Listening to Homer: Tradition, Narrative, and Audience by Ruth Scodel
Requirements: PDF Reader, 2MB
Overview: The Homeric poems were not intended for readers, but for a listening audience. Traditional in their basic elements, the stories were learned by oral poets from earlier poets and recreated at every performance. Individual nuances, tailored to the audience, could creep into the stories of the Greek heroes on each and every occasion when a bard recited the epics.
For a particular audience at a particular moment, “tradition” is what it believes it has inherited from the past–and it may not be particularly old. The boundaries between the traditional and the innovative may become blurry and indistinct. By rethinking tradition, we can see Homer’s methods and concerns in a new light. The Homeric poet is not naive. He must convince his audience that the story is true. He must therefore seem disinterested, unconcerned with promoting anyone’s interests. The poet speaks as if everything he says is merely the repetition of old tales.
Genre: Epic Poetry, Classics
Download Instructions:
http://destyy.com/wXmSEF
http://destyy.com/wXmSEL