Iliad 10 and the Poetics of Ambush: A Multitext Edition with Essays and Commentary

  Dué, Casey, and Mary Ebbott. 2010. Iliad 10 and the Poetics of Ambush: A Multitext Edition with Essays and Commentary. Hellenic Studies Series 39. Washington, DC: Center for Hellenic Studies. http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:hul.ebook:CHS_Due_Ebbott.Iliad_10_and_the_Poetics_of_Ambush.2010.


Bibliography

Note: In the notes and essays of this volume we have used the abbreviation MHV (= The Making of Homeric Verse) for Adam Parry’s 1971 edition of the collected works of Milman Parry.

Ahlberg-Cornell, G. 1992. Myth and Epos in Early Greek Art: Representation and Interpretation. Jonsered.

Aitken, E. B., and J. K. B. Maclean, eds. 2001. Flavius Philostratus: Heroikos. Atlanta.

Alden, M. 2000. Homer Beside Himself. Oxford.

———. 2005. “Lions in Paradise: Lion Similes in the Iliad and the Lion Cubs of Il. 18.318–22.” Classical Quarterly 55:335–342.

Allan, W. 2005. “Arms and the Man: Euphorbus, Hector, and the Death of Patroclus.” Classical Quarterly 55:1–16.

Allen, T. W. 1924. Homer: The Origins and the Transmission. Oxford.

———, ed. 1931. Homeri Ilias. Oxford.

Anderson, J. K. 1975. “Greek Chariot-Borne and Mounted Infantry.” American Journal of Archaeology 79:175–187.

Arend, W. 1933. Die typischen Scenen bei Homer. Berlin.

Armstrong, J. 1958. “The Arming Motif in the Iliad.” American Journal of Philology 79:337–354.

Arnim, J. von, ed. 1903. Stoicorum veterum fragmenta II. Leipzig.

Austin, N. 1975. Archery at the Dark of the Moon: Poetic Problems in Homer’s Odyssey. Berkeley.

Bader, F. 1980. “Rhapsodies homériques et irlandaises.” Recherches sur les religions de l’antiquité classique, ed. R. Bloch, 9–83. Paris.

Bakker, E. 2005. Pointing at the Past: From Formula to Performance in Homeric Poetics. Cambridge, MA.

Bakker, E., and A. Kahane, eds. 1997. Written Voices, Spoken Signs: Tradition, Performance, and the Epic Text. Hellenic Studies 12. Washington, DC.

Barrett, J. 2002. Staged Narrative: Poetics and the Messenger in Greek Tragedy. Berkeley.

Basson, A., and W. Dominik, eds. 2003. Literature, Art, History: Studies on Classical Antiquity and Tradition in Honor of W. J. Henderson. Frankfurt am Main.

Beck, D. 2005. Homeric Conversation. Hellenic Studies 14. Washington, DC.

———. 2008. Review of R. Friedrich, Formular Economy in Homer: The Poetics of the Breaches. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag, 2007. Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2008.10.27. http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2008/2008-10-27.html.

Beissinger, M., J. Tylus, and S. Wofford, eds. 1999. Epic Traditions in the Contemporary World: The Poetics of Community. Berkeley.

Benardete, S. 1968. “The Aristeia of Diomedes and the Plot of the Iliad.” Agōn 2:10–38.

Bentley, R. 1713. Remarks upon a Late Discourse of Free-thinking, in a Letter to F.H.D.D. by Phileleutherus Lipsiensis. London.

Bernabé, A., ed. 1987. Poetae Epici Graeci: Testimonia et Fragmenta I. Leipzig.

Bird, G. 2009. “Critical Signs—Drawing Attention to ‘Special’ Lines of Homer’s Iliad in the Manuscript Venetus A.” In Dué 2009a:89–115.

Björck, G. 1957. “The Authenticity of Rhesus.” Eranos 55:7–17.

Black, M. 1962. Models and Metaphors: Studies in Language and Philosophy. Ithaca, NY.

Blackwell, C. and C. Dué. 2009. “Homer and History in the Venetus A.” In Dué 2009a:1–18.

Block, E. 1985. “Clothing Makes the Man: A Pattern in the Odyssey.” Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 115:1–11.

Boardman, J., and C. F. Vafopoulou-Richardson. 1986. “Diomedes.” Lexicon Iconographicum Mythologiae Classicae III, ed. P. Müller et al., 396–409.

Bond, R. 1996. “Homeric Echoes in Rhesus.” American Journal of Philology 117:255–273.

Bonifazi, A. 2009. “Inquiring into Nostos and its Cognates.” American Journal of Philology 130:481–510.

Boyd, T. 1995. “A Poet on the Achaean Wall.” Oral Tradition 10:181–206.

Bradley, E. 1967. “Hector and the Simile of the Snowy Mountain.” Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 98:37–41.

Bremer, J. M. 1976. “Why Messenger-Speeches?” In Bremer, Radt, and Ruijgh 1976:29–48.

Bremer, J. M., S. L. Radt, and C. J. Ruijgh, eds. 1976. Miscellanea Tragica in honorem J.C. Kamerbeek. Amsterdam.

Brooks, P. 1981. “Introduction.” In Todorov 1981:vii–xix.

Bryce, T. R. 1990–1991. “Lycian Apollo and the Authorship of the Rhesus.” Classical Journal 86:144–149.

Buchan, M. 2004. The Limits of Heroism: Homer and the Ethics of Reading. Ann Arbor.

Buck, C. 1955. The Greek Dialects: Grammar, Selected Inscriptions, Glossary. Chicago.

Burgess, J. 1995. “Achilles’ Heel: The Death of Achilles in Ancient Myth.” Classical Antiquity 14:217–243.

———. 1997. “Beyond Neo-analysis: Problems with the Vengeance Theory.” American Journal of Philology 118:1–19.

———. 2001. The Tradition of the Trojan War in Homer and the Epic Cycle. Baltimore.

———. 2005. “The Death of Achilles by Rhapsodes.” In Rabel 2005:119–134.

