We use cookies to distinguish you from other users and to provide you with a better experience on our websites. Close this message to accept cookies or find out how to manage your cookie settings.
A summary is not available for this content so a preview has been provided. Please use the Get access link above for information on how to access this content.
Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)
References
Abusch, T. et al. (eds) 1990. Lingering over Words: Studies in Ancient Near Eastern Literature in Honour of William Moran. Atlanta, GA.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adkins, A. W. H.1969. ‘Threatening, abusing and feeling angry in the Homeric poems’, JHS89: 7–21.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alden, M. J.1997. ‘The resonances of the song of Ares and Aphrodite’, Mnemosyne50: 513–29.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alden, M. J.2000. Homer Beside Himself: Para-Narratives in the Iliad. Oxford.Google Scholar
Allan, W. and Cairns, D.2011. ‘Conflict and community in the Iliad’, in Fisher, and van Wees, (eds), pp. 113–46.Google Scholar
Allen, T. W. (ed.) 1912. Homeri Opera V: Hymnos Cyclum Fragmenta Margiten Batrachomyomachian Vitas Continens. Oxford.Google Scholar
Ando, C. and Rüpke, J. (eds) 2015. Public and Private in Ancient Mediterranean Law and Religion. Berlin.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andronikos, M.1968. Totenkult: Archaeologia Homerica, vol. 3 W. Göttingen.Google Scholar
Arend, W.1933. Die typischen Scenen bei Homer. Berlin.Google Scholar
Burkert, W.1984. ‘Sacrificio-sacrilegio: il “trickster” fondatore’, StudStor25(4): 835–45.Google Scholar
Burkert, W.1985. Greek Religion: Archaic and Classical. Oxford.Google Scholar
Burns, D. D.1980. Feeling Good: The New Mood Therapy. New York.Google Scholar
Cairns, D. L.2001. ‘Affronts and quarrels in the Iliad’, in Cairns, (ed.), pp. 203–19.Google Scholar
Cairns, D. L. (ed.) 2001. Oxford Readings in Homer’s Iliad. Oxford.Google Scholar
Cairns, D. L.2011. ‘Ransom and revenge in the Iliad’, in Lambert, (ed.), pp. 87–116.Google Scholar
Cairns, F.1983. ‘Alcaeus’ Hymn to Hermes, P.Oxy2734 Fr. 1 and Horace, Odes 1,10’, QUCC 42: 29–35.Google Scholar
Cancik-Kirschbaum, E., Van Ess, M. and Marzahn, J. (eds) 2011. Babylon: Wissenskultur in Orient und Okzident. Berlin and Boston, MA.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Canevaro, L. G.2014. ‘Genre and authority in Hesiod’s Works and Days’, in Werner, , Sebastiani, and Dourado-Lopes, (eds), pp. 23–48.Google Scholar
Canevaro, L. G.2015. Hesiod’s Works and Days: How to Teach Self-Sufficiency. Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carey, C. and Swift, L. (eds) 2016. Iambus and Elegy: New Approaches. Oxford.Google Scholar
Christopoulos, M.2010. ‘Casus belli: causes of the Trojan War in the Epic Cycle’, Classics@ Volume 6: Karakantza, Efimia D., ed. The Center for Hellenic Studies of Harvard University, edition of 4 February 2011.Google Scholar
Cingano, E. and Milano, L. (eds) 2008. Papers on Ancient Literatures: Greece Rome and the Near East. Proceedings of the Advanced Seminar in the Humanities, Venice International University 2004–2005. Padua.Google Scholar
Clark, M.1997. Out of Line: Homeric Composition beyond the Hexameter. Lanham, MD.Google Scholar
Clarke, H. W.1967. The Art of the Odyssey. Englewood Cliffs, NJ.Google Scholar
Clarke, M.2001. ‘Heart-cutting talk: Homeric κερτομέω and related words’, CQ51(2): 329–38.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clay, J. S.1981–2. ‘Immortal and ageless forever’, CJ66: 112–17.Google Scholar
Clay, J. S.1983. The Wrath of Athena: Gods and Men in the Odyssey. Princeton, NJ.Google Scholar
Clay, J. S.1989. The Politics of Olympus: Form and Meaning in the Major Homeric Hymns. Princeton, NJ.Google Scholar
Clay, J. S.1993. ‘The education of Perses: from “Mega Nepios” to “Dion Genos” and back’, MD31: 23–33.Google Scholar
Clay, J. S.1999. ‘Iliad 24.659 and the semantics of ΚΕΡΤΟΜΕΩ’, CQ49(2): 618–21.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clay, J. S.2007. ‘Art, nature and the gods in the chariot race of Iliad Ψ’, in Paizi-Apostolopoulou, , Rengakos, and Tsagalis, (eds), pp. 69–75.Google Scholar
Clay, J. S.2011. Homer’s Trojan Theater: Space, Vision, and Memory in the Iliad. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cohen, D.1983. Theft in Athenian Law. Munich.Google Scholar
Collins, B. (ed.) 1983. Collected Essays. Oxford.Google Scholar
Collins, D.2004. Master of the Game: Competition and Performance in Greek Poetry. Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Collins, L.1988. Studies in Characterization in the Iliad. Frankfurt.Google Scholar
Conca, F. (ed.) 1999. Ricordando Raffaele Cantarella. Milan.Google Scholar
