The Oral Palimpsest: Exploring Intertextuality in the Homeric Epics
Oral intertextuality is an innate feature of the web of myth, whose interrelated fabrics allow the audience of epic song to have access to an entire horizon of diverse variants of a story. The Oral Palimpsest argues that just as the erased text of a palimpsest still carries traces of its previous writing, so the Homeric tradition unfolds its awareness of alternative versions in the act of producing the signs of their erasure.

In this light, "Homer" reflects the concerted effort to create a Panhellenic canon of epic song, through which we can still retrieve the poikilia (roughly, "dappled, embroidered variation") of various interwoven fabrics belonging to recognizable song-traditions or even older Indo-European strata.

"1111976741"
The Oral Palimpsest: Exploring Intertextuality in the Homeric Epics
Oral intertextuality is an innate feature of the web of myth, whose interrelated fabrics allow the audience of epic song to have access to an entire horizon of diverse variants of a story. The Oral Palimpsest argues that just as the erased text of a palimpsest still carries traces of its previous writing, so the Homeric tradition unfolds its awareness of alternative versions in the act of producing the signs of their erasure.

In this light, "Homer" reflects the concerted effort to create a Panhellenic canon of epic song, through which we can still retrieve the poikilia (roughly, "dappled, embroidered variation") of various interwoven fabrics belonging to recognizable song-traditions or even older Indo-European strata.

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The Oral Palimpsest: Exploring Intertextuality in the Homeric Epics

The Oral Palimpsest: Exploring Intertextuality in the Homeric Epics

by Christos Tsagalis
The Oral Palimpsest: Exploring Intertextuality in the Homeric Epics

The Oral Palimpsest: Exploring Intertextuality in the Homeric Epics

by Christos Tsagalis

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Overview

Oral intertextuality is an innate feature of the web of myth, whose interrelated fabrics allow the audience of epic song to have access to an entire horizon of diverse variants of a story. The Oral Palimpsest argues that just as the erased text of a palimpsest still carries traces of its previous writing, so the Homeric tradition unfolds its awareness of alternative versions in the act of producing the signs of their erasure.

In this light, "Homer" reflects the concerted effort to create a Panhellenic canon of epic song, through which we can still retrieve the poikilia (roughly, "dappled, embroidered variation") of various interwoven fabrics belonging to recognizable song-traditions or even older Indo-European strata.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674026872
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 03/31/2008
Series: Hellenic Studies Series , #29
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 326
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.25(h) x 0.75(d)

About the Author

Christos Tsagalis is Associate Professor of Greek Literature at Aristotle University of Thessaloniki.

Table of Contents

Foreword     ix
Preface     xi
Acknowledgments     xxv
Note on Transliteration and References     xxvii
Intertextuality between Recognizable Traditions
[characters not reproducible]: The Dionysiac Element in the Iliad     1
[characters not reproducible]: The Self-Referential Encomium of the Odyssey and the Tradition of the Nostoi     30
Nausicaa and the Daughters of Anius: Terms and Limits of Epic Rivalry     44
Intertextual Fissures: The Returns of Odysseus and the New Penelope     63
Intertextuality and Meta-Traditionality
[characters not reproducible]: From the Cypria to the Iliad     93
Viewing from the Walls, Viewing Helen: Language and Indeterminacy in the 'Teichoscopia'     112
Time Games: The 'Twenty-Year' Absent Hero     135
Intertextuality and Diachronically Diffused Relations
The Formula [characters not reproducible]: Homeric Reflections of an Indo-European Metaphor     153
Genealogy and Imagery of a Homeric Formula: [characters not reproducible]     188
Intertextuality and Intratextual Sequences
The Rhetorics of Supplication and the Epic Intertext (Iliad I 493-516)     209
Intertextuality and Intratextual Distality: Thetis' Lament in Iliad XVIII 52-64     239
Mapping the Hypertext: Similes in Iliad XXII     272
Bibliography     287
Index Locorum     313
Index of Subjects     321
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