Caesurae, Cola, and Discourse Acts: A Functional Discourse Grammar Approach to Homeric Colometry
-
Rutger J. Allan
Rutger J. Allan is Associate Professor of Ancient Greek at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. He has published on a variety of topics in Ancient Greek linguistics relating to verbal semantics and discourse analysis, and has a particular interest in cognitive linguistic and narratological approaches to Greek narrative texts. He is the author ofThe Middle Voice in Ancient Greek. A Study in Polysemy (2003), and coeditor ofThe Language of Literature (2007) andThe Greek Future and its History (2017).
Abstract
One of the most influential colometric models of the Homeric hexameter is that of Hermann Fränkel (1926). Fränkel’s model revolves around the idea that each hexameter is divided into four cola, separated from one another by three caesurae that were audible in performance as intonational boundaries, and that were, at the same time, sense boundaries (“Sinnesfuge”). A shortcoming of Fränkel’s intuitively attractive approach is that it does not formulate explicit linguistic criteria that can be used to determine caesura positions. I argue that a Functional Discourse Grammar approach is able to provide these missing linguistic criteria, by treating caesurae as discourse-pragmatic boundaries. With this approach, most caesurae can be analyzed as boundaries between extra-clausal constituents (expressing Subsidiary Discourse Acts, such as Themes, Settings, Elaborations, and vocatives) and their host clause (Nuclear Discourse Act). I also postulate the existence of cola with the pragmatic function of Left-dislocated Focus. A discourse-pragmatic approach along these lines by and large confirms Fränkel’s central claim: the vast majority of the hexameters can indeed be divided into four cola. However, such an approach also provides evidence for a more flexible view, usually associated with Kirk’s approach to colometry, that not all word divisions at regular caesura positions are sense boundaries, resulting in two or three-colon lines. These exceptional cases, however, are less frequent than Kirk claims.
Abstract
One of the most influential colometric models of the Homeric hexameter is that of Hermann Fränkel (1926). Fränkel’s model revolves around the idea that each hexameter is divided into four cola, separated from one another by three caesurae that were audible in performance as intonational boundaries, and that were, at the same time, sense boundaries (“Sinnesfuge”). A shortcoming of Fränkel’s intuitively attractive approach is that it does not formulate explicit linguistic criteria that can be used to determine caesura positions. I argue that a Functional Discourse Grammar approach is able to provide these missing linguistic criteria, by treating caesurae as discourse-pragmatic boundaries. With this approach, most caesurae can be analyzed as boundaries between extra-clausal constituents (expressing Subsidiary Discourse Acts, such as Themes, Settings, Elaborations, and vocatives) and their host clause (Nuclear Discourse Act). I also postulate the existence of cola with the pragmatic function of Left-dislocated Focus. A discourse-pragmatic approach along these lines by and large confirms Fränkel’s central claim: the vast majority of the hexameters can indeed be divided into four cola. However, such an approach also provides evidence for a more flexible view, usually associated with Kirk’s approach to colometry, that not all word divisions at regular caesura positions are sense boundaries, resulting in two or three-colon lines. These exceptional cases, however, are less frequent than Kirk claims.
Chapters in this book
- frontmatter I
- Preface V
- Contents IX
- List of Figures and Diagrams XV
- List of Tables XVII
- Abbreviations XXI
-
Part I History of the Greek Language, Phonetics, Morphology
- Linguistic Variation and the Study of Ancient Greek Dialects 3
- Open Questions in Ancient Greek Phonology: Some New Evidence from Enclitics 33
- Post-Nasal Deaspiration in Ancient Greek: Mirage or Reality? 65
- Greek Verbs in -βω: A Survey 81
- Action Nouns in -τιζ/-σιζ as Second Members of Nominal Compounds in Greek 93
