Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-8bhkd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-17T19:12:51.846Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Irene J. F. de Jong
Affiliation:
Universiteit van Amsterdam
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Homer: Iliad Book 22 , pp. 194 - 205
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2012

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Alden, M. 2000 Homer Beside Himself. Para-Narratives in the IliadOxfordGoogle Scholar
Alexiou, M. 1974 The Ritual Lament in Greek TraditionCambridgeGoogle Scholar
Allan, R. 2003 The Middle Voice in Ancient Greek. A Study of PolysemyAmsterdamGoogle Scholar
Allan, R. 2010
Allan, W. 2006 Divine Justice and Cosmic Order in Early Greek EpicJournal of Hellenic Studies 126 1CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amory Parry, A 1973 Blameless Aegisthus. A Study of ΑΜΥΜΩΝ and Other Homeric EpithetsLeidenGoogle Scholar
Anderson, M. J. 1997 The Fall of Troy in Early Greek Poetry and ArtOxfordGoogle Scholar
Austin, J. N. H. 1975 Archery at the Dark of the Moon. Poetic Problems in Homer’s OdysseyBerkeley, Los Angeles, LondonGoogle Scholar
Bakker, E. J. 1988 Linguistics and Formulas in Homer: Scalarity and the Description of the ParticleAmsterdamCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bakker, E. J. 1997 Poetry in Speech. Orality and Homeric DiscourseIthaca, NY, LondonGoogle Scholar
Bakker, E. J.Kahane, A. 1997 Written Voices, Spoken Signs: Tradition, Performance, and the Epic TextCambridge, MassCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bannert, H. 1984 Die Lanze des PatroklosWiener Studien 97 27Google Scholar
Bannert, H. 1988 Formen des Wiederholens bei HomerViennaGoogle Scholar
Bassett, S. E. 1921 The Function of the Homeric SimileTransactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 52 132CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bassett, S. E. 1923 Hector’s Fault in HonorTransactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 54 117CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bassett, S. E. 1934 The Ἁμαρτία of AchillesTransactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 65 47CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bassett, S. E. 1934 The Omission of the Vocative in Homeric SpeechesAmerican Journal of Philology 55 140CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bassett, S. E. 1938 The Poetry of HomerBerkeleyGoogle Scholar
Biraud, M. 1990 ‘Conceptions dynamiques de la totalité et de la restriction dans la langue Homérique. Étude semantique des couples de lexèmes ΟΥΛΟΣ et ΠΑΣ, ΟΙΟΣ et ΜΟΥΝΟΣGranarolo, JHommage à René Braun I. De la préhistoire à Virgile: Philologie, littératures et histoires anciennesParis83Google Scholar
Boedeker, D. 1974 Aphrodite’s Entry into Greek EpicLeidenGoogle Scholar
Bowra, C. M. 1930 Tradition and Design in the IliadOxfordGoogle Scholar
Bowra, C. M. 1952 Heroic PoetryLondonGoogle Scholar
Bremer, J. M. 1987 31
Bremer, J. Mde Jong, I. J. F.Kalff, J. 1987 Homer: Beyond Oral Poetry. Recent Trends in Homeric InterpretationAmsterdamGoogle Scholar
Burgess, J. S. 2001 The Tradition of the Trojan War in Homer and the Epic CycleBaltimoreGoogle Scholar
Burgess, J. S. 2009 The Death and Afterlife of AchillesBaltimoreGoogle Scholar
Burkert, W. 1985 Greek Religion: Archaic and ClassicalCambridge, MassGoogle Scholar
Burkert, W. 1992 The Orientalizing Revolution: Near Eastern Influence on Greek Culture in the Early Archaic AgeCambridge, MassGerman original 1984Google Scholar
Burnett, A. P. 1991 Signals from the Unconscious in Early Greek PoetryClassical Philology 86 275CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cairns, D. L. 1993 Aidos. The Psychology and Ethics of Honour and Shame in Ancient Greek LiteratureOxfordGoogle Scholar
Cairns, D. L. 2003 ‘Ethics, Ethology, Terminology: Iliadic Anger and the Cross-Cultural Study of Emotion’Most, G. W.Braund, S.Ancient Anger. Perspectives from Homer to GalenCambridge11Google Scholar
Clarke, M. J. 1995 ‘Between Lions and Men. Images of the Hero in the Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies 36 137Google Scholar
Clarke, M. J. 1997 ‘Gods and Mountains in Greek Myth and PoetryLloyd, A.B.What Is a God? Studies in the Nature of Greek DivinityLondon65Google Scholar
