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Homer the Classic

por Gregory Nagy

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2011,098,136 (4.5)Ninguno
Homer the Classic is about the reception of Homeric poetry from the fifth through the first century BCE. The study of this reception is important for understanding not only the all-pervasive literary influence of ancient Greek epic traditions but also the various ways in which these traditions were used by individuals and states to promote their own cultural and political agenda. The aim of this book, which centers on ancient concepts of Homer as the author of a body of poetry that we know as the Iliad and the Odyssey, is not to reassess the oral poetic heritage of Homeric poetry but to show how it became a classic in the days of the Athenian empire and later. This volume is one of two books stemming from six Sather Classical Lectures given in the spring semester of 2002 at the University of California at Berkeley while the author was teaching there as the Sather Professor.… (más)
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From one point of view this is a study in the transmission of the Iliad and the Odyssey through the periods between Pericles and Virgil; in another, it is a work of reception criticism, as the way in which "Homer" was received is the major influence on the preference between the narrower Koine text and the Homerus Auctus (both already in existence at the beginning of the period). Accordingly, this illuminates Virgil, Aristarchus, Callimachus, and Plato at least as much as it does Homer, and exhibits multiple facets of the general way in which the classical world read and responded to Homer.

This is complemented by Nagy's Homer the Preclassic, covering the period before the Panathenaic Homer. ( )
  jsburbidge | Dec 1, 2017 |
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Homer the Classic is about the reception of Homeric poetry from the fifth through the first century BCE. The study of this reception is important for understanding not only the all-pervasive literary influence of ancient Greek epic traditions but also the various ways in which these traditions were used by individuals and states to promote their own cultural and political agenda. The aim of this book, which centers on ancient concepts of Homer as the author of a body of poetry that we know as the Iliad and the Odyssey, is not to reassess the oral poetic heritage of Homeric poetry but to show how it became a classic in the days of the Athenian empire and later. This volume is one of two books stemming from six Sather Classical Lectures given in the spring semester of 2002 at the University of California at Berkeley while the author was teaching there as the Sather Professor.

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