- The Syntax and Semantics of ([N+V]V) Verbal Compounds in Ancient Greek 107
- Σκορακίζω: ‘Curse (by Saying ἐζ κόρακαζ)’. About Delocutive Derivation in Ancient Greek and Performative 127
-
Part II Lexicon, Semantics
- Nature-based Metaphors as Body-part Terms in Ancient Greek: On καρπόζ ‘Wrist’ and ἀστράγαλοζ ‘Ankle(Bone)’ 147
- Grammaticalization of Adverbs in Ancient Greek: The Case of Homeric μάλα 159
- Smells like Metonymy 179
- Cultural Reconstruction through Linguistic Analysis: The Case of AG ταρχύω and ταριχ∊ύω 195
- On Hom. ἐπίφρων and πρόφρων in View of Homeric Human Physiology 211
- Analytical Constructions and Synthetic Encoding of Complex Predicates at the Semantics-Pragmatics Interface 225
-
Part III Syntax 1: Clause
- Number Agreement of a Predicate in Singular with Two or More Coordinated Noun Phrases in Nominative in Homer 247
- The Construction of the Verb μιμνήσκομαι in the Homeric Language 261
- On a Double Case Construction in Ancient Greek: The Whole-Part Construction in Homeric Greek 279
- Taking Stock of Greek Support-Verb Constructions: Synchronic and Diachronic Variability in the Documentary Papyri 297
- Hyperbaton in Herodotus: A Functional Discourse Grammar Perspective 315
- Adverb Placement in Demosthenes’ First Philippic 335
- Case Attraction in Infinitive Clauses: A Distributive Account 351
-
Part IV Syntax 2: Verb and Modality
- Dangling between Diachrony, Register and Atticism: A Language Ecology Approach to Modal Morphosyntax in Post-Classical Greek 373
- Information Source and Epistemic Modality in the Classical Usage of ἀνάγκη and ἀναγκαῖον 389
- The Preverb ἀντι- in Ancient Greek: From Space to Reciprocity 409
-
Part V Syntax 3: Coordination and Subordination
- Null-Subject Genitive Absolute and Co-Referentiality in 5th Cent. BCE Ionic and Attic Prose 435
- On the Oblique Optative in Ionic and Attic Prose Completive Sentences with ὥζ and ὅτι: Remarks Towards a Comparative Study 451
- Relativization of Syntactic and Semantic Functions in Classical Greek: A Case Study Based on Sophocles’ Heptad 467
- Backgrounding, Theticals and Periphrastic τυγχάν∊ιν 483
- βούλ∊ι/-∊σθ∊, θέλ∊ιζ/-∊τ∊ Plus Subjunctive in Classical Greek: Subordination or Coordination? 499
- Relative Clauses in Septuagint Greek: Some Preliminary Remarks 515
- Addition Clauses in Ancient Greek 535
- Pragmatic and Discursive Functions of Non-Canonical Conditional Sentences 553
- The Mixed Pattern and the Other Conjunctive Strategies in Herodotus’ Greek: An Analysis from a Typological Perspective 569
- Participle Constructions in Post-Classical Greek: The Example of the “Confessions” of Asia Minor 587
-
Part VI Pragmatics and Discourse
- Caesurae, Cola, and Discourse Acts: A Functional Discourse Grammar Approach to Homeric Colometry 609
- Vocative and ‘Terms of Address’ in the Odyssey 627
- The Pragmatics of Rhetorical Questions in Sophocles’ Tragedies: An Analysis of Antigone and Electra 641
- Verbal Impoliteness in Greek Oratory: The Case of οὗτοζ 659
- From Disjunct to Connective: The Particle οὖν in Herodotus’ Histories and its Association with Anaphoric Elements 671
- On the Use of the Interjection ὦ in the Dialogues of the Odyssey: An Analysis of (ὦ) γέρον, (ὦ) γύναι, and (ὦ) ξ∊ῖν∊ 683
- Structure and Function in Catalogic Discourse: The Case of Iliadic Androktasíai 701
-
Part VII Digital Research
- Linguistic Annotation for a Catalog of Ancient Greek Authors and Works 721
- Formulaic Networks as Prototypical Categories: Combining the Ancient Greek Dependency Treebank with the Ancient Greek WordNet for a Pilot Study on the Iliad 737
- Linguistic Complexity in Ancient Greek: Sentence Complexity and Digital Treebanks 759
- Representing Semantic Roles in Greek Treebanks 777
- “Proleptic” Arguments in the Greek Treebanks 795
- Tongue, Language or Noise? Word Sense Disambiguation in Ancient Greek with Corpus-Based Methods 813
- List of Contributors 829
- Index Locorum
- Index Rerum
Chapters in this book
- frontmatter I
- Preface V
- Contents IX
- List of Figures and Diagrams XV
- List of Tables XVII
- Abbreviations XXI
-
Part I History of the Greek Language, Phonetics, Morphology
- Linguistic Variation and the Study of Ancient Greek Dialects 3
