The Authoress of the Odyssey
Reproduction of the original: The Authoress of the Odyssey by Samuel Butler
1101420127
The Authoress of the Odyssey
Reproduction of the original: The Authoress of the Odyssey by Samuel Butler
52.9 In Stock
The Authoress of the Odyssey

The Authoress of the Odyssey

by Samuel Butler
The Authoress of the Odyssey

The Authoress of the Odyssey

by Samuel Butler

Paperback

$52.90 
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Overview

Reproduction of the original: The Authoress of the Odyssey by Samuel Butler

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9783752345278
Publisher: Outlook Verlag
Publication date: 07/26/2020
Pages: 260
Product dimensions: 5.83(w) x 8.27(h) x 0.59(d)

About the Author

Samuel Butler, scholar, painter, pioneer photographer and novelist (including 'Erewhon' and 'The Way of All Flesh'), was one of the less orthodox of Victorian intellectual provocateurs, who confronted powerful orthodoxies such as the Church, the academic establishment, and scientific Darwinism. Tim Whitmarsh (like Butler himself, a former Fellow of St John's College, Cambridge) is Reader in Greek Literature at the University of Exeter. He is author of 'Greek Literature and the Roman Empire' (Oxford University Press, 2001), 'A Cultural History of Greek Literature' (Polity Press, 2004) and 'Reading the Self in the Ancient Greek Novel' (Cambridge University Press, forthcoming).

Table of Contents

Chapter IImportance of the Enquiry-the Steps Whereby I was Led to My Conclusions-the Multitude of Early Greek Poetesses Removes any a priori Difficulty-the Muses and Minerva As Heads of Literature-Man, Rather Than Woman, the Imterloper1
Chapter IIThe Story of the Odyssey14
Book iThe council of the gods-Telemachus and the suitors in the house of Ulysses18
Book iiAssembly of the people of Ithaca-Telemachus starts for Pylos21
Book iiiTelemachus at the house of Nestor23
Book ivTelemachus at the house of Menelaus-The suitors resolve to lie in wait for him as he returns, and murder him24
Book vUlysses in the island of Calypso-He leaves the island on a raft, and after great suffering reaches the land of the Phaeacians28
Book viThe meeting between Ulysses and Nausicaa30
Book viiThe splendours of the house of King Alcinous-Queen Arete wants to know how Ulysses got his shirt and cloak, for she knows them as her own work. Ulysses explains34
Book viiiThe Phaeacian games and banquet in honour of Ulysses37
Book ixThe voyages of Ulysses-The Cicons, Lotus-eaters, and the Cyclops Polyphemus41
Book xAEolus-The Laestrygonians-Circe46
Book xiUlysses in the house of Hades49
Book xiiThe Sirens-Scylla and Charybdis-The cattle of the Sun53
Book xiiiUlysses is taken back to Ithaca by the Phaeacians57
Book vivUlysses in the hut of Eumaeus60
Book xvTelemachus returns from Pylos, and on landing goes to the hut of Eumaeus63
Book xviUlysses and Telemachus become known to one another66
Book xviiTelemachus goes to the town, and is followed by Eumaeus and Ulysses, who is maltreated by the suitors70
Book xviiiThe fight between Ulysses and Irus-The suitors make presents to Penelope-and ill-treat Ulysses75
Book xixUlysses converses with Penelope, and is recognised by Euryclea78
Book xxUlysses converses with Eumaeus, and with his herdsman Philoetius-The suitors again maltreat him-Theoclymenus foretells their doom and leaves the house83
Book xxiThe trial of the bow and of the axes87
Book xxiiThe killing of the suitors90
Book xxiiiPenelope comes down to see Ulysses, and being at last convinced that he is her husband, retires with him to their own old room-In the morning Ulysses, Telemachus, Philoetius, and Eumaeus go to the house of Laertes96
Book xxivThe Ghosts of the suitors in Hades-Ulysses sees his father-is attacked by the friends of the suitors-Laertes kills Eupeithes-Peace is made between him and the people of Ithaca99
Chapter IIIThe Preponderance of Woman in the Odyssey105
Chapter IVJealousy for the Honour and Dignity of Woman-Severity Against Those Who Have Disgraced Their Sex-Love of Small Religious Observances-of Preaching-of White Lies and Small Playacting-of Having Things Both Ways-and of Money115
Chapter VOn the Question Whether or No Penelope is Being Whitewashed125
Chapter VIFurther Considerations Regarding the Character of Penelope-the Journey of Telemachus to Lacedaemon134
Chapter VIIFurther Indications That the Writer is a Woman-Young-Head-Strong-And Unmarried142
Chapter VIIIThat Ithaca and Scheria are Both of Them Drawn from Trapani and Its Immediate Neighbourhood158
Chapter IXThe Ionian and the Aegadean Islands-the Voyages of Ulysses Shown to be Practically a Sail Round Sicily From Trapani to Trapani174
Chapter XFurther Details Regarding the Voyages of Ulysses, to Confirm the View That They Were a Sail Round Sicily, Beginning and Ending with Mt. Eryx and Trapani188
Chapter XIWho was the Writer?200
Chapter XIIThe Date of the Poem, and a Comparison of the State of the North Western Part of Sicily as Revealed to Us in the Odyssey, with the Account Given by Thucydides of the Same Territory in the Earliest Known Times210
Chapter XIIIFurther Evidence in Support of an Early Ionian Settlement at or Close to Trapani225
Chapter XIVThat the Iliad Which the Writer of the Odyssey Knew was the Same as What We Now Have232
Chapter XVThe Odyssey in its Relation to the Other Poems of the Trojan Cycle, and its Development in the Hands of the Authoress249
Chapter XVLConclusion262
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