Achilles inflicts countless agonies on the Achaeans, although he is supposed to be fighting on their side. Odysseus' return causes civil strife on Ithaca. The Iliad and the Odyssey depict conflict where consensus should reign, as do the other major poems of the early Greek hexameter tradition: Hesiod's Theogony and the Homeric Hymns describe divine clashes that unbalance the cosmos; Hesiod's Works and Days stems from a quarrel between brothers. These early Greek poems generated consensus among audiences: the reason why they reached us is that people agreed on their value. This volume, accordingly, explores conflict and consensus from a dual perspective: as thematic concerns in the poems, and as forces shaping their early reception. It sheds new light on poetics and metapoetics, internal and external audiences, competition inside the narrative and competing narratives, local and Panhellenic traditions, narrative closure and the making of canonical literature.
Author(s): Paola Bassino; Lilah Grace Canevaro; Barbara Graziosi
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Year: 2017
Language: English
Pages: 0
FM......Page 1
Contents......Page 5
Contributors......Page 7
Abbreviations......Page 9
Introduction......Page 11
Conflict, Consensus and Closure in Hesiod’s Theogony and Enūma eliš......Page 25
Divine Conflict and the Problem of Aphrodite......Page 47
Sparring Partners. Fraternal Relations in the Homeric Hymn to Hermes......Page 70
Achilles in Control? Managing Oneself and Others in the Funeral Games......Page 93
Uncertainty and the Possibilities of Violence. The Quarrel in Odyssey 8......Page 115
ΙΡΟΣ ΙΑΜΒΙΚΟΣ Archilochean Iambos and the Homeric Poetics of Conflict......Page 138
Conflict and Consensus in the Epic Cycle......Page 160
Fraternal Conflict in Hesiod’s Works and Days......Page 177
On Constructive Conflict and Disruptive Peace. The Certamen Homeri et Hesiodi......Page 194
Bibliography......Page 212
Index of Passages......Page 227
General Index......Page 230