Poetry as performance : Homer and beyond

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Poetry as performance : Homer and beyond

Gregory Nagy

Cambridge University Press, 1996

  • : pbk

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Note

English and Greek

Bibliography: p. 229-247

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

To understand the emergence of Homeric poetry as an actual written text, it is essential to trace the history of Homeric performance, from the very beginnings of literacy to the critical era of textual canonisations in the Hellenistic and Roman periods. Professor Nagy applies the comparative evidence of oral poetic traditions, including those that survived in literate societies, such as the Provencal troubadour tradition. It appears that a song cannot be fixed as a final written text so long as the oral poetic tradition in which it was created stays alive. So also with Homeric poetry, it is argued that no single definitive text could evolve until the oral traditions in which the epic was grounded became obsolete. In the time of Aristarchus, the gradual movement from relatively fluid to more rigid stages of Homeric transmission reached a near-final point of textualisation.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction: a brief survey of concepts and aims
  • Part I. Mimesis and the Making of Identity in Poetic Performance: 1. The Homeric nightingale and the poetics of variation in the art of a troubadour
  • 2. Mimesis, models of singers, and the meaning of a Homeric epithet
  • 3. Mimesis in Homer and beyond
  • 4. Mimesis in lyric: Sappho's Aphrodite and the Changing Woman of the Apache
  • Part II. Fixed Text in Theory, Shifting Words in Performance: 5. Multiform epic and Aristarchus' quest for the real Homer
  • 6. Homer as script
  • 7. Homer as 'scripture'
  • Epilogue: dead poets and recomposed performers
  • Appendix
  • Bibliography
  • Index.

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