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Select literary papyri from OxyrhynchusColomo, D. January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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Exile in Homeric EpicPerry, Timothy 01 September 2010 (has links)
This dissertation examines exile in Homeric epic and in particular the relationship between exile as a narrative motif and the thematic significance of exile in specific contexts. The Homeric exile motif is defined and found to include four stock elements involving the causes of exile, the role of compulsion in exile, the permanence of exile, and the possible outcomes of exile. The more thematic issues surrounding exile are also considered, especially in the light of ancient and modern theoretical discussions of exile. Three examples of exile in the Iliad and the Odyssey are then analyzed. In each case, close attention is paid to the way in which the exile narrative fits into the immediate context and is thematically relevant to it. The exile narrative delivered by Phoenix to Achilles in Iliad 9 is interpreted as an attempt to dissuade Achilles from carrying out his threat to abandon the expedition against Troy. More precisely, it is argued that Phoenix uses the parallels between his own exile and the situation facing Achilles to suggest that in abandoning the expedition Achilles would become something close to an exile himself, thereby compromising his heroic standing. It is argued that the ghost of the unburied Patroclus uses his exile narrative to Achilles in Iliad 23 to present his experience of death as a parallel to his experience of exile in life and does so in order to persuade Achilles to provide him with ‘hospitality’ in the form of burial, just as Achilles’ family provided Patroclus with hospitality as an exile. Finally, the false exile narrative delivered by Odysseus to Athena (disguised as a shepherd) in Odyssey 13 is interpreted as a reaction to Odysseus’ uncertainty as to whether or not he has reached Ithaca. It is argued that Odysseus uses his exile narrative to contrast the possibility that he is finally home with the possibility that he is still a nameless wanderer. The exile motif is found to be flexible enough to be adapted to the thematic requirements of the contexts in which these three exile narratives occur.
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Exile in Homeric EpicPerry, Timothy 01 September 2010 (has links)
This dissertation examines exile in Homeric epic and in particular the relationship between exile as a narrative motif and the thematic significance of exile in specific contexts. The Homeric exile motif is defined and found to include four stock elements involving the causes of exile, the role of compulsion in exile, the permanence of exile, and the possible outcomes of exile. The more thematic issues surrounding exile are also considered, especially in the light of ancient and modern theoretical discussions of exile. Three examples of exile in the Iliad and the Odyssey are then analyzed. In each case, close attention is paid to the way in which the exile narrative fits into the immediate context and is thematically relevant to it. The exile narrative delivered by Phoenix to Achilles in Iliad 9 is interpreted as an attempt to dissuade Achilles from carrying out his threat to abandon the expedition against Troy. More precisely, it is argued that Phoenix uses the parallels between his own exile and the situation facing Achilles to suggest that in abandoning the expedition Achilles would become something close to an exile himself, thereby compromising his heroic standing. It is argued that the ghost of the unburied Patroclus uses his exile narrative to Achilles in Iliad 23 to present his experience of death as a parallel to his experience of exile in life and does so in order to persuade Achilles to provide him with ‘hospitality’ in the form of burial, just as Achilles’ family provided Patroclus with hospitality as an exile. Finally, the false exile narrative delivered by Odysseus to Athena (disguised as a shepherd) in Odyssey 13 is interpreted as a reaction to Odysseus’ uncertainty as to whether or not he has reached Ithaca. It is argued that Odysseus uses his exile narrative to contrast the possibility that he is finally home with the possibility that he is still a nameless wanderer. The exile motif is found to be flexible enough to be adapted to the thematic requirements of the contexts in which these three exile narratives occur.
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Die Diathesen von "idein" und "horan" bei HomerBechert, Johannes, January 1964 (has links)
Inaug. - Diss. - Munich. / Vita. Words between quotation marks transliterated from Greek. Continuously paged. Bibliography; p. 429-441.
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Dissertatio de Diomede HomeriSchweigger, J. S. C. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Erlangen, 1800. / Includes bibliographical references (prelim. p. [9-12]).
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Morphosyntax of the Homeric Greek verbLeinieks, Valdis. January 1964 (has links)
Thesis--Princeton. / Bibliography: p. [89]-90.
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Menos in early GreekTeffeteller Dale, Annette, 1944- January 1984 (has links)
No description available.
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Die sogenannten Äolismen der homerischen Sprache /Strunk, Klaus. January 1957 (has links)
Thesis--Köln. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references.
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Woman and the sea a metaphoric identification in Winslow Homer's mature art /Orzech, Kathleen. January 1978 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Wisconsin. / Title from title screen (viewed Nov. 8, 2007). Bibliography: leaves 129-131. Online version of the print original.
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A comparison of Apollonius Rhodius with Homer in prepositional usageHaggett, Arthur Sewall. January 1902 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Johns Hopkins University.
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