Clarke, M. J. 1999 Flesh and Spirit in the Songs of Homer. A Study of Words and MythsOxfordGoogle Scholar
Clarke, W. M. 1978 Achilles and Patroclus in LoveHermes 106 381Google Scholar
Clay, J. S. 1974 and . The Nature of Divine Transformation in HomerHermes 102 129Google Scholar
Coffey, M. 1957 The Function of the Homeric SimileAmerican Journal of Philology 78 113CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Combellack, F. M. 1959 Milman Parry and Homeric ArtistryComparative Literature 11 193CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crielaard, J. P. 1995 Homeric QuestionsAmsterdamGoogle Scholar
Crielaard, J. P. 1995 201
Crotty, K. 1994 The Poetics of Supplication: Homer’s Iliad and OdysseyIthaca, NY, LondonGoogle Scholar
Crouwel, J. H. 1981 Chariots and Other Means of Land Transport in Bronze Age GreeceAmsterdamGoogle Scholar
Dalby, A. 1998 Homer’s Enemies”. Lyric and Epic in the Seventh Century’Fisher, Nvan Wees, HArchaic Greece. New Approaches and New EvidenceLondon195CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Danek, G. 1998 Epos und Zitat. Studien zu den Quellen der OdysseeViennaGoogle Scholar
Danek, G. 2006 Die Gleichnisse der Ilias und der Dichter Homer’Montanari, F.Rengakos, A.La poésie épique grecque: métamorphoses d’un genre littéraireGeneva41Google Scholar
Darcus Sullivan, S 1995 Psychological and Ethical Ideas: What Early Greeks SayLeidenGoogle Scholar
Dee, J. H. 2000 Epitheta Hominum apud HomerumHildesheim, Zurich, New YorkGoogle Scholar
Dee, J. H. 2001 Epitheta Deorum apud HomerumHildesheim, Zurich, New YorkGoogle Scholar
Dee, J. H. 2002 Epitheta Rerum et Locorum apud HomerumHildesheim, Zurich, New YorkGoogle Scholar
Derderian, K. 2001 Leaving Words to Remember. Greek Mourning and the Advent of LiteracyLeidenGoogle Scholar
Dodds, E. R. 1951 The Greeks and the IrrationalBerkeley, Los Angeles, LondonGoogle Scholar
Dodds, E. R. 1954 HomerPlatnauer, M.Fifty Years of Classical ScholarshipOxford1Google Scholar
Dover, K. J. 1978 Greek HomosexualityLondonGoogle Scholar
Duckworth, G. E. 1933 Foreshadowing and Suspense in the Epics of Homer, Apollonius, and VergilPrincetonGoogle Scholar
Easterling, P. E. 1991 ‘Men’s kleos and Women’s goos: Female Voices in the Iliad’, Journal of Modern Greek Studies 9 145
Eberhard, E. E. 1923 Das Schicksal als poetische Idee bei Homer
Edmunds, S. T. 1990 Homeric NēpiosNew York, LondonGoogle Scholar
Edwards, M. W. 1970 Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 74 1CrossRef
Edwards, M. W. 1980 Convention and Individuality in 1Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 84 1CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Edwards, M. W. 1987 Homer. Poet of the IliadBaltimore, LondonGoogle Scholar
Edwards, M. W. 2002 Sound, Sense, and Rhythm. Listening to Greek and Latin PoetryPrinceton, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Effe, B. 1988 ‘Der Homerische Achilleus. Zur gesellschaftlichen Funktion eines literarischen HeldenGymnasium 95 1Google Scholar
Eide, T. 1986 Poetical and Metrical Value of Homeric EpithetsSymbolae Osloenses 3 5CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Elliger, W. 1975 Die Darstellung der Landschaft in der griechischen DichtungBerlinCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Erbse, H. 1978 ‘Hektor in der IliasBeck, H. G.Kambylis, A.Moraux, P.Kyklos. Griechisch und Byzantinisches. Festschrift KeydellBerlin, New York1Google Scholar
Erbse, H. 1986 Untersuchungen zur Funktion der Götter im homerischen EposBerlin, New YorkGoogle Scholar
Erbse, H. 2001 Achilleus’ ErziehungRheinisches Museum 144 240Google Scholar
van Erp Taalman, Kip A. M. 2000 The Gods of the and the Fate of TroyMnemosyne 53 385Google Scholar
van Erp Taalman, Kip A. M. 2011 On Defining a Homeric IdiomMnemosyneGoogle Scholar
Farron, S. 1978 The Character of Hector in the Acta Classica 21 39Google Scholar
Faust, M. 1970 Die künstlerische Verwendung von κύων “Hund” in den homerischen EpenGlotta 48 8Google Scholar
Feeney, D. 1991 The Gods in Epic. Poets and Critics of the Classical TraditionNew YorkGoogle Scholar