Crowther, N. B.1992. ‘Second-place finishes and lower in Greek athletics (including the Pentathlon)’, ZPE90: 97–102.Google Scholar
Crudden, M.2001. The Homeric Hymns. Oxford.Google Scholar
Cyrino, M. S.2010. Aphrodite. Gods and Heroes of the Ancient World. London and New York.Google Scholar
Danek, G.1998. Epos und Zitat: Studien zu den Quellen der Odyssee. Vienna.Google Scholar
Dunkle, J. R.1981. ‘Some notes on the Funeral Games: Iliad 23’, Prometheus7: 11–18.Google Scholar
Dunkle, J. R.1987. ‘Nestor, Odysseus and the μῆτις-βίη antithesis: the Funeral Games, Iliad 23’, CW81: 1–17.Google Scholar
Edwards, M. W.1986. ‘The conventions of a Homeric funeral’, in Betts, , Hooker, and Green, (eds), pp. 84–92.Google Scholar
Eidinow, E.2015. ‘Φανερὰν ποιήσει τὴν αὑτοῦ διάνοιαν τοῖς θεοῖς: some ancient Greek theories of (divine and mortal) mind’, in Ando, and Rüpke, (eds), pp. 53–72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eidinow, E., Kindt, J. and Osborne, R. (eds) 2016. Theologies of Ancient Greek Religion. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Elmer, D. F.2013. The Poetics of Consent: Collective Decision Making and the Iliad. Baltimore.Google Scholar
Faulkner, A.2008. The Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite: Introduction, Text, and Commentary. Oxford.Google Scholar
Felson, N.2007. ‘Epinician ideology at the Phaeacian Games: θ 97–265’, in Paizi-Apostopoulou, , Rengakos, and Tsgalis, (eds), pp. 129–43.Google Scholar
Fenik, B.1974. Studies in the Odyssey. Stuttgart.Google Scholar
Fisher, N. and van Wees, H. (eds) 2011. Competition in the Ancient World. Swansea.Google Scholar
Foley, J. M. (ed.) 1981. Oral Traditional Literature: A Festschrift for Albert Bates Lord.Columbus, OH.Google Scholar
Foley, J. M.1999. Homer’s Traditional Art. University Park, PA.Google Scholar
Forbes, P. B. R.1950. ‘Hesiod versus Perses’, CR64(3/4): 82–7.Google Scholar
Ford, A.1992. Homer: The Poetry of the Past. Ithaca, NY.Google Scholar
Fowler, A.2003. ‘The formation of genres in the Renaissance and after’, New Literary History34: 185–200.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fowler, R. L. (ed.) 2004. The Cambridge Companion to Homer. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frazer, J. (ed.) 1921. Apollodorus: The Library, vol. II. Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Fryde, E. B.1996. Greek Manuscripts in the Private Library of the Medici, 1469–1510, vol. II. Aberystwyth.Google Scholar
Gabriel, G.2014. Enūma eliš: Weg zu einer globalen Weltordnung. Tübingen.Google Scholar
Gagarin, M.1983. ‘Antilochus’ strategy: the chariot race in Iliad 23’, CPh78: 35–9.Google Scholar
Garvie, A. F.1994. Homer: Odyssey Books VI–VIII. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Gerber, D. E. (ed.) 1997. A Companion to the Greek Lyric Poets. Leiden.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gerrig, R. J.1989. ‘Suspense in the absence of uncertainty’, Journal of Memory and Language28(6): 633–48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Glotz, G.1904. La Solidarité de la famille dans le droit criminel en Grèce. Paris.Google Scholar
Goedicke, H. and Roberts, J. J. M. (eds) 1975. Unity and Diversity: Essays in the History, Literature, and Religion of the Ancient Near East. Baltimore.Google Scholar
Goldhill, S.1991. The Poet’s Voice: Essays on Poetics and Greek Literature. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Goldhill, S.2010. ‘Idealism in the Odyssey and the meaning of mounos in Odyssey 16’, in Mitsis, and Tsagalis, (eds), pp. 115–28.Google Scholar
González, J. M.2013. The Epic Rhapsode and His Craft: Homeric Performance in a Diachronic Perspective. Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Görgemanns, H.1976. ‘Rhetorik und Poetik im homerischen Hermeshymnus’, in Görgemanns, and Schmidt, (eds), pp. 113–28.Google Scholar
Görgemanns, H. and Schmidt, E. A. (eds) 1976. Studien zum antiken Epos, Franz Dirlmeier und Viktor Poeschel gewidmet. Meisenheim.Google Scholar
Gοttesman, A.2008. ‘The pragmatics of Homeric κερτομία’, CQ58(1): 1–12.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Graziosi, B.2001. ‘Competition in wisdom’, in Budelmann, and Michelakis, (eds), pp. 57–74.Google Scholar
Graziosi, B.2002. Inventing Homer: The Early Reception of Epic. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Graziosi, B.2013. ‘The Poet in the Iliad’, in Hill, and Marmodoro, (eds), pp. 9–38.Google Scholar
Graziosi, B.2016b. ‘Theologies of the family in Homer and Hesiod’, in Eidinow, , Kindt, and Osborne, (eds), pp. 35–61.Google Scholar
