Neoanalysis, Orality, and Intertextuality: An Examination of Homeric Motif Transference

In Homeric studies scholars have speculated on the influence of (non-surviving) preHomeric material on the Iliad. This article expands this line of argument from an oralist perspective, with reference to modern intertextual theory. It concludes that preHomeric and nonHomeric motifs from oral traditi...

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Tác giả chính: Jonathan, Burgess
Ngôn ngữ:English
Năm xuất bản: Center for Studies in Oral Tradition 2018
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Truy cập Trực tuyến:http://lrc.quangbinhuni.edu.vn:8181/dspace/handle/DHQB_123456789/3886
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spelling oai:localhost:DHQB_123456789-38862018-10-22T08:44:37Z Neoanalysis, Orality, and Intertextuality: An Examination of Homeric Motif Transference Jonathan, Burgess eography Anthropology Recreation Folklore Language and Literature In Homeric studies scholars have speculated on the influence of (non-surviving) preHomeric material on the Iliad. This article expands this line of argument from an oralist perspective, with reference to modern intertextual theory. It concludes that preHomeric and nonHomeric motifs from oral traditions were transferred into the epic poem, creating an intertextually allusive poetics that would have been recognizable to an early Greek audience informed of mythological traditions. 2018-08-29T03:54:59Z 2018-08-29T03:54:59Z 2018 http://lrc.quangbinhuni.edu.vn:8181/dspace/handle/DHQB_123456789/3886 en Center for Studies in Oral Tradition
institution Trung tâm Học liệu Đại học Quảng Bình (Dspace)
collection Trung tâm Học liệu Đại học Quảng Bình (Dspace)
language English
topic eography
Anthropology
Recreation
Folklore
Language and Literature
spellingShingle eography
Anthropology
Recreation
Folklore
Language and Literature
Jonathan, Burgess
Neoanalysis, Orality, and Intertextuality: An Examination of Homeric Motif Transference
description In Homeric studies scholars have speculated on the influence of (non-surviving) preHomeric material on the Iliad. This article expands this line of argument from an oralist perspective, with reference to modern intertextual theory. It concludes that preHomeric and nonHomeric motifs from oral traditions were transferred into the epic poem, creating an intertextually allusive poetics that would have been recognizable to an early Greek audience informed of mythological traditions.
author Jonathan, Burgess
author_facet Jonathan, Burgess
author_sort Jonathan, Burgess
title Neoanalysis, Orality, and Intertextuality: An Examination of Homeric Motif Transference
title_short Neoanalysis, Orality, and Intertextuality: An Examination of Homeric Motif Transference
title_full Neoanalysis, Orality, and Intertextuality: An Examination of Homeric Motif Transference
title_fullStr Neoanalysis, Orality, and Intertextuality: An Examination of Homeric Motif Transference
title_full_unstemmed Neoanalysis, Orality, and Intertextuality: An Examination of Homeric Motif Transference
title_sort neoanalysis, orality, and intertextuality: an examination of homeric motif transference
publisher Center for Studies in Oral Tradition
publishDate 2018
url http://lrc.quangbinhuni.edu.vn:8181/dspace/handle/DHQB_123456789/3886
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score 9,463379