Fehling, D. 1969 Die Wiederholungsfiguren und ihr Gebrauch bei den Griechen vor GorgiasBerlinCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fenik, B. 1968 Typical Battle Scenes in the Iliad: Studies in the Narrative Techniques of Homeric Battle DescriptionWiesbadenGoogle Scholar
Fenik, B. 1978 Homer: Tradition and InventionLeidenGoogle Scholar
Finkelberg, M. 1990 A Creative Oral Poet and the MuseAmerican Journal of Philology 111 293CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Floyd, E. D. 1969 The Singular Uses of ἡμέτερος and ἡμεῖς in Homer’Glotta 47 116Google Scholar
Ford, A. 1992 Homer. The Poetry of the PastIthaca, NY, LondonGoogle Scholar
Forssman, B. 2006 Epischer und chorischer Literaturdialekt: das Verbum ἐφέπωIncontri linguistici 29 111Google Scholar
Fournier, H. 1946 Les verbes “dire” en grec ancienParisGoogle Scholar
Fowler, R. 1987 The Nature of Early Greek Lyric: Three Preliminary StudiesTorontoGoogle Scholar
Fowler, R. 2004 220
Fowler, R. 2004 The Cambridge Companion to HomerCambridgeCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fränkel, H. 1921 Die homerischen GleichnisseGöttingenGoogle Scholar
Friedrich, P.Redfield, J. 1978 Speech as a Personality Symbol: the Case of AchillesLanguage 54 263CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Friedrich, R. 2000 Homeric Enjambement and OralityHermes 128 1Google Scholar
Friedrich, W. H. 2003 Wounding and Death in the Iliad. Homeric Techniques of DescriptionLondonGoogle Scholar
Führer, R.Schmidt, M. 2001 West, Martin L.
Garner, R. 1990 From Homer to Tragedy: The Art of Allusion in Greek PoetryLondon, New YorkGoogle Scholar
Garvie, A. F. 1994 Homer, Odyssey Books VI-VIIICambridgeGoogle Scholar
Gaskin, R. 1990 Do Homeric Heroes Make Real Decisions?Classical Quarterly 40 1CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gates, P. 1971 The Kinship Terminology of Homeric GreekBaltimoreGoogle Scholar
Gill, C. 1996 Personality in Greek Epic, Tragedy, and Philosophy: the Self in DialogueNew YorkGoogle Scholar
Goldhill, S. 1991 The Poet’s Voice. Essays on Poetics and Greek LiteratureCambridgeGoogle Scholar
Gould, J. 1973 Hiketeia’Journal of Hellenic Studies 93 74CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grafton, A.Most, G. W.Zetzel, J. E. G 1985
Graziosi, B. 2002 Inventing Homer. The Early Reception of EpicCambridgeGoogle Scholar
Graziosi, B.Haubold, J. 2003 Homeric Masculinity: ΗΝΟΡΕΗ and ΑΓΗΝΟΡΙΗJournal of Hellenic Studies 123 61CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grethlein, J. 2006 Das Geschichtsbild der Ilias. Eine Untersuchung aus phänomenologischer und narratologischer PerspektiveGöttingenCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grethlein, J. 2007 The Poetics of the Bath in the Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 103 25Google Scholar
Grethlein, J. 2008 Memory and Material Objects in the and the Journal of Hellenic Studies 128 27Google Scholar
Griffin, J. 1980 Homer on Life and DeathOxfordGoogle Scholar
Griffin, J. 1986 ‘Homeric Words and SpeakersJournal of Hellenic Studies 106 36CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Griffin, J. 1987 1987
Griffin, J. 1990 Achilles kills HectorLampas 23 353Google Scholar
Hall, E. 1989 Inventing the Barbarian. Greek Self-Definition through TragedyOxfordGoogle Scholar
Harris, W. 2009 Dreams and Experience in Classical AntiquityCambridge, Mass., LondonCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haslam, M. 1997 55
Haubold, J. 2000 Homer’s People: Epic Poetry and Social FormationCambridgeCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haubold, J. 2002 Greek Epic: a Near Eastern Genre?Proceedings of the Cambridge Philological Society 48 1CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heath, J. 2005 The Talking Greeks: Speech, Animals, and the Other in Homer, Aeschylus, and PlatoCambridgeCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hellmann, O. 2000 Die Schlachtszenen der Ilias. Das Bild des Dichters vom Kampf der HeroenzeitStuttgartGoogle Scholar
Hershkowitz, D. 1998 The Madness of Epic. Reading Insanity from Homer to StatiusOxfordGoogle Scholar
Heubeck, A. 1974 Die Homerische FrageDarmstadtGoogle Scholar
Heubeck, A. 1987 ‘Ἀμύμων’Glotta 65 37Google Scholar
Higbie, C. 1990 Measure and Music. Enjambement and Sentence Structure in the IliadOxfordGoogle Scholar
Higbie, C. 1994 Heroes’ Names, Homeric IdentitiesLondonGoogle Scholar