Graziosi, B. and Greenwood, E. (eds) 2007. Homer in the Twentieth Century: Between World Literature and the Western Canon. Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Graziosi, B. and Haubold, J.2003. ‘Masculinity: ΗΝΟΡΕΗ and ΑΓΗΝΟΡΙΗ’, JHS123: 60–76.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Graziosi, B. and Haubold, J.2005. Homer: The Resonance of Epic. London.Google Scholar
Graziosi, B. and Haubold, J. (eds) 2010. Homer: Iliad Book VI. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Grethlein, J.2006. Das Geschichtsbild der Ilias: Eine Untersuchung aus phänomenologischer und narratologischer Perspektive. Göttingen.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grethlein, J.2010a. ‘Experientiality and “narrative reference”, with thanks to Thucydides’, H&T49: 315–35.Google Scholar
Grethlein, J.2010b. ‘The narrative reconfiguration of time beyond Ricoeur’, Poetics Today31(2): 313–29.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Griffith, M.1983. ‘Personality in Hesiod’, ClAnt2: 37–65.Google Scholar
Hägg, R. (ed.) 1983. The Greek Renaissance of the Eighth Century B.C.: Tradition and Innovation. Stockholm.Google Scholar
Hägg, T. and Utas, B.2003. The Virgin and Her Lover: Fragments of an Ancient Greek Novel and a Persian Epic Poem. Leiden.Google Scholar
Halliwell, S.2008. Greek Laughter: A Study of Cultural Psychology from Homer to Early Christianity. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hammer, D. C.1997. ‘“Who shall readily obey?”: authority and politics in the Iliad’, Phoenix51(1): 1–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hammer, D. C.2002. The Iliad as Politics: The Performance of Political Thought. Norman, OK.Google Scholar
Hansen, M. H.1976. Apagoge, Endeixis and Ephegesis against Kakourgoi, Atimoi and Pheugontes. Odense.Google Scholar
Haubold, J.2000. Homer’s People: Epic Poetry and Social Formation. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haubold, J.2005. ‘Heracles in the Hesiodic Catalogue of Women’, in Hunter, (ed.), pp. 85–98.Google Scholar
Haubold, J.2010. ‘Shepherd, farmer, poet, sophist: Hesiod on his own reception’, in Boys-Stones, and Haubold, (eds), pp. 11–30.Google Scholar
Haubold, J.2013. Greece and Mesopotamia: Dialogues in Literature. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hauser, E.2016. For The Most Beautiful. London.Google Scholar
Hawkins, T.2008. ‘Out-foxing the wolf-walker: Lycambes as performative rival to Archilochus’, ClAnt27(1): 93–114.Google Scholar
Heldmann, K.1982. Die Niederlage Homers im Dichterwettstreit mit Hesiod. Göttingen.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hesk, J. P.2006. ‘Homeric flyting and how to read it: performance and intratext in Iliad 20.83–109 and 20.178–258’, Ramus35(1): 4–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hesk, J. P.2007. ‘Combative capping in Aristophanic comedy’, CCJ53: 124–60.Google Scholar
Heubeck, A., West, S. and Hainsworth, J. B.1988. A Commentary on Homer’s Odyssey, vol. I: Introduction and Books I–VIII. Oxford.Google Scholar
Higbie, C.1990. Measure and Music: Enjambement and Sentence Structure in the Iliad. Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hilgert, M.2009. ‘Von “Listenwissenschaft” und “epistemischen Dingen”: Konzeptuelle Annäherungen an altorientalische Wissenspraktiken’, Journal for General Philosophy of Science40: 277–309.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hill, J. and Marmodoro, A. (eds) 2013. The Author’s Voice in Classical and Late Antiquity. Oxford.Google Scholar
Hinckley, L. V.1986. ‘Patroclus’ Funeral Games and Homer’s character portrayal’, CJ81(3): 209–21.Google Scholar
Hinds, S.1998. Allusion and Intertext: Dynamics of Appropriation in Roman Poetry. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Hinnells, J. R. (ed.) 1984. The Penguin Dictionary of Religions. London.Google Scholar
Hirschberger, M.2004. Gynaikon Katalogos und Megalai Ehoiai: Ein Kommentar zu den Fragmenten zweier hesiodeischer Epen. Munich and Leipzig.Google Scholar
Hitch, S. S. and Rutherford, I. C. (eds) in press. Animal Sacrifice in the Ancient Greek World. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hoffner, H. A. Jr. 1975. ‘Hittite mythological texts: a survey’, in Goedicke, and Roberts, (eds), pp. 136–45.Google Scholar
Hoffner, H. A. Jr. 1998. Hittite Myths, 2nd edn. Atlanta, GA.Google Scholar
Holoka, J. P.1983. ‘“Looking Darkly” (ΥΠΟΔΡΑ ΙΔΩΝ): reflections on status and decorum in Homer’, TAPhA113: 1–16.Google Scholar
Hooker, J. T.1986. ‘A residual problem in Iliad 24’, CQ36(1): 32–7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hunter, R. (ed.) 2005. The Hesiodic Catalogue of Women: Constructions and Reconstructions. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hunter, R.2009. ‘Hesiod’s style: towards an ancient analysis’, in Montanari, , Rengakos, and Tsagalis, (eds), pp. 253–69.Google Scholar