- Open Questions in Ancient Greek Phonology: Some New Evidence from Enclitics 33
- Post-Nasal Deaspiration in Ancient Greek: Mirage or Reality? 65
- Greek Verbs in -βω: A Survey 81
- Action Nouns in -τιζ/-σιζ as Second Members of Nominal Compounds in Greek 93
- The Syntax and Semantics of ([N+V]V) Verbal Compounds in Ancient Greek 107
- Σκορακίζω: ‘Curse (by Saying ἐζ κόρακαζ)’. About Delocutive Derivation in Ancient Greek and Performative 127
-
Part II Lexicon, Semantics
- Nature-based Metaphors as Body-part Terms in Ancient Greek: On καρπόζ ‘Wrist’ and ἀστράγαλοζ ‘Ankle(Bone)’ 147
- Grammaticalization of Adverbs in Ancient Greek: The Case of Homeric μάλα 159
- Smells like Metonymy 179
- Cultural Reconstruction through Linguistic Analysis: The Case of AG ταρχύω and ταριχ∊ύω 195
- On Hom. ἐπίφρων and πρόφρων in View of Homeric Human Physiology 211
- Analytical Constructions and Synthetic Encoding of Complex Predicates at the Semantics-Pragmatics Interface 225
-
Part III Syntax 1: Clause
- Number Agreement of a Predicate in Singular with Two or More Coordinated Noun Phrases in Nominative in Homer 247
- The Construction of the Verb μιμνήσκομαι in the Homeric Language 261
- On a Double Case Construction in Ancient Greek: The Whole-Part Construction in Homeric Greek 279
- Taking Stock of Greek Support-Verb Constructions: Synchronic and Diachronic Variability in the Documentary Papyri 297
- Hyperbaton in Herodotus: A Functional Discourse Grammar Perspective 315
- Adverb Placement in Demosthenes’ First Philippic 335
- Case Attraction in Infinitive Clauses: A Distributive Account 351
-
Part IV Syntax 2: Verb and Modality
- Dangling between Diachrony, Register and Atticism: A Language Ecology Approach to Modal Morphosyntax in Post-Classical Greek 373
- Information Source and Epistemic Modality in the Classical Usage of ἀνάγκη and ἀναγκαῖον 389
- The Preverb ἀντι- in Ancient Greek: From Space to Reciprocity 409
-
Part V Syntax 3: Coordination and Subordination
- Null-Subject Genitive Absolute and Co-Referentiality in 5th Cent. BCE Ionic and Attic Prose 435
- On the Oblique Optative in Ionic and Attic Prose Completive Sentences with ὥζ and ὅτι: Remarks Towards a Comparative Study 451
- Relativization of Syntactic and Semantic Functions in Classical Greek: A Case Study Based on Sophocles’ Heptad 467
- Backgrounding, Theticals and Periphrastic τυγχάν∊ιν 483
- βούλ∊ι/-∊σθ∊, θέλ∊ιζ/-∊τ∊ Plus Subjunctive in Classical Greek: Subordination or Coordination? 499
- Relative Clauses in Septuagint Greek: Some Preliminary Remarks 515
- Addition Clauses in Ancient Greek 535
- Pragmatic and Discursive Functions of Non-Canonical Conditional Sentences 553
- The Mixed Pattern and the Other Conjunctive Strategies in Herodotus’ Greek: An Analysis from a Typological Perspective 569
- Participle Constructions in Post-Classical Greek: The Example of the “Confessions” of Asia Minor 587
-
Part VI Pragmatics and Discourse
- Caesurae, Cola, and Discourse Acts: A Functional Discourse Grammar Approach to Homeric Colometry 609
- Vocative and ‘Terms of Address’ in the Odyssey 627
- The Pragmatics of Rhetorical Questions in Sophocles’ Tragedies: An Analysis of Antigone and Electra 641
- Verbal Impoliteness in Greek Oratory: The Case of οὗτοζ 659
- From Disjunct to Connective: The Particle οὖν in Herodotus’ Histories and its Association with Anaphoric Elements 671
- On the Use of the Interjection ὦ in the Dialogues of the Odyssey: An Analysis of (ὦ) γέρον, (ὦ) γύναι, and (ὦ) ξ∊ῖν∊ 683
- Structure and Function in Catalogic Discourse: The Case of Iliadic Androktasíai 701
-
Part VII Digital Research
- Linguistic Annotation for a Catalog of Ancient Greek Authors and Works 721
- Formulaic Networks as Prototypical Categories: Combining the Ancient Greek Dependency Treebank with the Ancient Greek WordNet for a Pilot Study on the Iliad 737
- Linguistic Complexity in Ancient Greek: Sentence Complexity and Digital Treebanks 759
- Representing Semantic Roles in Greek Treebanks 777
- “Proleptic” Arguments in the Greek Treebanks 795
- Tongue, Language or Noise? Word Sense Disambiguation in Ancient Greek with Corpus-Based Methods 813
- List of Contributors 829
- Index Locorum
- Index Rerum