HOMER

principal figure of ancient Greek literature; the first European poet.

Works, Life, and Legends

Two epic poems are attributed to Homer, the Iliad and the Odyssey. They are composed in a literary type of Greek, Ionic in basis with Aeolic admixtures. Ranked among the great works of Western literature, these two poems together constitute the prototype for all subsequent Western epic poetry.

The "Homeric question" was the great dispute of scholarship in the 19th cent. Scholars tried to analyze the two works by various tests, usually to show that they were strung together from older narrative poems. Recent evidence strongly suggests that the Iliad is the work of a single poet. Modern scholars are generally agreed that there was a poet named Homer who lived before 700 b.c., probably in Asia Minor, and that the Iliad and the Odyssey are each the product of one poet's work, developed out of older legendary matter. Some assign the Odyssey to a poet who lived slightly after the author of the Iliad.

Legends about Homer were numerous in ancient times. He was said to be blind. His birthplace has always been disputed, but Chios or Smyrna seem most likely. The study of Homer was required of all Greek students in antiquity, and his heroes were worshiped in many parts of Greece. The Iliad and the Odyssey are composed in dactylic hexameter and are of nearly the same length. The Homeric Hymns were falsely attributed to Homer.

The Iliad

Divided into 24 books, the Iliad tells of the wrath of Achilles and its tragic consequences, an episode in the Trojan War. The action is in several sections. Achilles quarrels with Agamemnon over possession of the captive woman Briseis, and Achilles retires from the war to sulk in his tent. The Greek position gradually weakens until Agamemnon offers amendment to Achilles (Books I–IX). Book X tells of an expedition by Odysseus and Diomedes leading to Greek reverses in the war. Thereupon Patroclus, Achilles' friend, is inspired to go into battle wearing Achilles' armor. He is killed by Hector (Books XI–XVII).

Book XVIII tells of the visit of Thetis, mother of Achilles, to comfort her grieving son and of the forging of new armor by Hephaestus for Achilles. Achilles then determines to avenge his friend, kills Hector, buries Patroclus, and finally, at the entreaty of Priam, gives Hector's body to the Trojan hero's aged father (Books XIX–XXIV). The Iliad is a highly unified work, splendid in its dramatic action. Written in a simple yet lofty style, it contains many perceptive characterizations that make exalted personages like Hector and Achilles believable as human beings.

The Odyssey

The Odyssey is written in 24 books and begins nearly ten years after the fall of Troy. In the first part, Telemachus, Odysseus' son, visits Nestor at Pylos and Menelaus at Sparta, seeking news of his absent father. He tells them of the troubles of his mother, Penelope, who is beset by mercenary suitors. Menelaus informs him that his father is with the nymph Calypso (Books I–IV). The scene then shifts to Mt. Olympus with an account of Zeus' order to Calypso to release Odysseus, who then builds a raft and sails to Phaeacia. There he is entertained by King Alcinoüs and his daughter Nausicaä; he relates to them the story of his wanderings in which he has encountered Polyphemus, Aeolus, Circe, Scylla and Charybdis, the Sirens, the Laestrygones, and the lotus-eaters (Books V–XII).

Dramatic tension mounts with the return of Odysseus and Telemachus to Ithaca; together they plan and execute the death of the suitors. Afterward Odysseus makes himself known to his wife and his father, with whose aid he repulses the suitors' angry kinsmen. Athena intervenes, peace is restored, and Odysseus once again rules his country (Books XIII–XXIV). The atmosphere of adventure and fate in the Odyssey contrasts with the heavier tone and tragic grandeur of the Iliad.

Bibliography

Among the many notable translations of the Iliad and the Odyssey are the prose translations by A. Lang et al., the mid-20th-century poetic translations by R. Lattimore, and the late 20th-century translations by R. Fagles and S. Lombardo. See C. H. Whitman, Homer and the Heroic Tradition (1958, repr. 1965); M. Parry, The Making of Homeric Verse, ed. by A. Parry (1971); C. M. Bowra, Homer (1930, repr. 1973); A. J. B. Wace and F. H. Stubbings, ed., A Companion to Homer (1962, repr. 1974); C. R. Beye, The Iliad, the Odyssey and the Epic Tradition (1966, repr. 1976); G. S. Kirk, The Songs of Homer (1962; repr. 1977); A. B. Lord, The Singer of Tales (1960, repr. 1978); W. A. Camps, An Introduction to Homer (1980); H. W. Clarke, Homer's Readers (1981); M. W. Edwards, Homer (1987); K. C. King, ed., Homer (1994).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Homer  - 17591 results

