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Character, Narrator, and Simile in the Iliad

Character, Narrator, and Simile in the <I>Iliad</I>

Character, Narrator, and Simile in the <I>Iliad</I>

Jonathan L. Ready , Indiana University
April 2011
Hardback
9780521190640

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    Jonathan L. Ready offers the first comprehensive examination of Homer's similes in the Iliad as arenas of heroic competition. This study concentrates primarily on similes spoken by Homeric characters. The first to offer a sustained exploration of such similes, Ready shows how characters are made to contest through and over simile not only with one another but also with the narrator. Ready investigates the narrator's similes as well. He demonstrates that Homer amplifies the feat of a successful warrior by providing a competitive orientation to sequences of similes used to describe battles. He also offers a new interpretation of Homer's extended similes as a means for the poet to imagine his characters as competitors for his attention. Throughout this study, Ready makes innovative use of approaches from both Homeric studies and narratology that have not yet been applied to the analysis of Homer's similes.

    • The first exploration of Homer's similes in the Iliad as arenas of heroic competition
    • A new take on the simile's place in the Iliad
    • The first sustained critical examination of similes spoken by characters

    Product details

    April 2011
    Hardback
    9780521190640
    334 pages
    229 × 152 × 22 mm
    0.57kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction
    • 1. The simile and the Homeric comparative spectrum
    • 2. Similes and likenesses in the character-text
    • 3. A preparation for reading sequences of similes
    • 4. Sequences of similes in the character-text
    • 5. Narrator, character, and simile
    • 6. Similes in the narrator-text
    • Conclusion: the Odyssey compared.
      Author
    • Jonathan L. Ready , Indiana University

      Jonathan L. Ready is an assistant professor in the Department of Classical Studies at Indiana University. He is the author of a chapter in The Cambridge Companion to Archaic Greece (2007) and of a number of articles that have appeared in classics journals including Transactions of the American Philological Association and the American Journal of Philology.