maker 3
  8. 2 The Songs of Demodocus: Compression and Extension in Greek Narrative Poetry 18
  9. 3 ‘Where do I begin?’: An Odyssean Narrative Strategy and its Afterlife 46
  10. Part II: Ancient Drama
  11. 4 The Garland of Hippolytus 67
  12. 5 Apollo and the Ion of Euripides: Nothing to do with Nietzsche? 84
  13. 6 Comedy and Reperformance 103
  14. Part III: Hellenistic Poetry
  15. 7 Language and Interpretation in Greek Epigram 131
  16. 8 The Gods of Callimachus 156
  17. 9 Festivals, Cults and the Construction of Consensus in Hellenistic Poetry 175
  18. 10 Theocritus and the Style of Hellenistic Poetry 193
  19. 11 Sweet Stesichorus: Theocritus 18 and the Helen Revisited 214
  20. 12 A Philosophical Death? 235
  21. 13 Hellenistic Poetry and the Archaeology of Leisure 245
  22. 14 Death of a Child: Grief Beyond the Literary? 267
  23. 15 Reading and Citing the Epigrams of Callimachus 286
  24. 16 Enkelados: Callimachus fr. 1.36 307
  25. 17 Sappho and Hellenistic Poetry 314
  26. 18 Theocritus and the Bucolic Homer 328
  27. Part IV: Latin Literature
  28. 19 Notes on the Ancient Reception of Sappho 349
  29. 20 One Verse of Mimnermus? Latin Elegy and Archaic Greek Elegy 364
  30. 21 Horace’s other Ars Poetica: Epistles 1.2 and Ancient Homeric Criticism 376
  31. 22 Some Dramatic Terminology 399
  32. 23 Regius urget: Hellenising Thoughts on Latin Intratextuality 411
  33. 24 The Geographies of Plautus’ Menaechmi 431
  34. Part V: The Ancient Novel
  35. 25 Fictional Anxieties 449
  36. 26 Rythmical Language and Poetic Citation in Greek Narrative Texts 462
  37. Part VI: Ancient Criticism and Scholarship
  38. 27 The Trojan Oration of Dio Chrysostom and Ancient Homeric Criticism 487
  39. 28 Plato’s Ion and the Origins of Scholarship 506
  40. 29 Attic Comedy in the Rhetorical and Moralising Traditions 521
  41. 30 ‘Clever about Verses’?: Plato and the ‘Scopas Ode’ (PMG 542 = 260 Poltera) 537
  42. 31 Serpents in the Soul: The ‘Libyan Myth’ of Dio Chrysostom 560
  43. 32 ‘Palaephatus’, Strabo and the Boundaries of Myth 578
  44. 33 The Rhetorical Criticism of Homer 598
  45. 34 The Hippias Minor and the Traditions of Homeric Criticism 633
  46. 35 Autobiography as Literary History: Dio Chrysostom, On exile 659
  47. 36 Eustathian Moments: Reading Eustathius’ Commentaries 682
  48. 37 Dionysius of Halicarnassus and the Idea of the Critic 750
  49. 38 Dio Chrysostom and the Citation of Tragedy 770
  50. 39 Some Problems in the ‘Deception of Zeus’ 787
  51. Part VII: Miscellaneous
  52. 40 The Letter of Aristeas 811
  53. 41 Pulling Apollo Apart 824
  54. 42 The Poetics of Greek Inscriptions 850
  55. 43 John Malalas and the Story of the Cyclops 875
  56. 44 Homer in Origen, Against Celsus 883
  57. General Index 909
  58. Index of Passages Discussed 915
Heruntergeladen am 31.10.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110747577-034/html
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