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Title Archaeology and Homeric epic / edited by Susan Sherratt and John Bennet.

Publication Info. Oxford ; Philadelphia : Oxbow Books, 2017.

Item Status

Description 1 online resource (xvi, 165 pages) : illustrations.
text file
Series Sheffield studies in Aegean archaeology ; 11
Sheffield studies in Aegean archaeology ; 11.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references.
Contents Homer, the moving target / Anthony Snodgrass -- The will to believe : why Homer cannot be 'true' in any meaningful sense / Oliver Dickinson -- Dream and reality in the work of Heinrich Schliemann and Manfred Korfmann / Johannes Haubold -- Homeric epic and contexts of Bardic creation / Susan Sherratt -- Remembering and forgetting Nestor : Pylian pasts pluperfect? / Jack L. Davis and Kathleen M. Lynch, with a contribution by Susanne Hofstra -- In the grip of their past? : Tracing Mycenaean Memoria / Diamantis Panagiotopoulos -- Heroes in early iron age Greece and the Homeric epics / Alexander Mazarakis Ainian -- Gilgamesh and heroes at Troy : myth, history and education in the invention of tradition / Stephanie Dalley -- History and the making of south Slavic epic / Margaret H. Beissinger -- 'The national epic of the modern Greeks'? -- Digenis Akritis, the Homeric question, and the making of a modern myth / Roderick Beaton -- Gilgamesh at Troy (a very short epic) / Paul Halstead.
Summary The relationship between the Homeric epics and archaeology has long suffered mixed fortunes, swinging between 'fundamentalist' attempts to use archaeology in order to demonstrate the essential historicity of the epics and their background, and outright rejection of the idea that archaeology is capable of contributing anything at all to our understanding and appreciation of the epics. Archaeology and the Homeric Epic concentrates less on historicity in favour of exploring a variety of other, perhaps sometimes more oblique, ways in which we can use a multi-disciplinary approach ? archaeology, philology, anthropology and social history ? to help offer insights into the epics, the contexts of their possibly prolonged creation, aspects of their 'prehistory', and what they may have stood for at various times in their long oral and written history. 0 0The effects of the Homeric epics on the history and popular reception of archaeology, especially in the particular context of modern Germany, is also a theme that is explored here. Contributors explore a variety of issues including the relationships between visual and verbal imagery, the social contexts of epic (or sub-epic) creation or re-creation, the roles of bards and their relationships to different types of patrons and audiences, the construction and uses of 'history' as traceable through both epic and archaeology and the relationship between 'prehistoric' (oral) and 'historical' (recorded in writing) periods. Throughout, the emphasis is on context and its relevance to the creation, transmission, re-creation and manipulation of epic in the present (or near-present) as well as in the ancient Greek past.
Local Note eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America
Language English with selection in Ancient Greek with parallel English translation.
Subject Homer -- Influence.
Homer.
Archaeology -- Greece.
Archaeology.
Greece.
Epic poetry, Greek -- History and criticism.
Epic poetry, Greek.
Civilization, Homeric.
Civilization, Homeric.
Genre/Form Electronic books.
Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Added Author Sherratt, Susan, editor.
Bennet, John, 1957- editor.
Other Form: Print version: Archaeology and Homeric epic. Oxford : Oxbow Books, 2017 9781785702952 (DLC) 2016040020 (OCoLC)959372792
ISBN 9781785702969 (electronic book)
1785702963 (electronic book)
9781785702983 (electronic book)
178570298X (electronic book)
9781785702976
1785702971
9781785702952 (paperback)
1785702955