Hunter, R.2014. Hesiodic Voices: Studies in the Ancient Reception of Hesiod’s Works and Days. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hunter, R., Rengakos, A. and Sistakou, E. (eds) 2014. Hellenistic Studies at a Crossroads: Exploring Texts, Contexts and Metatexts. Berlin and New York.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Irwin, E.1998. ‘Biography, fiction and the Archilochean ainos’, JHS118: 177–83.Google Scholar
Janko, R.1992. The Iliad: A Commentary, vol. IV: Books 13–16. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Jensen, A. K. and Heit, H. (eds) 2014. Nietzsche as a Scholar of Antiquity. London.Google Scholar
Jones, P. V.1989. ‘Iliad 24.649: another solution’, CQ39(1): 247–50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jones, P. V. and Wright, G. M. (eds) 1997. Homer: German Scholarship in Translation. Oxford.Google Scholar
Kahane, A.2005. Diachronic Dialogues: Authority and Continuity in Homer and the Homeric Tradition. Lanham, MD.Google Scholar
Kahn, L.1978. Hermès passe, ou les ambiguïtés de la communication. Paris.Google Scholar
Kämmerer, T. R. and Metzler, K. A.2012. Das babylonische Weltschöpfungsepos Enūma elîš. Münster.Google Scholar
Kantzios, I.2005. The Trajectory of Archaic Greek Trimeters. Leiden.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Karakantza, E.2010. ‘Eating from the tables of others: Sophocles’ Ajax and the Greek Epic Cycle’, Classics@ Volume 6: Karakantza, Efimia, ed. The Center for Hellenic Studies of Harvard University, edition of 21 December 2010.Google Scholar
Katsonopoulou, D., Petropoulos, I. and Katsarou, S. (eds) 2008. The Proceedings of ‘Archilochus and his Age,’ Paroikia, Paros, October 2005. Athens.Google Scholar
Katz, D.2011. ‘Reconstructing Babylon: recycling mythological traditions toward a new theology’, in Cancik-Kirschbaum, , Van Ess, and Marzahn, (eds), pp. 123–34.Google Scholar
Kearns, E.2004. ‘The gods in the Homeric epics’, in Fowler, (ed.), pp. 59–73.Google Scholar
Kelly, A.2007a. ‘How to end an orally-derived epic poem’, TAPhA137: 371–402.Google Scholar
Kelly, A.2007b. A Referential Commentary and Lexicon to Homer, Iliad VIII. Oxford.Google Scholar
Kelly, A.2008a. ‘The Babylonian captivity of Homer: the case of the Dios Apate’, RhM151: 259–304.Google Scholar
Kelly, A.2008b. ‘Performance and rivalry: Homer, Odysseus, and Hesiod’, in Revermann, and Wilson, (eds), pp. 177–203.Google Scholar
Kelly, S.1974. Homeric Correption and the Metrical Distinctions between Speeches and Narrative, PhD diss. Harvard.Google Scholar
Kilb, H.1973. Strukturen epischen Gestaltens: im 7. u. 23. Gesang der Odyssee. Munich.Google Scholar
Kirk, G. S.1966. ‘Studies in some technical aspects of Homeric style’, YClS20: 73–152.Google Scholar
Kirk, G. S.1990. The Iliad: A Commentary, vol. II: Books 5–8. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kitchell, K. F.1998. ‘“But the mare I will not give up”: the Games in Iliad 23’, CB74(2): 159–71.Google Scholar
Kivilo, M.2000. ‘Certamen’, Studia Humaniora Tartuensia1: 1–5.Google Scholar
Kivilo, M.2010. Early Greek Poets’ Lives: The Shaping of the Tradition. Leiden.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
König, J.2011. ‘Competitiveness and anti-competitiveness in Philostratus’ Lives of the Sophists’, in Fisher, and van Wees, (eds), pp. 279–300.Google Scholar
Koning, H. H.2010. Hesiod: The Other Poet. Ancient Reception of a Cultural Icon. Leiden.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kopff, E. C.1983. ‘The structure of the Amazonia (Aethiopis)’, in Hägg, (ed.), pp. 57–62.Google Scholar
Kullmann, W.1960. Die Quellen der Ilias (troischer Sagenkreis). Wiesbaden.Google Scholar
Kyle, D. G.2007. Sport and Spectacle in the Ancient World. Malden, MA.Google Scholar
Lambert, S. D. (ed.) 2011. Sociable Man: Essays on Ancient Greek Social Behaviour in Honour of Nick Fisher. Swansea.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lambert, W. G.2013. Babylonian Creation Myths. Winona Lake, IN.Google Scholar
Lang, M. L.1989. ‘Unreal conditions in Homeric narrative’, GRBS30: 5–26.Google Scholar
Larson, J.1995. ‘The Corycian nymphs and the bee maidens of the Homeric Hymn to Hermes’, GRBS36: 341–57.Google Scholar
Laser, S.1987. Sport und Spiel: Archaeologia Homerica, vol. III T. Göttingen.Google Scholar
Latacz, J.2014. ‘On Nietzsche’s philological beginnings’, in Jensen, and Heit, (eds), pp. 3–26.Google Scholar
Lateiner, D.1995. Sardonic Smile: Nonverbal Behaviour in Homeric Epic. Ann Arbor, MI.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Latimer, J. F.1930. ‘Hesiod versus Perses’, TAPhA61: 70–9.Google Scholar
Lattimore, R. (transl.) 1967. The Odyssey of Homer. New York.Google Scholar
Lavigne, D. E.2008a. ‘Bad “Kharma”: a “fragment” of the Iliad and iambic laughter’, Aevum(ant) N.S. 8: 115–38.Google Scholar