———. 2006. “Neoanalysis, Orality, and Intertextuality: An Examination of Homeric Motif Transference.” Oral Tradition 21:148–189.

Burian, P., ed. 1985. Directions in Euripidean Criticism. Durham, NC.

Burkert, W. 1985. Greek Religion. Oxford.

Burnett, A. P. 1985. “Rhesus: Are Smiles Allowed?” In Burian 1985:13–51.

Cantieni, R. 1942. Die Nestorerzählung im XI. Gesang der Ilias (V. 670–762). Zurich.

Carlisle, M., and O. Levaniouk, eds. 1999. Nine Essays on Homer. Lanham, MD.

Carter, J. B., and S. P. Morris, eds. 1995. The Ages of Homer: A Tribute to Emily Townsend Vermeule. Austin.

Casali, S. 2004. “Nisus and Euryalus: Exploiting the Contradictions in Virgil’s Doloneia.” Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 102:319–354.

Chantraine, P. 1937. “Remarques critiques et grammaticales sur le chant K de l’Iliade.” Mélanges offerts à A. M. Desrousseaux par ses amis et ses élèves, en l’honneur de sa cinquantième année d’enseignement supérieur (1887–1937) 59–68. Paris.

———. 1968/1999. Dictionnaire étymologique de la langue grecque: Histoire des mots. New ed. with suppl. Paris.

———. 1988. Grammaire Homérique. Tome I: Phonétique et Morphologie. 6th ed. Paris.

———. 1997. Grammaire Homérique. Tome II: Syntaxe. 6th ed. Paris.

Clark, M. 1994. “Enjambment and Binding in Homeric Hexameter.” Phoenix 48:95–114.

Clay, D. 1988. “The Archaeology of the Temple to Juno in Carthage (Aen. 1.446–93).” Classical Philology 83:195–205.

Clay, J. 2007. “Homer’s Trojan Theater.” Transactions of the American Philological Association 137:233–252.

Coffee, N. 2009. The Commerce of War: Exchange and Social Order in Latin Epic. Chicago.

Coffey, M. 1957. “The Function of the Homeric Simile.” American Journal of Philology 78:113–132.

Colakis, M. 1986. “The Laughter of the Suitors in Odyssey 20.” Classical World 79:137–141.

Cook, E. 2003. “Agamemnon’s Test of the Army in Iliad Book 2 and the Function of Homeric Akhos.” American Journal of Philology 124:165–198.

–––. 2009a. “On the ‘Importance’ of Iliad Book 8.” Classical Philology 104:133–161.

–––. 2009b. Review of Kelly 2007. Classical Review 59:14–16.

Crissy, K. 1997. “Herakles, Odysseus, and the Bow: Odyssey 21.11–41.” Classical Journal 93:41–53.

Crotty, K. 1994. The Poetics of Supplication: Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey. Ithaca, NY.

Cunliffe, R. 1963. A Lexicon of the Homeric Dialect. Norman, OK.

D’Agostino, B. 1987. “Achille et Troïlos: images, textes et assonances.” In Detienne, Loraux, Mossé, and Vidal-Naquet 1987:145–154.

Danek, G. 1988. Studien zur Dolonie. Vienna.

———. 1998. Epos und Zitat: Studien zu den Quellen der Odyssee. Wiener Studien 22. Vienna.

———. 2002. “Traditional Referentiality and Homeric Intertextuality.” In Montanari and Ascheri 2002:3–19.

Davidson, O. M. 1979. “Dolon and Rhesus in the Iliad.” Quaderni Urbinati di Cultura Classica 30:61–66.

Davies, M., ed. 1988. Epicorum Graecorum Fragmenta. Göttingen.

———. 1989. The Epic Cycle. Bristol.

———. 2005. “Dolon and Rhesus.” Prometheus 31:29–34.

Davison, J. A. 1958. “Notes on the Panathenaea.” Journal of Hellenic Studies 78:23–42.

De Jong, I. J. F. 1991. Narrative in Drama: The Art of the Euripidean Messenger-Speech. Leiden.

Descœudres , J.-P., ed. 1990. Eumousia: Ceramic and Iconographic Studies in Honour of Alexander Cambitoglou. Sydney.

Detienne, M., and J.-P. Vernant. 1974/1978. Les ruses d’intelligence: la métis des Grecs. Paris. Trans. as Cunning Intelligence in Greek Culture and Society (trans. by J. Lloyd, 1978). Chicago.

Detienne, M., N. Loraux, C. Mossé, and P. Vidal-Naquet, eds. 1987. Poikilia: Études offertes à Jean-Pierre Vernant. Paris.

Devereux, G. 1976. Dreams in Greek Tragedy: An Ethno-Psycho-Analytical Study. Berkeley.

Dickinson, O. 1986. “Homer, Poet of the Dark Age.” Greece and Rome 33:20–37.

Diggle, J., ed. 1994. Euripidis Fabulae III. Oxford.

Dihle, A. 1970. Homer-Probleme. Opladen.

Dik, H. and F. Létoublon, eds. 1998. Hommage à Milman Parry: Actes du Colloque Milman Parry. Amsterdam.

Diller, H. 1948. “Προθέλυμνος.” Philologus 97:361–363.

Duckworth, G. 1967. “The Significance of Nisus and Euryalus for Aeneid IX–XII.” American Journal of Philology 88:129–150.

Dué, C. 2001a. “Achilles’ Golden Amphora in Aeschines’ Against Timarchus and the Afterlife of Oral Tradition.” Classical Philology 96:33–47.

———. 2001b. “Sunt Aliquid Manes: Homer, Plato, and Alexandrian Allusion in Propertius 4.7.” Classical Journal 96:401–413.

———. 2002. Homeric Variations on a Lament by Briseis. Lanham, MD.

———. 2005. “Homer’s Post-Classical Legacy.” In Foley 2005a:397–414.

———. 2006a. The Captive Woman’s Lament in Greek Tragedy. Austin.

———. 2006b. “The Invention of Ossian.” Classics@ 3. http://chs.harvard.edu/publications.

