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Studies in the Odyssey PDF

257 Pages·1974·7.834 MB·English
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HERMES ZEITSCHRIFT FÜR KLASSISCHE PHILOLOGIE EINZELSCHRIFTEN HERAUSGEGEBEN VON KARL BÜCHNER · HERMANN GUNDERT HERBERT NESSELHAUF HEFT 30 STUDIES IN THE ODYSSEY BY BERNARD FENIK FRANZ STEINER VERLAG GMBH · WIESBADEN STUDIES IN THE ODYSSEY BY BERNARD FENIK FRANZ STEINER VERLAG GMFtTT. W TrcnAnp« PREFACE Quotations from the Iliad and Odyssey are from the Oxford text of D. B. Monro and T. W. Allen. Several important works appeared after the manuscript was already at press (especially H. Erbse’s Beiträge zum Verständnis der Odyssee, Berlin, 1972), but nothing that came into my hands after the spring of 1972 could be taken into account. I wish to express my gratitude to the Alexander von Humboldt Stiftung of Bad-Godesberg, West Germany, for a generous grant that enabled me to work at the University of Heidelberg in the spring of 1971, and again for a large subvention toward printing costs. The assistance and cooperation of this foundation, and the guest-friendship of the Classical Seminar at the University of Heidelberg, were invaluable in the research and preparation of this book. Published with the aid of financial grants from the Alexander von Humbold-Stiftung. Oittwr5',v*' Blkllv'' ·'■ Λ Alle Rechte Vorbehalten Ohne ausdrückliche Genehmigung des Verlages ist auch nichtgestattet, das Werk oder einzelne Teile daraus nachzudrucken oder auf phot/nnecB*nischem Wege (Photokopie, Mikrokopie usw.) zu vervielfältigen, Ö *974 Oy Franz Steiner Verlag GmbH, Wiesbaden. Satz u. Druck: Werk- una-Eeieoruckerei TABLE OF CONTENTS Preface...................................................................................................................VII Abbreviations of Frequently cited W orks...................................................VIII Journals................................................................................................................... IX Introduction.......................................................................................................... i PART I: ODYSSEUS AND QUEEN ARETE The nameless Stranger......................................................................................... 5 Interruptions........................................................................................................... 61 Discrepancies: The Problem of Queen Arete’s Importance.....................105 PART II: DOUBLETS Introduction...........................................................................................................133 Scenes with repeated Elements; Symmetrical ordering..............................143 Themes and typical Situations........................................................................153 Character Doublets..............................................................................................172 Helios and Poseidon..............................................................................................208 Conclusion...............................................................................................................231 EXCURSUS: THEOKLYMENOS................................................................233 INDEX OF PASSAGES.................................................................................245 ABBREVIATIONS OF FREQUENTLY CITED WORKS Besslich: S. Besslich, Schweigen — Verschweigen — Übergehen. Die Dar­ stellung des Unausgesprochenen in der Odyssee (Heidelberg, 1966) Bethe: E. Bethe, Homer II (Leipzig 1922) Finsler: G. Finsler, Homer II (Berlin 1918) Focke : F. Focke, Die Odyssee (Stuttgart, 1943) Heubeck: Λ. Heubeck, Der Odyssee-Dichter und die Ilias (Erlangen, 1954) Hölscher: U. Hölscher, Untersuchungen zur Form der Odyssee (Berlin, 1939) Kirch hoff: A. Kirchhoff, Die homerische Odyssee (Berlin, 1879) Kirk: G. Kirk, The Songs of Homer (Cambridge, 1962) Lord: A. B. Lord, The Singer of Tales (Cambridge, i960) Mattes: W. Mattes, Odysseus bei den Phlaken (Würzburg. 