Lavigne, D. E.2008b. ‘The persona of Archilochos and iambic performance’, in Katsonopoulou, , Petropoulos, and Katsarou, (eds), pp. 91–113.Google Scholar
Lavigne, D. E.2016. ‘Archilochus and Homer in the rhapsodic context’, in Carey, and Swift, (eds), pp. 74–98.Google Scholar
Lefkowitz, M. R.2012. The Lives of the Greek Poets, 2nd edn. London.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lehrs, K.1882. De Aristarchi Studiis Homericis, 3rd edn. Leipzig.Google Scholar
Lentini, G.2013. ‘The pragmatics of verbal abuse in Homer’, Classics@ Volume 11: Tell, Håkan, ed. The Center for Hellenic Studies of Harvard University.Google Scholar
Levine, D. B.1982. ‘Odyssey 18: Iros as paradigm for the suitors’, CJ77(3): 200–4.Google Scholar
Lichtheim, M.1996. ‘Didactic literature’, in Loprieno, (ed.), pp. 243–62.Google Scholar
Lloyd, M.2004. ‘The politeness of Achilles: off-record conversation strategies in Homer and the meaning of κερτομία’, JHS124: 75–89.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lohmann, D.1992. ‘Homer als Erzähler: die Athla im 23. Buch der Ilias’, Gymnasium99: 289–319.Google Scholar
Longley, M.1995. The Ghost Orchid. London.Google Scholar
López-Ruiz, C.2010. When the Gods Were Born: Greek Cosmogonies and the Near East. Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
López-Ruiz, C. (ed.) 2013. Gods, Heroes, and Monsters: A Sourcebook of Greek, Roman, and Near Eastern Myths in Translation, ed. López-Ruiz, C.. New York and Oxford.Google Scholar
Loprieno, A. (ed.) 1996. Ancient Egyptian Literature: History and Forms. Leiden.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Loraux, N.2002. The Divided City: On Memory and Forgetting in Ancient Athens (transl. C. Pache and J. Fort). New York.Google Scholar
Lord, A. B.1981. ‘Memory, fixity, and genre in oral traditional poetries’, in Foley, (ed.), pp. 451–61.Google Scholar
Louden, B.1993. ‘Pivotal contrafactuals in Homeric epic’, ClAnt12: 181–98.Google Scholar
Lowe, N. J.2000. The Classical Plot and the Invention of Western Narrative. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Machinist, P.2005. ‘Order and disorder: some Mesopotamian reflections’, in Shaked, (ed.), pp. 31–61.Google Scholar
Mackie, H. S.1996. Talking Trojan: Speech and Community in the Iliad. Lanham, MD.Google Scholar
Macleod, C.1982. Homer: Iliad Book XXIV. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Macleod, C.1983. ‘Homer on poetry and the poetry of Homer’, in Collins, (ed.), pp. 1–15.Google Scholar
Mahaffy, J. P.1891. The Flinders Petrie Papyri with Transcriptions, Commentaries and Index. Dublin.Google Scholar
Marks, J.2002. ‘The junction between the Cypria and the Iliad’, Phoenix56: 1–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marks, J.2008. Zeus in the Odyssey. Washington and London.Google Scholar
Marsilio, M.1992. ‘Dependence and self-sufficiency in Hesiod’s Works and Days’, PhD diss. Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
Marsilio, M.2000. Farming and Poetry in Hesiod’s Works and Days. Lanham, Md.Google Scholar
Martin, R. P.1984. ‘Hesiod, Odysseus, and the instruction of princes’, TAPhA114: 29–48.Google Scholar
Martin, R. P.1989. The Language of Heroes: Speech and Performance in the Iliad. Ithaca, NY.Google Scholar
Martin, R. P.2004. ‘Hesiod and the didactic double’, Synthesis11: 31–53.Google Scholar
Michalowski, P.1990. ‘Presence at the creation’, in Abusch, et al. (eds), pp. 381–96.Google Scholar
Miralles, C. and Portulas, J.1983. Archilochus and the Iambic Poetry. Rome.Google Scholar
Mitsis, P. and Tsagalis, C. (eds) 2010. Allusion, Authority and Truth: Critical Perspectives on Greek Poetic and Rhetorical Praxis. Berlin.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Montanari, F., Rengakos, A. and Tsagalis, C. (eds) 2009. Brill’s Companion to Hesiod. Leiden.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Montanari, F., Rengakos, A. and Tsagalis, C. (eds) 2012. Homeric Contexts: Neoanalysis and the Interpretation of Oral Poetry. Berlin and New York.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morris, I.2014. War! What is it Good For? Conflict and the Progress of Civilization from Primates to Robots. London.Google Scholar
Morris, I. and Powell, B. (eds) 1997. A New Companion to Homer. Leiden.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morrison, J. V.1992a. ‘Alternatives to the epic tradition: Homer’s challenges in the Iliad’, TAPhA122: 61–71.Google Scholar
Morrison, J. V.1992b. Homeric Misdirection: False Predictions in the Iliad. Ann Arbor, MI.Google Scholar
Morson, G. S.1994. Narrative and Freedom: The Shadows of Time. New Haven, CN and London.Google Scholar
Most, G. W.1989. ‘The structure and function of Odysseus’ Apologoi’, TAPhA119: 15–30.Google Scholar