———. 2009a, ed. Recapturing a Homeric Legacy: Images and Insights from the Venetus A Manuscript of the Iliad. Cambridge, MA.

———. 2009b. “Epea Pteroenta: How We Came to Have Our Iliad.” In Dué 2009a:19–30.

———. Forthcoming (2010). “Agamemnon’s Densely-packed Sorrow in Iliad 10: A Hypertextual Reading of a Homeric Simile.” In Homeric Hypertextuality, ed. C. Tsagalis. Special issue, Trends in Classics 2.2.

Dué, C., and M. Ebbott. 2009. “Digital Criticism: Editorial Standards for the Homer Multitext.” Digital Humanities Quarterly 3.1. http://www.digitalhumanities.org/dhq/vol/003/1/000029.html.

Ebbott, M. 1999. “The Wrath of Helen: Self-Blame and Nemesis in the Iliad.” In Carlisle and Levaniouk 1999:3–20.

———. 2003. Imagining Illegitimacy in Classical Greek Literature. Lanham, MD.

Edgeworth, R. 1985. “Ajax and Teucer in the Iliad.” Rivista di filologia e di instruzione classica 113:27–31.

Edgeworth, R., and C. Mayrhofer. 1987. “The Two Ajaxes and the Two Kṛs̥n̥as.” Rheinisches Museum 103:186–188.

Edmunds, L. 1997. “Myth in Homer.” In Powell and Morris 1997:415–441.

Edwards, A. T. 1981. Odysseus Against Achilles: The Role of Allusion in the Homeric Epic. PhD diss., Cornell University.

———. 1984. “P. Mich. 6972: An Eccentric Papyrus Text of Iliad K 421–34, 445–60.” Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik 56:11–15.

———. 1985. Achilles in the Odyssey. Königstein.

Edwards, M. W. 1966. “Some Features of Homeric Craftsmanship.” Transactions of the American Philological Association 97:115–179.

———. 1980. “Convention and Individuality in Iliad 1.” Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 84:1–28.

———, ed. 1991. The Iliad: A Commentary. Vol. 5, Books 17–20. Cambridge.

———. 1997. “Homeric Style and ‘Oral Poetics.’” In Powell and Morris 1997:261–283.

———. 2005. “Homer’s Iliad.” In Foley 2005a:302–314.

Evans, S. 2003. Review of Dué 2002. Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2003.01.36. http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2003/2003-01-36.html.

Fantuzzi, M. 2005. “Euripides (?), Rhesus 56–58 and Homer, Iliad 8.498–501: Other Possible Clues to Zenodotus’ Reliability.” Classical Philology 100:268–273.

———. 2006a. Review of F. Jouan, Euripide: Tragédies, tome VIII, 2e partie: Rhésos. Paris: Les Belles Lettres, 2004. Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2006.02.18. http://bmcr.brynmawr.edu/2006/2006-02-18.html.

———. 2006b. “The Myths of Dolon and Rhesus from Homer to the ‘Homeric/Cyclic’ Tragedy Rhesos.” In Montanari and Rengakos 2006:135–176.

Farron, S. 2003. “Attitudes to Military Archery in the Iliad.” In Basson and Dominik 2003:169–184.

Fenik, B. 1964. Iliad X and the Rhesus: The Myth. Collection Latomus 73. Brussels.

———. 1968. Typical Battle Scenes in the Iliad: Studies in the Narrative Techniques of Homeric Battle Description. Wiesbaden.

Fick, A. 1883. Die homerishe Odysse in der ursprünglichen Sprachform wiederhergestellt. Göttingen.

———. 1886. Die homerische Ilias. Göttingen.

Finkelberg, M. 1987. “Homer’s View of the Epic Narrative: Some Formulaic Evidence.” Classical Philology 82:135–138.

———. 2003. “Neoanalysis and Oral Tradition in Homeric Studies.” Oral Tradition 18:68–69.

Finnegan, R. 1977. Oral Poetry: Its Nature, Significance and Social Context. Cambridge.

———. 1988. Literacy and Orality: Studies in the Technology of Communication. Oxford.

Fletcher, K. F. B. 2006. “Vergil’s Italian Diomedes.” American Journal of Philology 127:219–259.

Foley, J. 1991. Immanent Art: From Structure to Meaning in Traditional Oral Epic. Bloomington, IN.

———. 1995. The Singer of Tales in Performance. Bloomington, IN.

———. 1997. “Oral Tradition and its Implications.” In Powell and Morris 1997:146–173.

———. 1998. “Individual Poet and Epic Singer: The Legendary Singer.” Arethusa 31:149–178.

———. 1999. Homer’s Traditional Art. University Park, PA.

———. 2002. How to Read an Oral Poem. Urbana and Chicago, IL.

———, ed. 2005a. A Companion to Ancient Epic. Oxford.

———. 2005b. “Analogues: Modern Oral Epics.” In Foley 2005a:196–212.

Fournet. J.-L. 1997. “Du nouveau dans la bibliotèque de Dioscure d’Aphrodité.” Akten des 21 Internationalen Papyrologenkongresses, Berlin 1995. Archiv für Papyrusforschung Beiheft 3:297–304.

———. 1999. Hellénisme dans l’Égypte du VIe siècle. La bibliothèque et l’oeuvre de Dioscore d’Aphrodité. Cairo.

Fowler, D. 2000. “Epic in the Middle of the Wood: Mise en Abyme in the Nisus and Euryalus Episode.” In Sharrock and Morales 2000:89–113.

Fowler, R., ed. 2004. The Cambridge Companion to Homer. Cambridge.

Frame, D. 1978/2005. The Myth of the Return in Early Greek Epic. New Haven. Online ed. 2005: Center for Hellenic Studies. http://chs.harvard.edu/publications.

———. 2005a. Acknowledgements and introduction to The Myth of Return in Early Greek Epic. Center for Hellenic Studies. http://chs.harvard.edu/publications.

———. 2005b. “The Return of Odysseus.” Chap. 3 in The Myth of Return in Early Greek Epic. Center for Hellenic Studies. http://chs.harvard.edu/publications.