Holoka, J. 1983 Looking Darkly (ΥΠΟΔΡΑ ΙΔΩΝ): Reflections on Status and Decorum in the Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 113 1CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holst-Warhaft, G. 1992 Dangerous Voices. Women’s Lament and Greek LiteratureLondonCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Horrocks, G. C. 1997
Jahn, T. 1987 Zum Wortfeld ‘Seele-Geist’ in der Sprache HomersMunichGoogle Scholar
Janko, R. 1981 Equivalent Formulae in the Greek EposMnemosyne 34 251CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Janko, R. 1982 Homer, Hesiod, and the Hymns. Diachronic Development in Epic DictionCambridgeGoogle Scholar
Janko, R. 1998 The Homeric Epics as Oral Dictated TextsClassical Quarterly 48 1CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jensen, M. S. 1980 The Homeric Question and the Oral-Formulaic TheoryCopenhagenGoogle Scholar
Jensen, M. S. 1999 Dividing Homer: When and How Were the Iliad and the Odyssey Divided into SongsSymbolae Osloenses 74 5CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jones, P. V. 1996 The Independent Heroes of the ’Journal of Hellenic Studies 116 108CrossRefGoogle Scholar
de Jong, I. J. F. 1987 Paris/Alexandros in the Mnemosyne 40 124Google Scholar
de Jong, I. J. F. 1987 The Voice of Anonymity: Tis-Speeches in the Eranos 85 69Google Scholar
de Jong, I. J. F. 1988 Homeric Words and Speakers: an AddendumJournal of Hellenic Studies 108 188CrossRefGoogle Scholar
de Jong, I. J. F. 1992 The Subjective Style in Odysseus’ WanderingsClassical Quarterly 42 1CrossRefGoogle Scholar
de Jong, I. J. F. 1993 Studies in Homeric DenominationMnemosyne 46 289CrossRefGoogle Scholar
de Jong, I. J. F. 1998 Païsi-Apostolopoulou, M.Homerica. Proceedings of the 8th International Symposium on the Odyssey (1–5 September 1996)Ithaca121Google Scholar
de Jong, I. J. F. 2001 A Narratological Commentary on the OdysseyCambridgeCrossRefGoogle Scholar
de Jong, I. J. F. 2004 Narrators and Focalizers. The Presentation of the Story in the IliadLondonGoogle Scholar
de Jong, I. J. F. 2005 Convention Versus Realism in the Homeric Epics’Mnemosyne 58 1CrossRefGoogle Scholar
de Jong, I. J. F. 2006 The Homeric Narrator and His Own Mnemosyne 59 188CrossRefGoogle Scholar
de Jong, I. J. F. 2007 Homer’de Jong, I. J. F.Nünlist, R.Time in Ancient Greek LiteratureStudies in Ancient Greek Narrative 2Leiden17CrossRefGoogle Scholar
de Jong, I. J. F. 2009 Many tales go of that city’s fall.” Het thema van de val van Troje in de sLampas 42 279Google Scholar
de Jong, I. J. F.Nünlist, R 2004 From Bird’s Eye View to Close Up: the Standpoint of the Narrator in the Homeric Epics’Bierl, A.Schmidt, A.Willi, A.Antike Literatur in neuer DeutungLeipzig63Google Scholar
Käppel, L. 1992 Paian. Studien zur Geschichte einer GattungBerlin, New YorkCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kahane, A. 1997 110
Kakridis, P. J. 1961 Achilleus’ RüstungHermes 89 288Google Scholar
Kearns, E. 2004 59
Kim, J. 2000 The Pity of Achilles. Oral Style and the Unity of the IliadLanhamGoogle Scholar
King, K. C. 1987 Achilles. Paradigms of the War Hero from Homer to the Middle AgesBerkeley, LondonGoogle Scholar
Kirk, G. S. 1962 The Songs of HomerCambridgeGoogle Scholar
Konstan, D. 2001 Pity TransformedLondonGoogle Scholar
Kullmann, W. 1956 Das Wirken der Götter in der Ilias. Untersuchungen zur Frage der Entstehung des homerischen ‘GötterapparatsBerlinGoogle Scholar
Kullmann, W. 1984 Oral Poetry Theory and Neoanalysis in Homeric ResearchGreek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies 25 307Google Scholar
Kurt, C. 1979 Seemannische Fachausdrücke bei Homer, unter Berücksichtigung Hesiods und der Lyriker bis BakchylidesGöttingenGoogle Scholar
Kyriakou, P. 2001 Warrior Vaunts in the ’Rheinisches Museum 144 250Google Scholar
Lang, M. 1989 Unreal Conditions in Homeric NarrativeGreek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies 30 5Google Scholar
Lardinois, A. M. P. H. 1997 Modern Paroemiology and the Use of Gnomai in Homer’s Classical Philology 92 213CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Latacz, J. 1965 ΑΝΔΡΟΤΗΤΑ’Glotta 43 62Google Scholar
Latacz, J. 1966 Zum Wortfeld ‘Freude’ in der Sprache HomersHeidelbergGoogle Scholar
