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Articles 1 - 30 of 40
Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
In Her Own Voice: Examining The Portrayal Of Briseis Across Ancient Sources And Modern Retellings, Paige Phillips
In Her Own Voice: Examining The Portrayal Of Briseis Across Ancient Sources And Modern Retellings, Paige Phillips
Senior Theses and Projects
This thesis attempts to reconcile the modern perspective on the Iliad with that of the ancient material through translation, utilizing two translations of the Iliad from its original Greek to English, from 1951 and 2023, Ovid’s letter from Briseis to Achilles in translation from Latin to English, and two modern novels published in 2012 and 2018.
The Struggle Over Patroclus’S Body And The Stretching Of Leather, Alison Maloney
The Struggle Over Patroclus’S Body And The Stretching Of Leather, Alison Maloney
Parnassus: Classical Journal
No abstract provided.
Life, Death, And Recycling In The Homeric Simile, Briana Oser
Life, Death, And Recycling In The Homeric Simile, Briana Oser
Parnassus: Classical Journal
No abstract provided.
The Funeral Of Patroclus, Carl Quist
The Funeral Of Patroclus, Carl Quist
Parnassus: Classical Journal
No abstract provided.
Nature, Glory, Lineage In Iliad 6.145-151, Anne-Catherine Schaaf
Nature, Glory, Lineage In Iliad 6.145-151, Anne-Catherine Schaaf
Parnassus: Classical Journal
No abstract provided.
The Weak, The Wicked, The Divine: A Collection Of Poems, Grace Hedin
The Weak, The Wicked, The Divine: A Collection Of Poems, Grace Hedin
University Honors Theses
The Weak, the Wicked, the Divine is a collection of thirteen original poems based on the female figures of the Iliad and the Odyssey with scholarly analysis. The Introduction gives background on Homer and his works as well as their impact on both modern day and myself. The second section contains both the original work of Grace Hedin and the author's scholarly analysis of both their own work and the figure the poem is based upon. The Conclusion will hold the final thoughts and dedications from the author. An audio reading of all poems is attached to this thesis, with …
Woven Words In The Iliad: Gender, Narrative, And Textile Production In The Scholia Of The Venetus A Manuscript, Anne-Catherine Schaaf
Woven Words In The Iliad: Gender, Narrative, And Textile Production In The Scholia Of The Venetus A Manuscript, Anne-Catherine Schaaf
College Honors Program
The work of previous scholars has established powerful connections between the process of creating textiles and process of epic oral composition. I build on disparte sources from the fields of archaeology and philology and analyze how the scholia in one epic manuscript of the Iliad, the Venetus A, treat this issue and with a focus on how it interplays with gender, specifically the female characters in the Iliad who produce textiles. I focus on a few major sections of scholia and important scenes of weaving in the Iliad. The key female characters in the novel, both divine and human nearly …
Andromache, Rachel Hungerford
Andromache, Rachel Hungerford
Honors Projects and Presentations: Undergraduate
This project is a fictional adaptation of The Iliad, told from the third-person perspective of Andromache, the wife of Trojan commander Hector. Andromache attempts to present a consistent Trojan female voice in its telling, as well as a picture of a committed marriage. It seeks to capture the complicated humanity of individual characters rather than the archetypal objectivity of Homer’s poem. And, most importantly, it tries to provide moments of goodness, fidelity, and hope in the face of immorality, unfaithfulness, and despair.
Ἔπος: A Musical Concept Album Adaptation Of Homer’S Iliad, Blaike Cheramie
Ἔπος: A Musical Concept Album Adaptation Of Homer’S Iliad, Blaike Cheramie
Scripps Senior Theses
This thesis project is a musical concept album adaptation of Homer’s classical epic the Iliad. Inspired by musicals like Hadestown, Les Miserables, and Hamilton as well as movies like O Brother Where Art Thou and musicians like Bob Dylan, this album seeks to enter the genre of Classical Reception Studies. The album consists of seven tracks all referencing moments within the poem, written from the perspective of the characters to inspire empathy within the audience. The content of this thesis includes detailed chord charts and audio demos of each song, as well as analyses of the lyrical, musical, and thematic …
Identities Of Armor: The Function Of Armor In Homer's Iliad, Eli Rosenthal
Identities Of Armor: The Function Of Armor In Homer's Iliad, Eli Rosenthal
Senior Projects Spring 2022
Senior Project submitted to The Division of Languages and Literature of Bard College.