———. 2009. Hippota Nestor. Hellenic Studies 37. Washington, DC.

Fraenkel, E. 1965. Review of W. Ritchie, The Authenticity of the Rhesus of Euripides (Cambridge 1964). Gnomon 37:228–241.

Fränkel, F. 1921. Die homerischen Gleichnisse. Göttingen.

Frazer, J., ed. 1921. The Library of Apollodorus. Cambridge, MA.

Friedrich, R. 2002. “Oral Composition-by-theme and Homeric Narrative. The Exposition of the Epic Action in Avdo Medjedovic’s Wedding of Meho and Homer’s Iliad.” In Montanari and Ascheri 2002:41–71.

Friis Johansen, K. 1967. The Iliad in Early Greek Art. Copenhagen.

Gantz, T. 1993. Early Greek Myth. Baltimore.

Gaunt, D. 1971. “The Change of Plan in the Doloneia.” Greece and Rome 18:191–198.

George, D. 1994. “Euripides’ Heracles 140–235: Staging and the Stage Iconography of Heracles’ Bow.” Greek, Roman and Byzantine Studies 35:145–157.

Germain, G. 1954. Homère et la Mystique des Nombres. Paris.

Gernet, L. 1936. “Dolon le loup.” Mélanges Franz Cumont. Annuaire de l’Institut de Philologie et d’Histoire Orientales et Slaves 4:189–208.

Gladstone, W. 1858. Studies in Homer and the Homeric Age. Oxford.

Goatley, A. 1997. The Language of Metaphors. London.

Gould, J. 2001. Myth, Ritual, Memory, and Exchange. Oxford.

Gow, A. S. W., and A. F. Scholfield, eds. 1953. Nicander: The Poems and Poetical Fragments. Cambridge.

Goward, B. 1999. Telling Tragedy: Narrative Technique in Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides. London.

Graf, F. 2002. “Myth in Ovid.” In Hardie 2002:108–121.

Grafton, A., G. Most, and J. Zetzel, eds. 1795/1985. F. A. Wolf, Prolegomena to Homer. Princeton.

Grandsen, K. W. 1984. Virgil’s Iliad: An Essay on Epic Narrative. Cambridge.

Graziosi, B. 2002. Inventing Homer: The Early Reception of Epic. Cambridge.

Graziosi, B. and J. Haubold. 2005. Homer: The Resonance of Epic. London.

Greene, T. M. 1999. “The Natural Tears of Epic.” In Beissinger, Tylus, and Wofford 1999:189–202.

Greg, W. W. 1955. The Shakespeare First Folio: Its Bibliographical and Textual History. London.

Grethlein, J. 2007. “The Poetics of the Bath in the Iliad.” Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 103:25–49.

Grube, G. M. A. 1961. The Drama of Euripides. Revised ed. London.

Haft, A. 1984. “Odysseus, Idomeneus and Meriones: The Cretan Lies of Odyssey 13–19.” Classical Journal 79:289–306.

———. 1990. “The City-Sacker Odysseus in Iliad 2 and 10.” Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 120:37–56.

Hainsworth, J. B. 1962. “The Homeric Formula and the Problem of its Transmission.” Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies 9:57–68.

———. 1964. “Structure and Content in Epic Formulae: The Question of the Unique Expression.” Classical Quarterly 14:155–164.

———. 1968. The Flexibility of the Homeric Formula. Oxford.

———. 1970. “The Criticism of an Oral Homer.” Journal of Hellenic Studies 90:90–98.

———, ed. 1993. The Iliad: A Commentary. Vol. 3, Books 9–12. Cambridge.

Halliwell, S. 1991. “The Uses of Laughter in Greek Culture.” Classical Quarterly 41:279–296.

———. 2008. Greek Laughter: A Study of Cultural Psychology from Homer to Early Christianity. Cambridge.

Hardie, P., ed. 1994. Virgil: Aeneid Book IX. Cambridge.

———, ed. 2002. The Cambridge Companion to Ovid. Cambridge.

Heiden, B. 2009. Review of L. Ferreri, La questione omerica dal cinquecento al settecento. Rome: Edizioni di storia e letteratura, 2007. Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2009.02.17. http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2009/2009-02-17.html.

Henry, R. 1905. “The Place of the Doloneia in Epic Poetry.” Classical Review 19:192–197.

Hermann, G. 1832. De interpolationibus Homeri. Leipzig.

———. 1840. De iteratis Homeri. Leipzig.

Heubeck, A., S. West, and J. Hainsworth, eds. 1988. A Commentary on Homer’s Odyssey. Vol. 1, Introduction and Books I–VIII. Oxford.

Hexter, R., and D. Selden, eds. 1992. Innovations of Antiquity. New York.

Higbie, C. 1995. Heroes’ Names, Homeric Identities. New York.

———. 1997. “The Bones of a Hero, The Ashes of a Politician: Athens, Salamis, and the Usable Past.” Classical Antiquity 16:279–308.

Hoekstra, A. 1965. Homeric Modifications of Formulaic Prototypes. Amsterdam.

Holland, G. 1993. “The Name of Achilles: A Revised Etymology.” Glotta 71:17–27.

Holmberg, I. 1997. “The Sign of ΜΗΤΙΣ.” Arethusa 30:1–33.

Holoka, J. 1983. “Looking Darkly (ΥΠΟΔΡΑ ΙΔΩΝ): Reflections on Status and Decorum in Homer.” Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 113:1–16.

Horrocks, G. 1987. “The Ionian Epic Tradition: Was there an Aeolic Phase in its Development?” In Killen, Melena, and Olivier 1987:269–294.

———. 1997. “Homer’s Dialect.” In Powell and Morris 1997:193–217.

Howald, E. 1924. “Meleager und Achill.” Rheinisches Museum 73:402–425.

Janko, R. 1982. Homer, Hesiod, and the Hymns: Diachronic Development in Epic Diction. Cambridge.