Most, G. W. (ed.) 2006. Hesiod: Theogony. Works and Days. Testimonia. Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Murnaghan, S.1997. ‘Equal honor and future glory: the plan of Zeus in the Iliad’, in Roberts, , Dunn, and Fowler, (eds), pp. 23–42.Google Scholar
Myerston, J.2013. ‘Divine names in the Derveni papyrus and Mesopotamian hermeneutics’, Trends in Classics5: 74–110.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nagler, M.1988. ‘Toward a semantics of ancient conflict: Eris in the Iliad’, CW82: 81–90.Google Scholar
Nagy, G.1979. The Best of the Achaeans: Concepts of the Hero in Archaic Greek Poetry. Baltimore, MD.Google Scholar
Nagy, G.1990. Pindar’s Homer: The Lyric Possession of an Epic Past. Baltimore, MD.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nagy, G.1996. Homeric Questions. Austin, TX.Google Scholar
Nagy, G.1999a. The Best of the Achaeans: Concepts of the Hero in Archaic Greek Poetry, revised edition. Baltimore, MD.Google Scholar
Nagy, G.1999b. ‘Epic as genre’, in Beissinger, , Tylus, and Wofford, (eds), pp. 21–32.Google Scholar
Nagy, G.2003. Homeric Responses. Austin, TX.Google Scholar
Nagy, G.2010. Homer the Preclassic. Berkeley and Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Nesselrath, H.-G.1992. Ungeschehenes Geschehen: Beinahe-Episoden im griechischen und römischen Epos von Homer bis zur Spätantike. Stuttgart.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nietzsche, F.1870. ‘Der Florentinische Tractat über Homer und Hesiod, ihr Geschlecht und ihren Wettkampf, 1–2’, RhM25: 528–40.Google Scholar
Nietzsche, F.1871. ‘Certamen quod dicitur Homeri et Hesiodi: e codice florentino post Henricum Stephanum denuo edidit Fridericus Nietzsche Numburgensis’, Acta societatis philologae Lipsiensis1: 1–23.Google Scholar
Oakley, J. H. and Sinos, R. H.1993. The Wedding in Ancient Athens. Madison, WI.Google Scholar
Ogden, D.1996. Greek Bastardy in the Classical and Hellenistic Periods. Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Olson, S. D.2012. The Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite and Related Texts: Text, Translation and Commentary. Berlin and Boston, MA.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ormand, K.2014. The Hesiodic Catalogue of Women and Archaic Greece. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Osborne, R.2001. ‘The use of abuse: Semonides 7’, PCPhS47: 47–64.Google Scholar
Osborne, R.2004. ‘Homer’s society’, in Fowler, (ed.), pp. 206–19.Google Scholar
O’Sullivan, N.1992. Alcidamas, Aristophanes and the Beginnings of Greek Stylistic Theory. Stuttgart.Google Scholar
Paizi-Apostopoulou, M., Rengakos, A. and Tsagalis, C. (eds) 2007. Contests and Rewards in the Homeric Epics: Proceedings of the 10th International Symposium on the Odyssey. Ithaca, Greece.Google Scholar
Penglase, C.1994. Greek Myths and Mesopotamia: Parallels and Influence in the Homeric Hymns and Hesiod. London and New York.Google Scholar
Peschel, I.1987. Die Hetäre bei Symposium und Komos in der attisch rotfigurigen Malerei des 6.–4. Jhs. v. Chr. Frankfurt.Google Scholar
Petrovic, A. and Petrovic, I.2016. Inner Purity and Pollution in Greek Religion. Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Phillips, D. and Pritchard, D. J. (eds) 2003. Sport and Festival in the Ancient World. Swansea.Google Scholar
Pirenne-Delforge, V.1994. L’Aphrodite grecque: contribution à l’étude de ses cultes et de sa personnalité dans le panthéon archaïque et classique. Liège.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Postlethwaite, N.1988. ‘Thersites in the Iliad’, G&R35: 123–36.Google Scholar
Postlethwaite, N.1995. ‘Agamemnon best of spearmen’, Phoenix49(2): 95–103.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Prince, G.2003. A Dictionary of Narratology. Lincoln, NE.Google Scholar
Pritchard, J. B. (ed.) 2011. The Ancient Near East: An Anthology of Texts and Pictures. Princeton, NJ.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pucci, P.1987. Odysseus Polytropos: Intertexual Readings in the Odyssey and the Illiad. Ithaca, NY.Google Scholar
Purves, A.2011. ‘Homer and the art of overtaking’, AJPh132: 523–51.Google Scholar
Ready, J.2011. Character, Narrator, and Simile in the Iliad. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Redfield, J. M.1975. Nature and Culture in the Iliad: The Tragedy of Hector. Chicago, IL.Google Scholar
Reece, S.1993. The Stranger’s Welcome: Oral Theory and the Aesthetics of the Homeric Hospitality Scene. Ann Arbor, MI.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reinhardt, K.1997. ‘The Judgment of Paris’, in Jones, and Wright, (eds), pp. 170–91.Google Scholar
Revermann, M. and Wilson, P. (eds) 2009. Performance, Reception, Iconography: Studies in Honour of Oliver Taplin. Oxford.Google Scholar
