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The Cambridge Companion to Ancient Greek Epic

The Cambridge Companion to Ancient Greek Epic

The Cambridge Companion to Ancient Greek Epic

Emma Greensmith, University of Oxford
November 2024
Available
Paperback
9781009087377

    Ancient Greek literature begins with the epic verses of Homer. Epic then continued as a fundamental literary form throughout antiquity and the influence of the poems produced extends beyond antiquity and down to the present. This Companion presents a fresh and boundary-breaking account of the ancient Greek epic tradition. It includes wide-ranging close readings of epics from Homer to Nonnus, traces their dialogues with other modes such as ancient Mesopotamian poetry, Greek lyric and didactic writing, and explores their afterlives in Byzantium, early Christianity, modern fiction and cinema, and the identity politics of Greece and Turkey. Plot summaries are provided for those unfamiliar with individual poems. Drawing on cutting-edge new research in a number of fields, such as racecraft, geopolitics and the theory of emotions, the volume demonstrates the sustained and often surprising power of this renowned ancient genre, and sheds new light on its continued impact and relevance today.

    • Provides a new thematic account of the Greek epic tradition, focused on concepts such as time, space, people and emotions rather than giving an author-by-author survey
    • Engages with innovative research methods and multi-disciplinary techniques such as racecraft, emotion and affect and feminist criticism
    • Focuses equally on well-known archaic poetry and post-classical, late antique and modern epic and responses, putting ancient and 'later' literature in constant dialogue

    Product details

    November 2024
    Paperback
    9781009087377
    570 pages
    230 × 152 × 30 mm
    0.81kg
    10 b/w illus.
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction: (pushing) the limits of epic Emma Greensmith
    • Part I. Epic Engagements:
    • 1. Greek and near eastern epic: context and comparison Bernardo Ballesteros
    • 2. Epic and lyric Henry Spelman
    • 3. Didactic (and) epic Emily Kneebone
    • Part II. Epic Space:
    • 4. Space and story: the Iliad and odyssey Christos Tsagalis
    • 5. Do not talk death to me: the epic underworld Karolina Sekita
    • 6. Epic dislocation: nostalgia and return Alexander C. Loney
    • 7. Shrunken epic: the poetics of epyllion Berenice Verhelst
    • Part III. Epic Time:
    • 8. A brief history of epic time Simon Goldhill
    • 9. Time and again: Apollonius' Argonautica Tom Phillips
    • 10. Trojan temporality in imperial Greek epic Emma Greensmith
    • Part IV. Epic People:
    • 11. The language of epic sacrifice Renaud Gagné
    • 12. Epic racecraft and the race of heroes Jackie Murray
    • 13. Women in homer and beyond Emily Hauser
    • Part V. Epic Feelings:
    • 14. Before, beneath, beyond emotions: reading affects in epic Pauline LeVen
    • 15. Humour in Greek epic Matt Hosty
    • 16. Love, desire and erotics Steven D. Smith
    • Part VI. Epic Without End:
    • 17. Ancient readers of Greek epic Richard Hunter
    • 18. Greek epic in a Christian empire: grit in the eye Tim Whitmarsh
    • 19. The fates of epic in Byzantium: homer for a new era Markéta Kulhánková
    • 20. Homeric epic and nation building in modern Greece and Turkey Johanna Hanink
    • 21. Ancient Greek epic and the cinema: transformations and archetypes Martin M. Winkler
    • Epilogue: a continuous song: reflections on Greek epic in the modern Greek lands Panayiotis Christoforou
    • Chapter abstracts
    • Timeline of ancient Greek epic
    • Bibliography
    • Index locorum
    • Subject Index.
    Resources for
    Type
    Online resource
    Size: 539.01 KB
    Type: application/pdf
      Contributors
    • Emma Greensmith, Bernardo Ballesteros, Henry Spelman, Emily Kneebone, Christos Tsagalis, Karolina Sekita, Alexander C. Loney, Berenice Verhelst, Simon Goldhill, Tom Phillips, Renaud Gagné, Jackie Murray, Emily Hauser, Pauline LeVen, Matt Hosty, Steven D. Smith, Richard Hunter, Tim Whitmarsh, Markéta Kulhánková, Johanna Hanink, Martin M. Winkler, Panayiotis Christoforou

    • Editor
    • Emma Greensmith , University of Oxford

      EMMA GREENSMITH is Associate Professor of Classical Languages and Literature at the University of Oxford and Fellow of St John's College. She specialises in imperial Greek literature, particularly epic poetics and religious culture. Her 2020 book, The Resurrection of Homer in Imperial Greek Epic offers a new reading of the role of epic and the reception of Homer in the Graeco-Roman world. She has co-edited a volume on the Posthomerica (2022) and is currently working on a new book entitled Homer and the Bible: Christian Greek Epic in Late Antiquity. She has written many articles and public engagement pieces on ancient Greek literature, and is also filming a documentary on Homer's Odyssey and its cultural legacy.