———. 1986. “Hesychius Q 216 and Empedocles Fragment 21.6.” Classical Philology 81:308–309.

———, ed. 1992. The Iliad: A Commentary. Vol. 4, Books 13–16. Cambridge.

Johnston, S. I. 2002. “Myth, Festival, and Poet: The Homeric Hymn to Hermes in Its Performative Context.” Classical Philology 97:109–132.

Kahane, A. 1997. “Quantifying Epic.” In Powell and Morris 1997:326–342.

Kelly, A. 2007. A Referential Commentary and Lexicon to Homer, Iliad VIII. Oxford.

Killen, J., J. Melena, and J.-P. Olivier, eds. 1987. Studies in Mycenaean and Classical Greek Presented to John Chadwick. Salamanca.

Kirk, G. 1960. “Objective Dating Criteria in Homer.” Museum Helveticum 17:189–205.

———. 1962. The Songs of Homer. Cambridge.

———. 1976. Homer and the Oral Tradition. Cambridge.

———, General ed. 1985–1993. The Iliad: A Commentary I–VI. Cambridge.

———, ed. 1985. The Iliad: A Commentary. Vol. 1, Books 1–4. Cambridge.

———, ed. 1990. The Iliad: A Commentary. Vol. 2, Books 5–8. Cambridge.

Kitto, H. D. F. 1977. “The Rhesus and Related Matters.” Yale Classical Studies 25:317–350.

Klingner, F. 1940. “Über die Dolonie.” Hermes 75:337–368.

Knox, P. 1995. Ovid, Heroides: Select Epistles. Cambridge.

Kopff, E. C. 1981. “Virgil and the Cyclic Epics.” Aufstieg und Niedergang der Romischen Welt II.31.2, ed. W. Haase, 919–947.

Kossatz-Deissmann, A. 1981. “Achilleus.” Lexicon Iconographicum Mythologiae Classicae I, ed. H. C. Ackermann and J.-R. Gisler, 37–200.

Kouklanakis, A. 1999. “Thersites, Odysseus, and the Social Order.” In Carlisle and Levaniouk 1999:35–53.

Kullmann, W. 1960. Die Quellen der Ilias. Hermes Einzelschriften 14. Wiesbaden.

Lachmann, K. 1847. Betrachtungen über Homers Ilias. Berlin.

Lang, M. 1995. “War Story into Wrath Story.” In Carter and Morris 1995:149–162.

Lateiner, D. 1995. Sardonic Smile: Nonverbal Behavior in Homeric Epic. Ann Arbor.

Lattimore, R. 1958. Rhesus (trans. with introduction). Euripides IV: Four Tragedies, ed. D. Grene and R. Lattimore, 1–49. Chicago.

Leaf, W., ed. 1886. The Iliad. 2nd ed. 1900–1902. London.

———. 1892. A Companion to the Iliad for English Readers. London.

———. 1915. “Rhesos of Thrace.” Journal of Hellenic Studies 35:1–11.

Lennox, P. 1977. “Virgil’s Night-Episode Re-examined (Aeneid IX, 176–449).” Hermes 105:331–342.

Létoublon, F. “Le jour et la nuit: Formulaire épique et problèmes de narratologie homérique.” In Dik and Létoublon 1998: 137–146.

Levine, D. 1982. “Homeric Laughter and the Unsmiling Suitors.” Classical Journal 78:97–104.

———. 1984. “Odysseus’ Smiles: Odyssey 20.301, 22.371, 23.111.” Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 114:1–9.

Lissarrague, F. 1980. “Iconographie de Dolon le Loup.” Revue Archéologique, no. 1:3–30.

———. 1990. L’autre guerrier. Paris.

Littauer, M. A., and J. H. Crouwel. 1983. “Chariots in Late Bronze Age Greece.” Antiquity 57:187–192.

Lonsdale, S. 1990. Creatures of Speech: Lion, Herding, and Hunting Similes in the Iliad. Stuttgart.

Loranger, C. 1999. “‘This Book Spills Off the Page in All Directions’: What is the Text of Naked Lunch?” Postmodern Culture 10.1. http://www3.iath.virginia.edu/pmc/text-only/issue.999/10.1loranger.txt.

Lord, A. B. 1948. “Homer, Parry, and Huso.” American Journal of Archaeology 52:34–44.

———. 1951. “Composition by Theme in Homer and Southslavic Epos.” Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 82:71–80.

———. 1960/2000. The Singer of Tales. Cambridge, MA. 2nd ed. 2000 by S. Mitchell and G. Nagy. Cambridge, MA.

———. 1991. Epic Singers and Oral Tradition. Ithaca, NY and London.

———. 1995. The Singer Resumes the Tale. Ithaca, NY.

Lorimer, H. 1950. Homer and the Monuments. London.

Lowenstam, S. 1992. “The Uses of Vase-Depictions in Homeric Studies.” Transactions of the American Philological Association 122:165–198.

———. 1993. “The Pictures on Juno’s Temple in the Aeneid.” Classical World 87:37–49.

———. 1997. “Talking Vases: The Relationship between the Homeric Poems and Archaic Representations of Epic Myth.” Transactions of the American Philological Association 127:21–76.

———. 2008. As Witnessed by Images: The Trojan War Tradition in Greek and Etruscan Art. Baltimore.

Luce, J. V. 1998. Celebrating Homer’s Landscapes. New Haven.

Lynn-George, M. 1988. Epos: Word, Narrative and the Iliad. London.

Maass, E., ed. 1887. Scholia Graeca in Homeri Iliadem Townleyana. 2 vols. Oxford.

Machacek, G. 1994. “The Occasional Contextual Appropriateness of Formulaic Diction in the Homeric Poems.” American Journal of Philology 115:321–335.

Maclean, J., and E. Aitken. 2001. Flavius Philostratus, Heroikos. Atlanta.

Maehler, H., W. Müller, and G. Poethke. 1976. “Ilias-Handschriften aus der Berliner Papyrus-Sammlung.” Archiv für Papyrusforschung und verwandte Gebiete 24/25:13–26.