Latacz, J. 1968 ἄπτερος μῦθος – ἄπτερος φάτις: ungeflügelte Worte?’Glotta 46 27Google Scholar
Latacz, J. 1977 Kampfparänese, Kampfdarstellung und Kampfwirklichkeit in der Ilias, bei Kallinos und TyrtaiosMunichGoogle Scholar
Latacz, J. 1995 Achilleus. Wandlungen eines europäischen HeldenbildesStuttgartGoogle Scholar
Latacz, J. 1996 Homer. His Art and His WorldAnn ArborGoogle Scholar
Latacz, J. 2003 Troy and Homer. Towards a Solution of an Old MysteryOxfordGoogle Scholar
Lateiner, D. 1995 Sardonic Smile. Nonverbal Behavior in Homeric EpicAnn ArborCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lebessi, A. 1992 Zum Phalos des homerischen HelmsMitteilungen des Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts, Athenische Abteilung 107 1Google Scholar
Lee, D. J. N. 1964 The Similes of the Iliad and the Odyssey ComparedMelbourneGoogle Scholar
Leinieks, V. 1973 A Structural Pattern in the Classical Journal 69 102Google Scholar
Lesky, A. 1961 Göttliche und menschliche Motivation im homerischen EposHeidelbergGoogle Scholar
Létoublon, F. 1983 Défi et combat dans l’IliadeRevue des Études Grecques 96 27CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lilja, S. 1976 Dogs in Ancient Greek PoetryHelsinkiGoogle Scholar
Llewellyn-Jones, L. 2003 Aphrodite’s Tortoise. The Veiled Woman of Ancient GreeceLondonGoogle Scholar
Lloyd, M. 1989 Paris/Alexandros in Homer and EuripidesMnemosyne 42 76CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lohmann, D. 1970 Die Komposition der Reden in der IliasBerlinCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lohmann, D. 1988 Die Andromache-Szenen in der Ilias. Ansätze und Methoden der Homer-InterpretationHildesheim, Zurich, New YorkGoogle Scholar
Lonsdale, S. H. 1990 Creatures of Speech. Lion, Herding, and Hunting SimilesStuttgartCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lord, A. B. 1960 The Singer of TalesCambridge, MassGoogle Scholar
Lord, A. B. 1995 The Singer Resumes the TaleIthaca, NY, LondonGoogle Scholar
Lorimer, H. L. 1950 Homer and the MonumentsLondonGoogle Scholar
Louden, B. 1993 Pivotal Contrafactuals in Homeric EpicClassical Antiquity 12 181CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Louden, B. 1995 Categories of Homeric WordplayTransactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 125 27CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Luce, J. V. 1998 Homer’s Landscape. Troy and Ithaca RevisitedNew HavenCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maehler, H. 1963 Die Auffassung des Dichterberufs im frühen Griechentum bis zur Zeit PindarsGöttingenGoogle Scholar
Mannsperger, B. 1993 Das dardanische Tor in der IliasStudia Troica 3 193Google Scholar
Marinatos, S. 1967
Martin, R. P. 1989 The Language of Heroes. Speech and Performance in the IliadIthaca, NY, LondonGoogle Scholar
Martin, R. P. 1997 138
Mastronarde, D. J. 1994 EuripidesPhoenissaeCambridge
Metz, W. 1990 Hektor als der homerischste aller homerischen HeldenGymnasium 97 385Google Scholar
Van Der Mije, S. R. 1987 Achilles’ God-Given Strength. A 178 and Gifts from the Gods in HomerMnemosyne 40 241CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van Der Mije, S. R. 2011 Bad Herbs — the Snake Simile in 22Mnemosyne 64 359CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van Der Mije, S. R. 2011 πείθειν φρένα(ς), πείθειν θυμόν — A Note on Homeric PsychologyMnemosyne 64 447CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Minchin, E. 2001 Homer and the Resources of Memory. Some Applications of Cognitive Theory to the Iliad and the OdysseyOxfordGoogle Scholar
Monsacré, H. 1984 Les larmes d’Achille. Le héros, la femme et la souffrance dans la poésie d’HomèreParisGoogle Scholar
Morris, I. 1986 The Use and Abuse of HomerClassical Antiquity 5 81CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morris, I.Powell, B. 1997 A New Companion to HomerLeidenGoogle Scholar
Morris, S. 1997 599
Morrison, A. D. 2007 The Narrator in Archaic Greek and Hellenistic PoetryCambridgeCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morrison, J. V. 1991 The Function and Context of Homeric PrayersHermes 119 145Google Scholar
Morrison, J. V. 1992 Homeric Misdirection: False Predictions in the IliadAnn ArborGoogle Scholar