Rhodes, P. J.1981. A Commentary on the Aristotelian Athenaion Politeia. Oxford.Google Scholar
Richardson, N. J.1993. The Iliad: A Commentary, vol. VI: Books 21–24. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Richardson, N. J.2007. ‘The Games in Book θ of the Odyssey’, in Paizi-Apostopoulou, , Rengakos, and Tsagalis, (eds), pp. 121–7.Google Scholar
Richter, S. L.2002. The Deuteronomistic History and the Name Theology: lešakkēn šemô šām in the Bible and the Ancient Near East. Berlin and New York.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rotstein, A.2010. The Idea of Iambos. Oxford.Google Scholar
Rüter, K.1969. Odysseeinterpretationen: Untersuchungen zum ersten Buch und zur Phaiakis. Göttingen.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Russo, J.1992. ‘Books XVII–XX’, in Russo, , Fernandez-Galiano, and Heubeck, (eds), pp. 3–127.Google Scholar
Russo, J., Fernandez-Galiano, M. and Heubeck, A. (eds). 1992. A Commentary on Homer’s Odyssey, vol. III: Books XVII–XXIV. Oxford.Google Scholar
Rutherford, I.2009. ‘Hesiod and the literary traditions of the Near East’, in Montanari, , Rengakos, and Tsagalis, (eds), pp. 9–35.Google Scholar
Rutherford, R. B.1982. ‘From the Iliad to the Odyssey’, JHS102: 145–60.Google Scholar
Rutherford, R. B.1985. ‘At home and abroad: aspects of the structure of the Odyssey’, PCPhS31: 133–50.Google Scholar
Sakellariou, M. B.1958. La migration grecque en Ionie. Athens.Google Scholar
Scheinberg, S.1979. ‘The bee maidens of the Homeric Hymn to Hermes’, HSPh83: 1–28.Google Scholar
Schmitz, W.2004. ‘Griechische und nahöstliche Spruchweisheit: Die “erga kai hemerai” Hesiods und nahöstliche Weisheitsliteratur’, in Rollinger, and Ulf, (eds), pp. 311–33.Google Scholar
Scodel, R.1998. ‘Bardic performance and oral tradition in Homer’, AJPh119(2): 171–94.Google Scholar
Scodel, R.2008a. Epic Facework: Self-Presentation and Social Interaction in Homer. Swansea.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scodel, R.2008b. ‘Zielinski’s law reconsidered’, TAPhA138(1): 107–25.Google Scholar
Scodel, R.2009. Listening to Homer: Tradition, Narrative, and Audience, 2nd edn.Ann Arbor, MI.Google Scholar
Scott, W. C.1997. ‘The etiquette of games in Iliad 23’, GRBS38: 213–27.Google Scholar
Seaford, R.1994. Reciprocity and Ritual: Homer and Tragedy in the Developing City-State. Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sedley, D.2010. ‘Hesiod’s Theogony and Plato’s Timaeus’, in Boys-Stones, and Haubold, (eds), pp. 246–58.Google Scholar
Segal, C. P.1962. ‘The Phaeacians and the symbolism of Odysseus’ return’, Arion1(4): 17–64.Google Scholar
Segal, C. P.1983. ‘Kleos and its ironies in the Odyssey’, AC52: 22–47.Google Scholar
Seri, A.2006. ‘The fifty names of Marduk in Enūma eliš’, JAOS126: 507–19.Google Scholar
Seri, A.2012. ‘The role of creation in Enūma eliš’, Journal of Ancient Near Eastern Religions12: 4–29.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seri, A.2014. ‘Borrowings to create anew: intertextuality in the Babylonian Poem of Creation (Enūma eliš)’, JAOS134: 89–106.Google Scholar
Shaked, S. (ed.) 2005. Genesis and Regeneration: Essays on Conceptions of Origins. Jerusalem.Google Scholar
Sider, D.2014. ‘Didactic poetry: the Hellenistic invention of a pre-existing genre’, in Hunter, , Rengakos, and Sistakou, (eds), pp. 13–29.Google Scholar
Simon, E.1998. Die Götter der Griechen, 2nd edn. Munich.Google Scholar
Solmsen, F.1968. ‘Zur Theologie im grossen Aphrodite-Hymnus’, in Kleine Schriften, vol. I, Hildesheim: 55–67.Google Scholar
Sowa, C. A.1984. Traditional Themes and the Homeric Hymns. Chicago, IL.Google Scholar
Spariosu, M.1991. The God of Many Names: Play, Poetry and Power in Hellenic Thought from Homer to Aristotle. Durham, NC and London.Google Scholar
Stamatopoulou, Z.2016. ‘The quarrel with Perses and Hesiod’s biographical tradition’, GRBS56: 1–17.Google Scholar
Stanley, K.1993. The Shield of Homer: Narrative Structure in the Iliad. Princeton, NJ.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Steiner, D.2009. ‘Ritual, poetic mockery and the Odysseus–Iros encounter’, ClAnt28(1): 71–100.Google Scholar
Steiner, D. (ed.) 2010. Homer: Odyssey Books XVII and XVIII. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Steinrück, M.2008. The Suitors in the Odyssey: The Clash Between Homer and Archilochus. Bern.Google Scholar
Sternberg, M.1992. ‘Telling in time (II): chronology, teleology, narrativity’, Poetics Today13(3): 463–541.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Suter, A.1993. ‘Paris and Dionysos: iambos in the Iliad’, Arethusa26: 1–18.Google Scholar
Taplin, O.1992. Homeric Soundings: The Shaping of the Iliad. Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thalmann, W. G.1984. Conventions of Form and Thought in Early Greek Epic Poetry. Baltimore, MD and London.Google Scholar