Magrath, W. 1982. “Progression of the Lion Simile in the Odyssey.” Classical Journal 77:205–212.

Marks, J. 2003. “Alternative Odysseys: The Case of Thoas and Odysseus.” Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 133:209–226.

Maronitis, D. N. 2004. Homeric Megathemes: War – Homilia – Homecoming. Trans. D. Connolly. Lanham, MD.

Marshall, K., ed. 1993. Rediscovering the Muses: Women’s Musical Traditions. Boston.

Martin, R. P. 1989. The Language of Heroes: Speech and Performance in the Iliad. Ithaca, NY.

———. 1993. “Telemachus and the Last Hero Song.” Colby Quarterly 29:222–240.

———. 1997. “Similes and Performance.” In Bakker and Kahane 1997:138–166.

———. 2000. “Wrapping Homer Up: Cohesion, Discourse, and Deviation in the Iliad.” In Sharrock and Morales 2000:43–65.

Martini, E. 1902. Parthenii Nicaeni quae supersunt. Leipzig.

McLeod, W. 1988. “The Bow at Night: An Inappropriate Weapon?” Phoenix 42:121–125.

Mellink, M., ed. 1986. Troy and the Trojan War: A Symposium Held at Bryn Mawr College, October 1984. Bryn Mawr.

Messer, W. S. 1918. The Dream in Homer and Greek Tragedy. New York.

Mette, H. J. 1952. Parateresis: Untersuchungen zur Sprachtheorie des Krates von Pergamon. Halle.

Minchin, E. 2001. Homer and the Resources of Memory. Oxford.

Montanari, F. 1998. “Zenodotus, Aristarchus, and the Ekdosis of Homer.” In Most 1998:1–21.

Montanari, F., and P. Ascheri, eds. 2002. Omero tremila anni dopo. Rome.

Montanari, F., and A. Rengakos, eds. 2006. La Poésie Épique Greque: Métamorphoses d’un Genre Littéraire. Geneva.

Morris, I. 1986. “The Use and Abuse of Homer.” Classical Antiquity 5:81–138.

Morris, S. 1992. Daidalos and the Origins of Greek Art. Princeton.

Most, G., ed. 1998. Editing Texts/Texte edieren. Göttingen.

Moulton, C. 1977. Similes in the Homeric Poems. Göttingen.

Muellner, L. 1976. The Meaning of Homeric EYXOMAI through Its Formulas. Innsbruck.

———. 1990. “The Simile of the Cranes and Pygmies: A Study of Homeric Metaphor.” Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 93:59–101.

Murnaghan, S. 1999. “The Poetics of Loss in Greek Epic.” In Beissinger, Tylus, and Wofford 1999:203–220.

Murray, G. 1907. Rise of the Greek Epic. Oxford.

Mynors, R. A. B., ed. 1969. P. Vergili Maronis Opera. Oxford.

Nagler, M. 1967. “Towards a Generative View of the Oral Formula.” Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 98:269–311.

———. 1974. Spontaneity and Tradition: A Study in the Oral Art of Homer. Berkeley.

Nagy, G. 1974. Comparative Studies in Greek and Indic Meter. Cambridge, MA.

———. 1979/1999. Best of the Achaeans: Concepts of the Hero in Archaic Greek Poetry. 2nd ed. Baltimore.

———. 1990a. Pindar’s Homer: The Lyric Possession of an Epic Past. Baltimore.

———. 1990b. Greek Mythology and Poetics. Ithaca, NY.

———. 1992. “Mythological Exemplum in Homer.” In Hexter and Selden 1992: 311–331.

———. 1996a. Poetry as Performance: Homer and Beyond. Cambridge.

———. 1996b. Homeric Questions. Austin.

———. 1997. “Ellipsis in Homer.” In Bakker and Kahane 1997: 167–189.

———. 1999. “Epic as Genre.” In Beissinger, Tylus, and Wofford 1999:21–32.

———. 2000. Review of M. L. West, ed., Homeri Ilias. Recensuit / testimonia congessit. Volumen prius, rhapsodias I-XII continens. Stuttgart and Leipzig: Bibliotheca Teubneriana, 1998. Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2000.09.12. http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2000/2000-09-12.html.

———. 2002. Plato’s Rhapsody and Homer’s Music: The Poetics of the Panathenaic Festival in Classical Athens. Cambridge, MA.

———. 2003. Homeric Responses. Austin.

———. 2004. Homer’s Text and Language. Champaign, IL.

———. 2009. Homer the Classic. Hellenic Studies 36. Washington, DC.

Naiden, F. 1999. “Homer’s Leopard Simile.” In Carlisle and Levaniouk 1999:177–203.

———. 2006. Ancient Supplication. Oxford.

Neils, J., ed. 1992a. Goddess and Polis: The Panathenaic Festival in Ancient Athens. Hanover, NH and Princeton.

———. 1992b. “The Panathenaia: An Introduction.” In Neils 1992a:13–27.

Newton, R. 1998. “Cloak and Shield in Odyssey 14.” Classical Journal 93:143–156.

———. 2005. “The Ciconians, Revisited.” In Rabel 2005:135–146.

———. 2008. “Assembly and Hospitality in the Cyclôpeia.” College Literature 35:1–44.

———. 2009. “Geras and Guest Gifts in Homer.” In K. Myrsiades, ed., Reading Homer: Film and Text. Madison, NJ.

Nickel, R. 2002. “Euphorbus and the Death of Achilles.” Phoenix 56:215–233.

Notopoulos, J. A. 1957. “Homeric Similes in the Light of Oral Poetry.” Classical Journal 52:323–328.

Orzulik, K. 1883. Über das Verhältnis der Doloneia zu den übrigen Teilen der Ilias und der Odyssee. Progr. Teschen.

Otto, W. 1929/1956. Die Götter Griechenlands. Bonn. 4th ed. Frankfurt.

Pache, C. 2000. “War Games: Odysseus at Troy.” Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 100:15–23.

Paduano, G. 1973. “Funzioni Drammatiche nella Struttura del Reso.” Maia 25:3–29.