Morrison, J. V. 1997 Kerostasia. The Dictates of Fate and the Will of Zeus in the Arethusa 30 276CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morrison, J. V. 1999 Homeric Darkness: Patterns and Manipulations of Death Scenes in the Hermes 127 129Google Scholar
Most, G. W. 2003 Anger and Pity in the Most, G. W.Braund, S.Ancient Anger. Perspectives from Homer to GalenCambridge50Google Scholar
Moulton, C. 1974 Similes in the Hermes 102 381Google Scholar
Moulton, C. 1977 Similes in the Homeric PoemsGöttingenGoogle Scholar
Müller, C.W. 1989 Der schöne Tod des Polisburgers oder “Ehrenvoll ist es, für das Vaterland zu sterbenGymnasium 96 317Google Scholar
Mueller, M. 1978 Knowledge and Delusion in the Wright, J.Essays on the IliadBloomington105Google Scholar
Mueller, M. 1984 The IliadLondonGoogle Scholar
Murnaghan, S. 1992 Maternity and Mortality in Homeric PoetryClassical Antiquity 11 244CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Murnaghan, S. 1999 The Poetics of Loss in Greek EpicBeissinger, JTylus, JWofford, SEpic Traditions in the Contemporary World. The Poetics of CommunityBerkeley202Google Scholar
Murray, P. 1981 Poetic Inspiration in Early GreeceJournal of Hellenic Studies 101 87CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nagler, M. N. 1974 Spontaneity and Tradition. A Study in the Oral Art of HomerBerkeleyGoogle Scholar
Nagy, G. 1996 Homeric QuestionsAustinGoogle Scholar
Nagy, G. 2004 Homer’s Text and LanguageChampaignGoogle Scholar
Naiden, F. S. 2006 Ancient SupplicationOxford, New YorkCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nesselrath, H.-G. 1992 Ungeschehenes Geschehen. ‘Beinahe-Episoden’ im Griechischen und Römischen EposStuttgartGoogle Scholar
Nünlist, R. 1998 Der homerische Erzähler und das sogenannte SukzessionsgesetzMuseum Helveticum 55 2Google Scholar
Nünlist, R. 2009 The Ancient Critic at Work. Terms and Concepts of Literary Criticism in Greek ScholiaCambridgeCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Olson, S. D. 1995 Blood and Iron. Stories and Storytelling in Homer’s OdysseyLeidenGoogle Scholar
O’Nolan, K. 1978 Doublets in the ’Classical Quarterly 28 23CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Osborne, R. 2004 206
Owen, E. T. 1947 The Story of the IliadNew YorkGoogle Scholar
Pantelia, M. C. 1993 Spinning and Weaving: Ideas of Domestic Order in HomerAmerican Journal of Philology 114 493CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Parker, R. 1983 Miasma. Pollution and Purification in Early Greek ReligionOxfordGoogle Scholar
Parry, A. 1971 The Making of Homeric Verse. The Collected Papers of Milman ParryOxfordGoogle Scholar
Pedrick, V. 1982 Supplication in the and the ’Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 112 125CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Petersmann, G. 1973 Die monologische Totenklage der IliasRheinisches Museum für die Philologie 116 3Google Scholar
Petersmann, G. 1974 ‘Die Entscheidungsmonologe in den homerischen EpenGräzer Beiträge 2 147Google Scholar
Pritchett, W. K. 1991 The Greek States at War, VBerkeleyGoogle Scholar
Race, W. H. 1982 The Classical Priamel from Homer to BoethiusLeidenGoogle Scholar
Redfield, J. M. 1994 Nature and Culture in the Iliad. The Tragedy of HectorDurham, LondonGoogle Scholar
Reece, S. 2005 Homer’s and : From Oral Performance to Written TextAmodio, M. C.New Directions in Oral TheoryTempe43Google Scholar
Reichel, M. 1990 Retardationstechniken in der Kullmann, W.Reichel, M.Der Übergang von der Mündlichkeit zur Literatur bei den GriechenTübingen125Google Scholar
Reichel, M. 1994 Fernbeziehungen in der IliasTübingenGoogle Scholar
Reinhardt, K. 1961 Die Ilias und ihr DichterGöttingenGoogle Scholar
Reinhold, M. 1970 History of Purple as a Status Symbol in GreeceBrusselsGoogle Scholar
Renehan, R. 1987 The in Homer: One Heroic IdealClassical Philology 82 99CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rengakos, A. 1995 ‘Zeit und Gleichzeitigkeit in den homerischen Epen’Antike und Abendland 41 1Google Scholar
Richardson, N. J. 1987 165
Richardson, S. 1990 The Homeric NarratorNashvilleGoogle Scholar
Rijksbaron, A. 1997 Further Observations on Expressions of Sorrow and Related Expressions in HomerBanfi, E.Atti del secondo incontro internazionale di linguistica GrecaTrento215Google Scholar