1958) M erkelbach : R. Merkelbach, Untersuchungen zur Odyssee (Mönchen, 1951) Page: D. Page, The Homeric Odyssey (Oxford, 1955) Reinhardt* : K. Reinhardt, Die Abenteuer der Odyssee (Tradition und Geist, Göttingen, i960, 47—124) Reinhardt*: K. Reinhardt, Tradition und Geist im homerischen Epos (Tradi­ tion und Geist, Göttingen, i960, 5—15) Rothe : K. Rothe, Die Odyssee als Dichtung (Paderborn, 1914) Schwartz: E. Schwartz, Die Odyssee (München, 1924) Stanford: W. B. Stanford, The Odyssey of Homer, 2 vols. (Vol. I, Oxford. 1950; Vol. II, Oxford, 1954) Von der Mühll: P. Von der Mühll, Odyssee (Pauly-Wissowa-Kroll, Realenzyklopädie für die klass. Altertumswissenschaft, Supplementband VII, 6968. Leipzig. 1940) Wilamowitz* : U. von Wilamowitz-Mobllendorf, Homerische Untersuchungen (Berlin, 1884) Wilamowitz*: U. von Wilamowitz-Mobllendorf, Die Heimkehr des Odysseus (Berlin, 1927) Woodhouse : W. J. Woodhouse, The Composition of Homer’s Odyssey (Oxford, 1930) JOURNALS AJA American Journal of Archaeology AJPh American Journal of Philology CJ Classical Journal CPh Classical Philology CQ Classical Quarterly CR Classical Review Comp. Lit. Comparative Literature HSCPh Harvard Studies in Classical Philology JHS Journal of Hellenic Studies ΤΑΡΑ Transactions of the American Philological Association UCPCPh University of California Publications in Classical Philology WS Wiener Studien YCS Yale Classical Studies INTRODUCTION This book consists of a series of separate, independent studies of various scenes and larger problems of interpretation in the Odyssey. The unity that it lacks in topic and subject matter is, hopefully, compensated for by consistency in method and general approach. My aim is, basically, to isolate and identify certain dominant stylistic characteristics of the Odyssey, and to interpret on that basis both individual incidents and longer stretches of the narrative, and also to explain the origin and genesis of these techniques as a factor influencing the way they are used. The three studies in Part I all center around the scene in Book η where Odysseus enters the palace of Alkinoos and begs queen Arete to send him home. The starting point for each essay is a different problem that critics (mostly analyst critics) have discovered there. These problems are, in my opinion, genuin? a®d unportantjandrequire more comprehensive and thorough­ going analysis than they have yet received. What I have tried to show is that the peculiar details in question are rooted infetvlistic featuralthat are character­ istic of the Odyssey generally, and that they should be interpreted on that basis. The purpose here is to establish tet^jjstjs^äiaaal— *· e· the poet’s predilection for certain ^Tandard sceae-tmea./^· — as a foundation for further inter­ pretation. Since extensive repetition generally seems to be a characteristic of all oral poetry, or poetry derived from an oral tradition, it will come as no surprise that my analysis is grounded in the meth^SLiß^JäööMÜi ot/cantemoorarv oral poetry studies!) My standpoint is lha<;i^llp nnitAr^ari and my proce­ dure is to combine the older traditional methods of criticism with the concepts and techniques that have been worked out by Parry and his suc­ cessors. It is, I think, important tp achieve some such combination of methnooda and outlook for two reasons. ^First^f all, becaus^the~use of formulaic mater±iT i tiuini tmhee liEuaacuT aannaJ TvTjJayysssseeyy ggooeess \wJJeeuIl bpeeyyoofnida" rreeppeeaatteedd dcuicctuioonnaali floonrmnuuilaaee; it} iextends to repeated themes and jjBpiiiQfiawliere whole action sequences are tfie' Biflc Dtuiding Wocks in larger narrative structures, analogous to dictional formulae that work as basic «nits in the creation of single verses^ It is | kn unportantand as yet far from completed task to define the extent to which teuch larger compositional entities underlie the narrative of the Homeric enica. 5_2 5ΕΣ_Ώ \an attempt is long overdue to turn oral poetry studies to the specific mterOTetatiOTofffi^ej^juüfl,dfiHiiajatäiftthfii£4jaÖiiäLiäS^i2j£2iSie£iJ

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