Page, D. 1959. History and the Homeric Iliad. Berkeley.

Palmer, L. 1962. “The Language of Homer.” In Wace and Stubbings 1962:75–178.

———. 1963. The Interpretation of Mycenaean Greek Texts. Oxford.

Papaioannou, S. 2000. “Vergilian Diomedes Revisited: The Re-evaluation of the Iliad.” Mnemosyne 53:193–217.

Parry, A., ed. 1971. The Making of Homeric Verse: The Collected Papers of Milman Parry. Oxford. (= MHV)

Parry, M. 1928. L’épithète traditionelle dans Homère: essai sur un problème de style homérique. Paris. Trans. as “The Traditional Epithet in Homer” in A. Parry 1971:1–190.

———. 1930. “Studies in the Epic Technique of Oral Versemaking. I. Homer and Homeric Style.” Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 41:73–147. Reprinted in A. Parry 1971:266–324.

———. 1932. “Studies in the Epic Technique of Oral Versemaking. II. The Homeric Language as the Language of Oral Poetry.” Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 43:1–50. Reprinted in A. Parry 1971:325–64.

———. 1936. “On Typical Scenes in Homer.” Review of Arend 1933. Classical Philology 31:357–60. Reprinted in A. Parry 1971:404–407.

Pavlock, B. 1985. “Epic and Tragedy in Vergil’s Nisus and Euryalus Episode.” Transactions of the American Philological Association 115:207–224.

Petegorsky, D. 1982. Context and Evocation: Studies in Early Greek and Sanskrit Poetry. PhD diss., University of California, Berkeley.

Poe, J. P. 2004. “Unconventional Procedures in Rhesus.” Philologus 148:21–33.

Poethke, G. 1985. “Ilias Κ 372–443 (P. Berol. 10570).” Yale Classical Studies 28:1–4.

Pollard, J. 1977. Birds in Greek Myth and Life. London.

Porter, W. H. 1929. The Rhesus of Euripides. 2nd ed. Cambridge.

Powell, B. 1977. Composition by Theme in the Odyssey. Beiträge zur klassischen Philologie 81. Meisenheim am Glan.

Powell, B., and I. Morris, eds. 1997. A New Companion to Homer. Leiden.

Pucci, P. 1987. Odysseus Polutropos: Intertextual Readings in the Odyssey and the Iliad. Ithaca, NY.

Putnam, M. 1998. “Dido’s Murals and Virgilian Ekphrasis.” Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 98:243–275.

Rabel, R. 1991. “The Theme of Need in Iliad 9–11.” Phoenix 45:283–295.

———, ed. 2005. Approaches to Homer: Ancient and Modern. Swansea.

Reece, S. 1994. “The Cretan Odyssey: A Lie Truer than the Truth.” American Journal of Philology 115:157–173.

Reinhardt, K. 1961. Die Ilias und ihr Dichter. Göttingen.

Renan, E. 1890. L’avenir de la science: pensées de 1848. Paris.

Rengakos, A. 1993. Der Homertext und die hellenistischen Dichter. Hermes Enzelschriften 64. Stuttgart.

Reynolds, L. D., and N. G. Wilson. 1991. Scribes and Scholars: A Guide to the Transmission of Greek and Latin Literature. Oxford.

Richardson, N. 1978. “Homer and Oral Poetry.” Classical Review 28:1–2.

Ritchie, W. 1964. The Authenticity of the Rhesus of Euripides. Cambridge.

Robertson, M. 1990. “Troilos and Polyxene: Notes on a Changing Legend.” In Descoeudres 1990:63–70.

Rolfe, J. C. 1893. “The Tragedy Rhesus.” Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 4:61–98.

Russo, J. 1997. “The Formula.” In Powell and Morris 1997:238–260.

Sauge, A. 2000. L’Iliade, poème athénien de l’époque de Solon. Berne.

———. 2007a. Iliade: langue, récit, écriture. Berne.

———. 2007b. “Προθέλυμνος.” Collège de Saussure online research. http://icp.ge.ch/po/de-saussure/espace-pedagogique/espaces-des-disciplines/grec/recherche/prothelumnos.pdf: edition of 4/4/2007.

Scaife, R. 1995. “The Kypria and Its Early Reception.” Classical Antiquity 14:164–192.

Schein, S. 1984. The Mortal Hero: An Introduction to Homer’s Iliad. Berkeley.

Schnapp-Gourbeillon, A. 1981. Lions, héroes, masques. Les représentations de l’animal chez Homère. Paris.

———. 1982. “Le lion et le loup. Diomédie et Dolonie dans l’Iliade.” Quaderni di Storia. 8:45–77.

Schoeck, G. 1961. Ilias und Aithiopis. Zurich.

Schwanz, L. 2000. “Martes martes.” Animal Diversity Web. http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Martes_martes.html (accessed October 02, 2009).

Scott, J. 1921. The Unity of Homer. Berkeley.

Scott, W. 1974. The Oral Nature of the Homeric Simile. Leiden.

———. 2005. “The Patterning of the Similes in Book 2 of the Iliad.” In Rabel 2005:21–54.

Shapiro, H. A. 1992. “Mousikoi Agones: Music and Poetry at the Panathenaia.” In Neils 1992:53–76.

Sharrock, A., and H. Morales, eds. 2000. Intratextuality: Greek and Roman Textual Relations. Oxford.

Sheppard, J. 1922. The Pattern of the Iliad. London.

Sherratt, E. 1990. “‘Reading the Texts’: Archaeology and the Homeric Question.” Antiquity 64:807–824.

Shewan, A. 1911. The Lay of Dolon: Homer Iliad X. London.

Shipp, G. 1953/1972. Studies in the Language of Homer. 2nd ed. Cambridge.

Simonsuuri, K. 1979. Homer’s Original Genius: Eighteenth-Century Notions of the Early Greek Epic (1688–1798). Cambridge.

Singor, H. 1992. “The Achaean Wall and the Seven Gates of Thebes.” Hermes 120:401–411.

