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OverviewVolume 2 of the Yearbook of Ancient Greek Epic presents seven articles. Contributors explore the poetry of Homer, Hesiod, and Empedocles, investigate the nature of formulaic language, reveal Greek tragedy’s connections with epic, and study the characters of Ganymede and Hekamede. This diverse collection will be of interest to all students and scholars of ancient Greek epic. Contributors are: Joel P. Christensen, Xavier Gheerbrant, Ahuvia Kahane, Lynn Kozak, Bruce Louden, Sheila Murnaghan, Polyxeni Strolonga. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Jonathan Ready , Christos TsagalisPublisher: Brill Imprint: Brill Volume: 2 Weight: 0.496kg ISBN: 9789004376908ISBN 10: 9004376909 Pages: 220 Publication Date: 20 September 2018 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In stock We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsThe volume, like YAGE 1 (2017), shows clear interpretive focus on the Homeric epics, but individual contributions pursue innovative and ingenious approaches to the poems, often drawing on theoretical frameworks from other fields of scholarly research. The result is an anthology of current scholarship with an impressive breadth of topics ranging from minor interpretive problems to questions addressing the development and tradition of the genre as a whole. - Fabian Horn, in: BMCR 2019.03.18 In conclusion, the papers presented above clearly explore variable aspects of the archaic epic tradition mixed with Greek tragedy, ancient mythographers, Empedocles and the concept of Fandom and Fan studies. There is much more in this volume of YAGE to provoke further thoughts and reflections about archaic Greek epic poetry. (...) there is coherence and power to the method in general, and it is a valuable series journal, not only for scholars or students, but also for anyone who wants to investigate thoroughly epic reception from archaic to late antique literature. - Manolis Spanakis, in: CJ-Online, 2019.11.08 """The volume, like YAGE 1 (2017), shows clear interpretive focus on the Homeric epics, but individual contributions pursue innovative and ingenious approaches to the poems, often drawing on theoretical frameworks from other fields of scholarly research. The result is an anthology of current scholarship with an impressive breadth of topics ranging from minor interpretive problems to questions addressing the development and tradition of the genre as a whole."" - Fabian Horn, in: BMCR 2019.03.18 ""In conclusion, the papers presented above clearly explore variable aspects of the archaic epic tradition mixed with Greek tragedy, ancient mythographers, Empedocles and the concept of Fandom and Fan studies. There is much more in this volume of YAGE to provoke further thoughts and reflections about archaic Greek epic poetry. (…) there is coherence and power to the method in general, and it is a valuable series journal, not only for scholars or students, but also for anyone who wants to investigate thoroughly epic reception from archaic to late antique literature."" - Manolis Spanakis, in: CJ-Online, 2019.11.08" The volume, like YAGE 1 (2017), shows clear interpretive focus on the Homeric epics, but individual contributions pursue innovative and ingenious approaches to the poems, often drawing on theoretical frameworks from other fields of scholarly research. The result is an anthology of current scholarship with an impressive breadth of topics ranging from minor interpretive problems to questions addressing the development and tradition of the genre as a whole. Fabian Horn in BMCR 2019.03.18 Author InformationJonathan L. Ready, Ph.D. (2004), University of California, Berkeley, is Associate Professor of Classical Studies at Indiana University. His books include Character, Narrator, and Simile in the Iliad (2011) and The Homeric Simile in Comparative Perspectives: Oral Traditions from Saudi Arabia to Indonesia (2018). Christos C. Tsagalis, Ph.D. (1998), Cornell University, is Professor of Greek at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki. He has written the following books: Epic Grief (2004), The Oral Palimpsest (2008), Inscribing Sorrow (2008), Space in the Iliad (2012), Ομηρικές μελέτες (2016), and Early Greek Epic Fragments (2017). Contributors are: Joel P. Christensen, Xavier Gheerbrant, Ahuvia Kahane, Lynn Kozak, Bruce Louden, Sheila Murnaghan, Polyxeni Strolonga. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |