Produktbild: Orality, Textuality, and the Homeric Epics

Orality, Textuality, and the Homeric Epics An Interdisciplinary Study of Oral Texts, Dictated Texts, and Wild Texts

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

30.07.2019

Verlag

Oxford Academic

Seitenzahl

372

Maße (L/B/H)

26/20,8/2,5 cm

Gewicht

942 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-19-883506-6

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

30.07.2019

Verlag

Oxford Academic

Seitenzahl

372

Maße (L/B/H)

26/20,8/2,5 cm

Gewicht

942 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-19-883506-6

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: Orality, Textuality, and the Homeric Epics
    • 0: Introduction

    • Part I: Oral Texts and Oral Intertextuality

    • 1: Oral Texts and Entextualization in the Homeric Epics

    • Introduction

    • 1.1: Performance, Oral Texts, and Entextualization

    • 1.2: Application to the Homeric Epics

    • 1.2.1: The Preexistence of Tales and Songs and the Object-Like Status of Utterances in the Homeric Epics

    • 1.2.2: Entextualization in the Character Text I

    • 1.2.3: Entextualization in the Character Text II

    • 1.2.4: The Poet and Entextualization

    • 1.3: Homerists on Texts

    • 2: Oral Intertextuality and Mediational Routines in the Homeric Epics

    • Introduction

    • 2.1: Oral Intertextuality and Mediational Routines

    • 2.2: Mediational Routines in the Homeric Epics

    • 2.2.1: The Source Text

    • 2.2.2: The Target Text

    • 2.3: Metapoetic Implications

    • Part II: The Emergence of Written Texts

    • 3: Textualization: Dictation and Written Versions of the Iliad and the Odyssey

    • Introduction

    • 3.1: The Dictation Model

    • 3.2: A Comparative Approach

    • 3.3: The Process of Recording by Hand

    • 3.3.1: The Challenges of Manual Transcription

    • 3.3.2: Steps to Work around These Challenges and Their Effects

    • 3.3.3: The Rare Exceptions

    • 3.3.4: Dictated Texts versus Sung Texts

    • 3.3.5: What Was Written Down

    • 3.3.5.1: The Collector as Gatekeeper

    • 3.3.5.2: The Scribal Process

    • 3.4: The Collector's Impact on the Oral Text

    • 3.4.1: Unwitting Interference (or the Collector's Presence)

    • 3.4.2: Purposeful Interference

    • 3.5: Editing

    • 3.5.1: Field Notes

    • 3.5.2: Editorial Work in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries

    • 3.5.3: Editorial Work from the Second Half of the Twentieth Century until Today

    • 3.6: Best Practices

    • 3.7: The Collector's Text versus the Performer's Oral Performance

    • 3.8: The Formulations in Section 3.1 Reevaluated

    • 3.9: The Evolutionary Model's Transcript

    • Excursus: The Interventionist Textmaker and Herodotus's Histories

    • Part III: Copying Written Texts

    • 4: The Scribe as Performer and the Ptolemaic Wild Papyri of the Homeric Epics

    • Introduction

    • 4.1: The Ptolemaic Wild Papyri of the Homeric Epics

    • 4.2: The Nature of the Variation: Not Scribal Error

    • 4.3: Accounting for This Variation

    • 4.4: The Scribe as Performer

    • 4.5: The Scribe as Performer and the Wild Homeric Papyri

    • 4.5.1: The Wild Papyri and the Comparanda

    • 4.5.2: When?

    • 4.5.3: Who?

    • 5: Scribal Performance in the Ptolemaic Wild Papyri of the Homeric Epics

    • Introduction

    • 5.1: Juxtaposing the Wild Papyri and Helmut van Thiel's Text

    • 5.2: Competence and Entextualization

    • 5.2.1: Cohesion

    • 5.2.2: Coherence

    • 5.3: Competence and Completeness

    • 5.3.1: Characters Do More Things

    • 5.3.2: Nothing Is Assumed

    • 5.4: Competence and "Affecting Power"

    • 5.4.1: The Emotions

    • 5.4.2: The Fulfillment of Expectations and the Groove

    • 5.5: Tradition, Traditionalization, and the Intertextual Gap

    • 5.6: The Bookroll

    • 5.7: The Performing Scribe

    • 5.8: Scribal Performance and the Alternatives

    • 6: Conclusion

    • Endmatter

    • Works Cited

    • Index