Richardson, S. 2002 The Syntax and Semantics of the Verb in Classical GreekAmsterdamGoogle Scholar
Richardson, S. 2006 The Meaning and Word-Class of πρότερον and τὸ πρότερον’Crespo, E.Villa, J. de laRevuelta, A. R.Word Classes and Related Topics in Ancient GreekLouvain-la-Neuve441Google Scholar
Robinson, D. 1990 ‘Homeric φίλος: Love of Life and Limbs, and Friendship with one’s θυμός’Craik, E. M.Owls to Athens. Essays on Classical Subjects Presented to Sir Kenneth DoverOxford97Google Scholar
de Romilly, J 1995 Tragédies grecques au fil des ansParisGoogle Scholar
de Romilly, J 1997 HectorParisGoogle Scholar
Rosner, J. 1976 The Speech of Phoenix 9.434–605Phoenix 30 314CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ruijgh, C. J. 1971 Autour de ‘τε épique’. Études sur la syntaxe grecqueAmsterdamGoogle Scholar
Ruijgh, C. J. 1981 L’emploi de HTOI chez Homère et HésiodeMnemosyne 34 272CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ruijgh, C. J. 1995 1995 1
Rutherford, I. R. 2001 Pindar’s Paeans. A Reading of the Fragments and a Survey of the GenreOxfordGoogle Scholar
Rutherford, R. B. 1982 Tragic Form and Feeling in the Journal of Hellenic Studies 102 145CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sacks, R. 1987 The Traditional Phrase in Homer: Two Studies in Form, Meaning, and InterpretationLeidenGoogle Scholar
Schadewaldt, W. 1959 Von Homers Welt und Werk. Aufsätze und Auslegungen zur homerischen FrageStuttgartGoogle Scholar
Schadewaldt, W. 1966 IliasstudienLeipzig 1938Google Scholar
Schadewaldt, W. 1970 Hektor in der IliasHellas und Hesperien. Gesammelte Schriften zur Antike und zur neueren LiteraturZürich-Stuttgart21Google Scholar
Schmidt, M 1976
Schmitt, A. 1990 Selbständigkeit und Abhängigkeit menschlichen Handelns bei HomerMainzGoogle Scholar
Schofield, M. 1986 Euboulia in the Classical Quarterly 36 6CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scodel, R. 2002 Listening to Homer. Tradition, Narrative, and AudienceAnn ArborGoogle Scholar
Scott, W. C. 1974 The Oral Nature of Homeric SimilesLeidenCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scott, W. C. 2009 The Artistry of the Homeric SimileHanover, LondonCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scully, S. 1990 Homer and the Sacred CityNY, LondonGoogle Scholar
Seaford, R. 1994 Reciprocity and Ritual. Homer and Tragedy in the Developing City-StateOxfordGoogle Scholar
Segal, C. 1971 The Theme of the Mutilation of the Body in the IliadLeidenGoogle Scholar
Segal, C. 1971 Andromache’s . Formulaic Artistry in 22.437–476Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 75 33CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shipp, G. P. 1972 Studies in the Language of HomerCambridgeCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shive, D. 1987 Naming AchillesNew York, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Sicking, C. M. J. 1993 Griechische VerslehreMunichGoogle Scholar
Silk, M. S 1983
Slings, S. 2002 ‘Oral Strategies and the Language of HerodotusBakker, E. J.de Jong, I. J. Fvan Wees, H.Brill’s Companion to HerodotusLeiden53CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, W. 1988 Disguises of the Gods in the Numen 35 161Google Scholar
Stoevesandt, M. 2004 Feinde-Gegner-Opfer. Zur Darstellung der Troianer in den Kampfszenen der IliasBasleGoogle Scholar
Taplin, O. 1977 The Stagecraft of Aeschylus. The Dramatic Use of Exits and Entrances in Greek TragedyOxfordGoogle Scholar
Taplin, O. 1992 Homeric Soundings. The Shaping of the IliadOxfordGoogle Scholar
Thornton, A. 1984 Homer’s Iliad: Its Composition and the Motif of SupplicationGöttingenGoogle Scholar
Trachsel, A. 2007 La Troade: un paysage et son héritage littéraire: les commentaires antiques sur la Troade, leur genèse et leur influenceBasleGoogle Scholar
Tsagalis, C. S. 2004 Epic Grief. Personal Laments in Homer’s IliadBerlin, New YorkCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vernant, J. P. 1991 A “Beautiful Death” and the Disfigured Corpse in Homeric EpicMortals and ImmortalsPrinceton50Google Scholar
Visser, E. 1987 Homerische Versifikationstechnik. Versuch einer RekonstruktionFrankfurt, Bern, New YorkGoogle Scholar
Visser, E. 1988 Formulae or Single Words? Towards a New Theory of Homeric Verse-MakingWürzburger Jahrbücher für die Altertumswissenschaft 14 21Google Scholar