The Gift In The Iliad, Tyler Jordan
The Gift In The Iliad, Tyler Jordan
Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository
In this thesis I challenge the dominant conception of gift giving in the Iliad. In Chapter 1 I show that the textual evidence does not support the idea that different categories of gift giving are denoted by word choice. In Chapter 2, I show that modern theories are not able to explain perfectly the instances of gift giving in the Iliad. Furthermore, I show that the use or avoidance of gift-terms in the poem can carry meaning. In Chapter 3, I take the conclusions from the previous two chapters and apply them to a focused analysis of the …
The Fabric Of Gifts: Culture And Politics Of Giving And Exchange In Archaic Greece, Beate Wagner-Hasel
The Fabric Of Gifts: Culture And Politics Of Giving And Exchange In Archaic Greece, Beate Wagner-Hasel
Zea E-Books Collection
When the Greek leader Agamemnon took for himself the woman awarded to Achilles as his spoils of battle, the warrior’s resulting anger and outrage nearly cost his side the war. Beyond the woman herself was what she symbolised — a matter of esteem rather than material value. In Archaic Greece the practices of gift giving existed alongside an economy of market relations. The value of gifts and the meanings of exchange in ancient societies are fundamental to the debates of 19th-century economists, to Marcel Mauss’s famous Essai sur le don (1923-4), and to the definition of experiential value by modern …
The Transactions Of Mortal Coil: Hellenic Meaning In The Suffering Of The Iliad And The Oresteia, Stephen L. Bothwell
The Transactions Of Mortal Coil: Hellenic Meaning In The Suffering Of The Iliad And The Oresteia, Stephen L. Bothwell
Honors Bachelor of Arts
The meaning of suffering is enigmatic. To grasp at it cosmologically, I examine both Archaic and Classical Greek views of suffering via their primary literature and culture. Homer’s Iliad reveals the transactionality of suffering as it is embedded in the heroic code through an analysis of the Glaucus-Diomedes exchange. An investigation of Achilles’ development portrays both the Homeric system that equates honor and suffering and the unquantifiable suffering that critiques said system. Meanwhile, a study of Aeschylus’ Oresteia exhibits the interrelation of suffering and learning in Zeus’ law. The progression of the trilogy displays an accruement of wisdom by means …
Homeric Time Travel, Erwin F. Cook
Homeric Time Travel, Erwin F. Cook
Classical Studies Faculty Research
It has been a commonplace among anthropologists since Malinowski that during the performance of traditional stories the listening community experiences the primordial past when the gods still appeared freely to humans. Significantly, this involves not a return to the past, but a return of the past. The Odyssey not only depicts its own hero as a character from the heroic past, in which the gods were intimately involved with the heroes who fought at Troy, but also as one who brings the past with him when he returns home to an Ithaca that represents a greatly diminished present. In so …
Aristotelian Justice In The Iliad, Dylan Grant
Homeric Time Travel, Erwin F. Cook
Homeric Time Travel, Erwin F. Cook
Erwin F. Cook
It has been a commonplace among anthropologists since Malinowski that during the performance of traditional stories the listening community experiences the primordial past when the gods still appeared freely to humans. Significantly, this involves not a return to the past, but a return of the past. The Odyssey not only depicts its own hero as a character from the heroic past, in which the gods were intimately involved with the heroes who fought at Troy, but also as one who brings the past with him when he returns home to an Ithaca that represents a greatly diminished present. In so …
Nobility Of The Warrior: Etiquette, Empathy, And Emotion, Tao Tan
Nobility Of The Warrior: Etiquette, Empathy, And Emotion, Tao Tan
Agora
No abstract provided.
Review Of "Homer's Iliad: The Basel Commentary, Book Xix", Rachel H. Lesser
Review Of "Homer's Iliad: The Basel Commentary, Book Xix", Rachel H. Lesser
Classics Faculty Publications
Marina Coray’s commentary on Iliad 19, originally published in German in 2009, is part of the ongoing Basel commentary series on Homer’s Iliad, edited by Anton Bierl and Joachim Latacz. So far thirteen volumes of the series have been published in German, and five in English translation. Coray’s commentary is a work of great erudition and will be an indispensable resource for scholars of Homer. Here I focus on the utility of this slightly revised new English edition for anglophone readers at various levels, and consider how this commentary relates to and supplements Mark W. Edwards’ outstanding commentary on …
Insight Into The Community: Bee Similes In The Iliad And The Aeneid, Sara Heist
Insight Into The Community: Bee Similes In The Iliad And The Aeneid, Sara Heist
Montview Journal of Research & Scholarship
This paper offers a comparative analysis of the bee similes in Homer’s Iliad and Virgil’s Aeneid to demonstrate that there are significant thematic connections between the similes in the two epics. In both works, bee similes illustrate the structure of the ideal society, as a close reading of each simile reveals. This paper demonstrates that both Homeric and Virgilian bee similes focus on the concept of community. In the Iliad, Homer’s first extended simile compares the Greek forces to a colony of bees. This prominent placement foreshadows the significance of bee similes in the Homeric epic. As a Greek poet, …
Challenging Kleos: An Fpda Analysis And Application Of Andromache In The Iliad, Ayana Marie Rowe
Challenging Kleos: An Fpda Analysis And Application Of Andromache In The Iliad, Ayana Marie Rowe
Honors Bachelor of Arts
I will argue that through carefully constructed language, Andromache manipulates her status as an ideal, aristocratic woman in order to critique the masculine pursuit of kleos, thereby giving a voice to women like herself who are limited as women in their ability to speak out against the societal norms. I begin my argument by establishing the parameters of an ideal, aristocratic woman in ancient Greece and demonstrating ways in which Andromache fits this characterization. The larger expanse of my thesis is then devoted to my FPDA reading of Andromache’s speeches, and the conclusions drawn from my analyses. My final …
Achilleus: Immortal Glory Through Humanity, Joshua Philip Bressman
Achilleus: Immortal Glory Through Humanity, Joshua Philip Bressman
Senior Projects Spring 2016
Senior Project submitted to The Division of Languages and Literature of Bard College.