Slatkin, L. 1991. The Power of Thetis: Allusion and Interpretation in the Iliad. Berkeley.

Smith, R. A. 2005. The Primacy of Vision in Virgil’s Aeneid. Austin.

Snodgrass, A. 1998. Homer and the Artists: Text and Picture in Early Greek Art. Cambridge.

Spruytte, J. 1977. Études experimentales sur l’attelage. Paris.

Stagakis, G. 1985. “Homeric Warfare Practices.” Historia 34:129–152.

———. 1986. “The ἵπποι of Rhesus.” Hellenika 37:231–241.

———. 1987–88. “Athena and Dolon’s Spoils.” Archaiognosia 5:55–71.

Stanford, W., ed. 1961–1965. The Odyssey of Homer. Revised reprint of the 2nd ed. London.

Stanley, K. 1965. “Irony and Foreshadowing in Aeneid, I, 462.” American Journal of Philology 86:267–277.

———. 1993. The Shield of Homer: Narrative Structure in the Iliad. Princeton.

Strauss, B. 2006. The Trojan War: A New History. New York.

Stubbings, F. 1962. “Arms and Armour.” In Wace and Stubbings 1962:504–522.

Sultan, N. 1993. “Private Speech, Public Pain: The Power of Women’s Laments in Ancient Greek Poetry and Tragedy.” In Marshall 1993:92–110.

———. 1999. Exile and the Poetics of Loss in Greek Tradition. Lanham, MD.

Thiel, H. van. 1982. Ilias und Iliaden. Basel.

Thomas, R. F. 1983. “Virgil’s Ecphrastic Centerpieces.” Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 87:175–184.

Thompson, D. W. 1895. A Glossary of Greek Birds. Oxford.

Thornton, A. 1984. Homer’s Iliad: Its Composition and the Motif of Supplication. Göttingen.

Todorov, T. 1981. Introduction to Poetics. Trans. R. Howard. Minneapolis.

———. 1990. Genres in Discourse. Trans. C. Porter. Cambridge.

True, M. 1997. “Rhesus.” Lexicon Iconigraphicum Mythologiae Classicae VIII, ed. P. Müller et al., 1044–1046.

Tsagalis, C. 2004. Epic Grief: Personal Laments in Homer’s Iliad. Berlin.

———. 2008. The Oral Palimpsest: Exploring Intertextuality in the Homeric Epics. Cambridge, MA.

Turner, F. 1997. “The Homeric Question.” In Powell and Morris 1997:123–145.

Van Erp Taalman Kip, A. M. 2000. “The Gods of the Iliad and the Fate of Troy.” Mnemosyne 58:385–402.

Vermeule, E. 1986. “‘Priam’s Castle Blazing’: A Thousand Years of Trojan Memories.” In Mellink 1986:77–92.

Villoison, J. B. G. de., ed. 1788. Homeri Ilias ad veteris codicis Veneti fidem recensita. Venice.

Wace, A., and F. Stubbings, eds. 1962. A Companion to Homer. London.

Walton, J. M. 2000. “Playing in the Dark: Masks and Euripides’ Rhesus.” Helios 27:137–147.

Wathelet, P. 1989. “Rhésos ou la Quête de l’Immortalité.” Kernos 2:213–231.

Webster, T. B. L. 1958. From Mycenae to Homer. London.

Wees, H. van. 1988. “Kings in Combat: Battles and Heroes in the Iliad.” Classical Quarterly n.s. 38:1–24.

West, M. L. 1969. “The Achaean Wall.” Classical Review 19:256-260.

———.1973. “Greek Poetry 2000–700 B.C.” Classical Quarterly 23:179–192.

———. 1988. “The Rise of the Greek Epic.” Journal of Hellenic Studies 108:151–172.

———, ed. 1989. Iambi et elegi Graeci ante Alexandrum cantati. 2nd ed. Oxford.

———. 1997. “Homer’s Meter.” In Powell and Morris 1997:218–237.

———, ed. 1998–2000. Homeri Ilias. Recensuit / testimonia congessit. Stuttgart and Leipzig.

———. 2001a. Studies in the Text and Transmission of the Iliad. Munich.

———. 2001b. “West on Nagy and Nardelli on West.” Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2001.09.06. http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2001/2001-09-06.html.

———. 2004. “West on Rengakos (BMCR 2002.11.15) and Nagy (Gnomon 75, 2003, 481–501) on West: Response to 2002.11.15.” Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2004.04.17. http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2004/2004-04-17.html.

West, S. 1967. The Ptolemaic Papyri of Homer. Cologne and Opladen.

Whitman, C. 1958. Homer and the Heroic Tradition. Cambridge, MA.

Wilamowitz-Moellendorff, U. von. 1884. Homerische Untersuchungen. Berlin.

———. 1916. Die Ilias und Homer. Berlin.

Willcock, M. 1964. “Mythological Paradeigma in the Iliad.” Classical Quarterly 14:141–154.

———. 1977. “Ad Hoc Invention in the Iliad.” Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 81:41–53.

Williams, D. 1986. “Dolon.” Lexicon Iconographicum Mythologiae Classicae III, ed. P. Müller et al., 660–664.

Williams, R. D. 1960. “The Pictures on Dido’s Temple (Aeneid 1.450–93).” Classical Quarterly n.s. 10:145–151.

———. 1973. The Aeneid of Virgil: Books 7–12. Basingstoke and London.

Wilson, D. 2002. Ransom, Revenge, and Heroic Identity in the Iliad. Cambridge.

———. 2005. “Demodokos’ Iliad and Homer’s.” In Rabel 2005:1–20.

Wolf, F. 1795. Prolegomena ad Homerum: sive, De operum Homericorum prisca et genuina forma variisque mutationibus et probabili ratione emendandi. Halle. Republished in Grafton, Most, and Zetzel 1985.

———, ed. 1804–1807. Homērou epē: Homeri et Homeridarum opera et reliquiae. Leipzig.

Zuntz, G. 1965. An Inquiry into the Transmission of the Plays of Euripides. Cambridge.