Visser, E. 1997 Homers Katalog der SchiffeStuttgart, LeipzigCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vivante, P. 1982 The Epithets in Homer: a Study in Poetic ValueBloomingtonGoogle Scholar
Waanders, F. M. J. 1983 The History of Telos and Teleō in Ancient GreekAmsterdamGoogle Scholar
Waanders, F. M. J. 2000 Πέλομαι: To Be or… To BecomeŽiva Antika 50 257Google Scholar
Wachter, R. 2000 ‘Grammatik der homerischen SpracheLatacz, J.Homers Ilias Gesamtkommentar. ProlegomenaBerlin, New York61Google Scholar
Wackernagel, J. 1920 Vorlesungen über Syntax, mit besonderer Berücksichtigung von Griechisch, Lateinisch, und DeutschBasleGoogle Scholar
Wakker, G. C. 1994 Conditions and Conditionals. An Investigation of Classical GreekAmsterdamGoogle Scholar
Wackernagel, J. 1997 Modal Particles and Different Points of View in Herodotus and ThucydidesBakker, E. J.Grammar as Interpretation. Greek Literature in its Linguistic ContextLeiden215Google Scholar
Wackernagel, J. 1997 Emphasis and Affirmation. Some Aspects of μήν in Tragedy’Rijksbaron, A.New Approaches to Greek ParticlesAmsterdam209Google Scholar
van Wees, H 1992 Status Warriors. War, Violence, and Society in Homer and HistoryAmsterdamGoogle Scholar
van Wees, H 1994 The Homeric Way of War: the and the Hoplite Phalanx (II)Greece & Rome 41 131CrossRefGoogle Scholar
van Wees, H 1997 668
van Wees, H 1998 A Brief History of Tears. Gender Differentiation in Archaic GreeceFoxhall, L.Salmon, J.When Men Were Men. Masculinity, Power and Identity in Classical AntiquityLondon, New York10Google Scholar
van Wees, H 2004 Greek Warfare. Myth and RealitiesLondonGoogle Scholar
West, M. L. 1966 Hesiod, TheogonyOxfordGoogle Scholar
West, M. L. 1978 Hesiod, Works and DaysOxfordGoogle Scholar
West, M. L. 1982 Greek MetreOxfordGoogle Scholar
West, M. L. 1988 The Rise of the Greek EpicJournal of Hellenic Studies 108 151CrossRefGoogle Scholar
West, M. L. 1997 The East Face of Helicon. West Asiatic Elements in Greek Poetry and MythOxfordGoogle Scholar
West, M. L. 1999 The Invention of HomerClassical Quarterly 49 346CrossRefGoogle Scholar
West, M. L. 2001 Studies in the Text and Transmission of the IliadMunichCrossRefGoogle Scholar
West, M. L. 2003 and Classical Quarterly 53 1CrossRefGoogle Scholar
West, M. L. 2007 Indo-European Poetry and MythOxfordCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whallon, W. 1969 Formula, Character, and Context: Studies in Homeric, Old English, and Old Testament PoetryCambridge, MassGoogle Scholar
Whitman, C. H. 1958 Homer and the Heroic TraditionCambridge, MassCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Willcock, M. M. 1970 Some Aspects of the Gods in the Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies 17 1CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williams, B. 1993 Shame and NecessityBerkeleyGoogle Scholar
Wilson, D. F. 2002 Ransom, Revenge, and Heroic Identity in the IliadCambridgeCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yamagata, N. 1991 Phoenix’s Speech — Is Achilles Punished?Classical Quarterly 41 1CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yamagata, N. 1994 Homeric MoralityLeidenGoogle Scholar
Zanker, G. 1994 The Heart of Achilles. Characterization and Personal Ethics in the IliadMichiganCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zarker, J. W. 1965 King Eëtion and Thebe as Symbols in the Classical Journal 61 110Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Bibliography
  • Homer
  • Edited by Irene J. F. de Jong, Universiteit van Amsterdam
  • Book: Homer: Iliad Book 22
  • Online publication: 05 June 2012
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781139029902.006
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Bibliography
  • Homer
  • Edited by Irene J. F. de Jong, Universiteit van Amsterdam
  • Book: Homer: Iliad Book 22
  • Online publication: 05 June 2012
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781139029902.006
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Bibliography
  • Homer
  • Edited by Irene J. F. de Jong, Universiteit van Amsterdam
  • Book: Homer: Iliad Book 22
  • Online publication: 05 June 2012
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781139029902.006
Available formats
×