Thalmann, W. G.1988. ‘Comedy, scapegoats, and heroic ideology in the Iliad’, TAPhA118: 1–28.Google Scholar
Thalmann, W. G.1998. The Swineherd and the Bow: Representations of Class in the Odyssey. Ithaca, NY.Google Scholar
Thomas, O. R. H.2010. ‘Ancient Greek awareness of child language acquisition’, Glotta86: 185–223.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thomas, O. R. H. in press a. ‘Hermetically unsealed: lyric genres in the Homeric Hymn to Hermes’, in Budelmann and Phillips (eds), in press. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Thomas, O. R. H. in press b. ‘Sacrifice and the Homeric Hymn to Hermes 112–41’, in Hitch and Rutherford (eds), in press. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Tötösy de Zepetnek, S.1998. Comparative Literature: Theory, Method, Application. Amsterdam and Atlanta, GA.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Trypanis, C. A.1963. ‘Brothers fighting together in the Iliad’, RhM106(4): 289–97.Google Scholar
Tufnell, P.1999. Phil Tufnell: What Now?London.Google Scholar
van der Valk, M. (ed.) 1971. Eustathii Archiepiscopi Thessalonicensis Commentarii ad Homeri Iliadem Pertinentes, vol. I. Leiden.Google Scholar
van Dongen, E.2011. ‘The “kingship in heaven”-theme of the Hesiodic Theogony: origin, function, composition’, GRBS51: 180–201.Google Scholar
van Thiel, H. (ed.) 1996. Homeri Ilias. Hildesheim.Google Scholar
van Wees, H.1992. Status Warriors: War, Violence and Society in Homer and History. Amsterdam.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vergados, A.2013. The Homeric Hymn to Hermes: Introduction, Text and Commentary. Berlin and Boston, MA.Google Scholar
Verity, A. (transl.) 2011. Homer: The Iliad. Oxford.Google Scholar
Verity, A. (transl.) 2016. The Odyssey. Oxford.Google Scholar
von der Mühll, P. (ed.) 1962. Homeri Odyssea. Basel.Google Scholar
von Soden, W.1936. ‘Leistung und Grenze sumerischer und babylonischer Wissenschaft’, Die Welt als Geschichte: Zeitschrift für universalgeschichtliche Forschung2: 411–64 and 509–57.Google Scholar
von Wilamowitz-Moellendorff, U.1928. Hesiodos’ Erga. Berlin.Google Scholar
von Wolzogen, C.1885. Schillers Leben: Verfasst aus Erinnerungen der Familie, seinen eigenen Briefen und den Nachrichten seines Freundes Körner. Stuttgart and Tübingen.Google Scholar
Walcot, P.1962. ‘Hesiod and the instructions of Onchsheshonqy’, JNES21(3): 215–19.Google Scholar
Walcot, P.1966. Hesiod and the Near East. Cardiff.Google Scholar
Walcot, P.1977. ‘The judgement of Paris’, G&R24(1): 31–9.Google Scholar
Wehr, O.2006. ‘The judgement of Paris in Homer: re-examining Iliad 8,548–552 and 24,27–30’, JAC21: 41–60.Google Scholar
Weil, S.2003. The Iliad or the Poem of Force (ed. and transl. J P. Holoka). New York.Google Scholar
Weiler, I.1975. ‘ΑΙΕΝ ΑΡΙΣΤΕΥΕΙΝ: Ideologiekritische Bemerkungen zu einem vielzitierten Homerwort’, Stadion1: 199–227.Google Scholar
Weiler, I.1981. Der Sport bei den Völkern der alten Welt. Darmstadt.Google Scholar
Wenders, W. and Handke, P.1998. Der Himmel über Berlin: Ein Filmbuch von Wim Wenders und Peter Handke. Berlin.Google Scholar
Werner, C., Sebastiani, B. B. and Dourado-Lopes, A. (eds) 2014. Gêneros poéticos na Grécia antiga: confluências e fronteiras. São Paulo.Google Scholar
West, M. L. (ed.) 1966. Hesiod: Theogony. Edited with Prolegomena and Commentary by M. L. West. Oxford.Google Scholar
West, M. L.1967. ‘The contest of Homer and Hesiod’, CQ17(2): 433–50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
West, M. L. (ed.) 1978. Hesiod: Works and Days. Edited with Prolegomena and Commentary by M. L. West. Oxford.Google Scholar
Willcock, M.1973. ‘The Funeral Games of Patroclus’, BICS20: 1–11.Google Scholar
Willis, W. H.1941. ‘Athletic contests in the epic’, TAPhA72: 392–417.Google Scholar
Wilson, D. F.2002. Ransom, Revenge, and Heroic Identity in the Iliad. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Winnifrith, T.1992. ‘Funeral games in Homer and Virgil’, in Winnifrith, and Barrett, (eds), pp. 1–13.Google Scholar
Winnifrith, T. and Barrett, C. (eds) 1992. Leisure in Art and Literature. London.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Winter, J. G.1925. ‘A new fragment on the life of Homer’, TAPhA56: 120–9.Google Scholar
Wisnom, L. S.2014. Intertextuality in Babylonian Narrative Poetry: Anzû, Enūma Elish, and Erra and Ishum. PhD diss. University of Oxford.Google Scholar
Woodward, R. D.2007. ‘Hesiod and Greek myth’, in Woodward, (ed.), pp. 83–165.Google Scholar
Woodward, R. D. (ed.) 2007. The Cambridge Companion to Greek Mythology. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Worman, N.2002. The Cast of Character: Style in Greek Literature. Austin, TX.Google Scholar