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Texts and Intertexts in Archaic and Classical Greece

Texts and Intertexts in Archaic and Classical Greece

Texts and Intertexts in Archaic and Classical Greece

Adrian Kelly, University of Oxford
Henry Spelman, University of Cambridge
November 2024
Hardback
9781108840118
NZD$201.95
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Hardback
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eBook

    Encompassing the period from the earliest archaic epics down through classical Athenian drama, this is the first concerted, step-by-step examination of the development of allusive poetics in the early Greek world. Recent decades have seen a marked rise in intertextual approaches to early Greek literature; as scholars increasingly agree on the need to read these texts in a comparative way, this only makes all the more urgent the question of how best to do so. This volume brings together divergent scholarly voices to explore the state of the field and to point the way forward. All twelve chapters address themselves to a core set of fundamental questions: how do texts generate meaning by referring to other texts and how do the poetics of allusivity change over time and differ across genres? The result is a holistic study of a key dimension of literary experience.

    • Covers all major authors and genres from the dawn of extant literary texts through the classical era, allowing readers to gain a diachronic sense of how the poetics of allusivity developed over time
    • Enables readers to apprehend the current state of scholarship by presenting a variety of theoretical and practical approaches to core issues
    • Combines literary and historical perspectives to allow readers to perceive how the varied relationships between texts evolve over time

    Product details

    November 2024
    Hardback
    9781108840118
    362 pages
    251 × 177 × 25 mm
    0.79kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction Adrian Kelly and Henry Spelman
    • Part I. Early Intertextuality:
    • 1. From the Odyssey to the Iliad, and round (and round) again Adrian Kelly
    • 2. The wisdom of Archilochus: Didactic Intertexts in early Greek poetry Laura Swift
    • 3. Intertextual effects in early epigram Oliver Thomas
    • Part II. Lyric and Epic:
    • 4. Sappho's intertextual geographies Barbara Graziosi
    • 5. Invoking Homer: the Catalogue of Ships and the early reception of the Iliad Henry Spelman
    • 6. Pindar, Bacchylides, Archaic Epic and Intertextuality Andrew Morrison
    • Part ΙΙΙ. Drama:
    • 7. Intertextuality, 'cf.' and fragmentary drama Matthew Wright
    • 8. Satyr drama and the limits of the possible: Sophocles' Judgement and the Cypria Lyndsay Coo
    • 9. A cave with two doors Richard Hunter and Rebecca Lämmle
    • Part ΙV. Conceptual Contexts:
    • 10. Talk and text: the pre-Alexandrian footnote from Homer to Theodectes Thomas Nelson
    • 11. How, and why, the Athenians painted different myths at different times Robin Osborne
    • 12. Framing intertextuality in early Greek prose Ilaria Andolfi.
      Contributors
    • Adrian Kelly, Henry Spelman, Laura Swift, Oliver Thomas, Barbara Graziosi, Henry Spelman, Andrew Morrison, Matthew Wright, Lyndsay Coo, Richard Hunter, Rebecca Lämmle, Thomas Nelson, Robin Osborne, Ilaria Andolfi

    • Editors
    • Adrian Kelly , University of Oxford

      Adrian Kelly is Tutorial Fellow in Ancient Greek at Balliol College, and an Associate Professor and Clarendon University Lecturer at the University of Oxford. He has recently edited (with Patrick Finglass) The Cambridge Companion to Sappho (Cambridge, 2021), (with Christopher Metcalf) Gods and Mortals in early Greek and Near Eastern Mythology (Cambridge, 2021), and (with Bill Beck, Thomas Phillips, and Oliver Thomas) The Ancient Scholia to Homer's Iliad: A Translation. Volume I: Introduction and Books 1–2 (Cambridge, 2024). He is completing a commentary on Homer, Iliad XXIII for the Cambridge Greek and Latin Classics series.

    • Henry Spelman , University of Cambridge

      Henry Spelman is Assistant Professor in Classics at the University of Cambridge and Fellow of Christ's College. He is the author of Pindar and the Poetics of Permanence (2018) and is currently editing The Cambridge Companion to Pindar.