The Treatment Of Women By Achilles And Agamemnon, Erica M. Cosgrove
The Treatment Of Women By Achilles And Agamemnon, Erica M. Cosgrove
Student Research
No abstract provided.
Introduction To The Iliad, Erwin F. Cook
Introduction To The Iliad, Erwin F. Cook
Erwin F. Cook
Sing of rage, Goddess, that bane of Akhilleus,Peleus' son, which caused untold pain for Akhaians,sent down throngs of powerful spirits to Aides, war-chiefs rendered the prize of dogs and everysort of bird.
Edward McCrorie’s new translation of Homer’s classic epic of the Trojan War captures the falling rhythms of a doomed Troy. McCrorie presents the sundry epithets and resonant symbols of Homer's verse style and remains as close to the Greek's meaning as research allows.
The work is an epic with a flexible contemporary feel to it, capturing the wide-ranging tempos of the original. It underscores the honor of soldiers …
The Natures Of Monsters And Heroes, Vanessa Nikolovska
The Natures Of Monsters And Heroes, Vanessa Nikolovska
The Review: A Journal of Undergraduate Student Research
Around the late eighth or early seventh century B.C., a poet, known to later ages as Homer, composed two epic poems that tell the tales of the Trojan War, The Iliad and The Odyssey. The Iliad tells the story of the rage of Achilles, the great Greek warrior, while The Odyssey tells the story of the coming home of Odysseus, the King of Ithaca, from the Trojan War. A study of both epics reveals that constructs portraying various values, such as the characteristics of heroes, have remained the same from the times of ancient Greece to the present day. …
Homeric Epic Repeated Lines Chart 2: Sets Of Odyssey Base Lines, Keith L. Yoder
Homeric Epic Repeated Lines Chart 2: Sets Of Odyssey Base Lines, Keith L. Yoder
Keith L. Yoder
Homeric Epic Repeated Lines Chart 1: Sets Of Iliad Base Lines, Keith L. Yoder
Homeric Epic Repeated Lines Chart 1: Sets Of Iliad Base Lines, Keith L. Yoder
Keith L. Yoder
Homeric Epic Repeated Lines Chart 3: All Iliad Repeated Lines, Keith L. Yoder
Homeric Epic Repeated Lines Chart 3: All Iliad Repeated Lines, Keith L. Yoder
Keith L. Yoder
Homeric Epic Repeated Lines Chart 4: All Odyssey Repeated Lines, Keith L. Yoder
Homeric Epic Repeated Lines Chart 4: All Odyssey Repeated Lines, Keith L. Yoder
Keith L. Yoder
Theban Walls In Homeric Epic, Corinne Ondine Pache
Theban Walls In Homeric Epic, Corinne Ondine Pache
Classical Studies Faculty Research
Throughout the Iliad, the Greeks at Troy often refer to the wars at Thebes in their speeches, and several important warriors fighting on the Greek side at Troy also fought at Thebes and are related to Theban heroes who besieged the Boeotian city a generation earlier. The Theban wars thus stand in the shadow of the story of war at Troy, another city surrounded by walls supposed to be impregnable. In the Odyssey, the Theban connections are less central, but nevertheless significant as one of our few sources concerning the building of the Theban walls. In this essay, …
Echoes Of Peace: Anti-War Sentiment In The Iliad And Heike Monogatari And Its Manifestation In Dramatic Tradition, Tyler A. Creer
Echoes Of Peace: Anti-War Sentiment In The Iliad And Heike Monogatari And Its Manifestation In Dramatic Tradition, Tyler A. Creer
Theses and Dissertations
The Iliad and Heike monogatari are each seen as seminal pieces of literature in Greek and Japanese culture respectively. Both works depict famous wars from which subsequent generations of warriors, poets, and other artists in each society drew their inspiration for their own modes of conduct and creation. While neither work is emphatically pro-war, both were used extensively by the warrior classes of both cultures to reinforce warrior culture and to inculcate proper battlefield behavior. In spite of this, however, both tales contain a strong undercurrent of anti-war sentiment which contrasts sharply with their traditionally seen roles of being tales …