We use cookies to enhance your experience on our website. By continuing to use our website, you are agreeing to our use of cookies. You can change your cookie settings at any time. Find out more

Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University's objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide.

Print Price: $52.50

Format:
Paperback
416 pp.
138 mm x 216 mm

ISBN-13:
9780199542857

Publication date:
October 2011

Imprint: OUP UK


Homer and the Odyssey

Suzanne Saïd
Ruth Webb

Who was Homer? This book takes us beyond the legends of the blind bard or the wandering poet to explore an author about whom nothing is known, except for his works. It offers a reading of the ancient biographies as clues to the reception of the Homeric poems in Antiquity and provides an introduction to the oral tradition which lay at the source of the Homeric epics.

Above all, it takes us into the world of the Odyssey, a world that lies between history and fiction. It guides the reader through a poem which rivals the modern novel in its complexity, demonstrating the unity of the poem as a whole. It defines the many and varied figures of otherness by which the Greeks of the archaic period defined themselves and underlines the values promoted by the poem's depictions of men, women, and gods. Finally, it asks why, throughout the centuries from Homer to Kazantzakis and Joyce, the hero who never forgets his homeland and dreams constantly of return has never ceased to be the incarnation of what it is to be human.

This translation is a revised and much expanded version of the original French text, and includes a new chapter on the representation of women in the Odyssey and an updated bibliography.

Readership : This volume will prove useful for students in Classical Studies and Literature, and readers of Ancient Greek Literautre.

PrefaceSuzanne Saïd:
Note on TranslationsRuth Webb:
1. From 'Homer' to the Homeric Poems
2. The Art of Homer: Between Tradition and Innovation
3. Homer and History
4. The Odyssey: narrations, narrators, and poets
5. The Adventures of Telemachus
6. Odysseus' Travels
7. Odysseus on Ithaca
8. The Human World
9. Women in the Odyssey
10. The World of the Gods
11. The Ideology of the Odyssey
Conclusion
Bibliography

There are no Instructor/Student Resources available at this time.

Suzanne Saïd is Professor of Classics at Columbia University, New York.

Making Sense - Margot Northey and Joan McKibbin

Special Features

  • A revised and much expanded translation of the original French text.
  • Includes a new chapter on the representation of women in the Odyssey, as well as an updated bibliography.