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WINSLOW HOMER, A Retrospective Exhibition Frontispiece...A Retrospective Exhibition WINSLOW HOMER MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS, BOSTON in collaboration...unexampled exhibition of the art of Winslow Homer. No less is the Museum indebted to all...
HOMER WORKS BY ANDREW LANG. CUSTOM AND MYTH : Studies...LONGMANS, GREEN, CO. And New York: 15 East 16th Street. HOMER AND THE EPIC BY ANDREW LANG, M.A. HON. LL.,D, ST...prevalent literary taste is adverse to a correct judgment of Homer. It is plain to every reader that long narrative poems are...
...Christie Nangle Editor VOLUME 105 -ii- Homer in English Criticism The Historical...thought of as a great "conscious" artist, Homer was being characterized as an ideal example...development of the historical approach to Homer and the ways in which that approach was...
...such use, and abuse, of the classical past. Homer in the Twentieth Century Between World Literature...GRAZIOSI and EMILY GREENWOOD PART I PLACING HOMER IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY 1 Homer after Parry: Tradition, Reception, and the Timeless...
WINSLOW HOMER, American Artist: His World and His Work...Boston THE LOOKOUT -- "ALLS WELL" WINSLOW HOMER AMERICAN ARTIST: HIS WORLD AND HIS...No one can write a book about Winslow Homer without acknowledging a deep indebtedness...
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Homer in the French Renaissance*. by Philip Ford 1. INTRODUCTION It is difficult for us to imagine a world without Homer. The story of the Trojan War and the wanderings of Odysseus...Homers poetry was lost to Western Europe, even though the name Homer was a byword for the inspired poet, and it was not until...
Homer for the Court of Francois I. by Marian Rothstein...the printed volume where contemporary readers encountered Homer. (4) 2. GREEK Salel undertook the translation at a time when...come to be attached to this epithet. Salels awareness that Homer might possibly have a French peer is reflected in the tone...
...Scarcity and Violent Conflict in Thomas Homer-Dixons Work (1). by Nils Petter...small for people to survive on." Thomas Homer-Dixon has published extensively on population...early to mid-1990s, (2) and research by Homer-Dixon and his colleagues on the relationship...
HOMER REVISITED: ANNE LE FEVRE DACIERS PREFACE TO HER PROSE TRANSLATION...translation, like Perraults, evolved from her interpretation of Homer, but her views contradicted Perraults: in her opinion, the...translation. The disputable resemblance Dacier found between Homer as a "poete divin" and the Scriptures ideas and style paradoxically...
Tolstoy, Homer, and Genotypical Influence by Paul Friedrich...profoundly and throughout his life influenced by Homer, key questions remain regarding the nature...Hadji Murad. 1. Biography Tolstoy read Homer as a boy on his family estate, Yasnaya Polyana...
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Winslow HOMER THE ILLUSTRATOR: His Wood Engravings, 1857-1888...our past, than the works of artist Winslow Homer? As a 19th-century painter and illustrator...middle-class New England family, Winslow Homer (1836-1910) was first introduced to art...
Winslow Homer is an American original by Stephen...unique skill as a watercolorist. Winslow Homer is familiar images of 19th-century American...to Boston and New York, also shows that Homer brought a craftsmanship and an intensity...
Winslow Homer: struggling with the elements of nature by Carol M. Losos In The Life Line, Homer depicts the rescue of a woman from a shipwreck...Artist as Observer of the Power of Nature Homer was primarily a painter of the American...
Man and Nature: The Art of Winslow Homer. by Charles Brock WINSLOW HOMER first received critical recognition for his insightful...American artists as George Bellows and Edward Hopper. Homer belongs to the generation of modernists that includes...
The Glory of War: From Homer to Baghdad. by John J. Savant...literature, going all the way back to Homer and his sanguinary epics of men in battle...dimension of this resonant ambivalence in Homer lies in his refusal to affirm, unequivocally...
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Winslow Homer; Hints of Unease in Great Outdoors...National Gallery of Art, where a new Winslow Homer exhibition opens tomorrow. Cherished American...archetype, the outdoorsman confronting nature. Homer played to popular taste, but he also was...
How Homer Won the World; Household Names: The Simpson...hesays. Well, he would know. Groening created Homer Simpson, a nuclear power-plant safety inspector...world agrees. Millions of people look at Homer, hisblue-haired wife Marge, his son Bart...
...Less Than Three Years at the Helm, Lin Homer Has Quit as Chief Executive of Birmingham...coalition were acutely suspicious of Mrs Homer, whom they viewed as having little interest...before the 2003 city council elections, Mrs Homer delivered what was seen as an overtly political...
SEX, DRUGS DONUTS; My Story by Homer SIMPSON EXCLUSIVE: THE INTERVIEW THEY ALL...massive yellow face. Well, its not every day Homer Simpson pops in to your local boozer for...everything is so... foreign," he says. Homer is in London to grant the Mirror his ONLY...
Goodens homer adds to Indians power surge CINCINNATI...Dwight Gooden. Gooden hit his eighth career homer, the most by any active pitcher, and Richie...on a double switch, won it with his 12th homer off Scott Williamson (5-2). Williamson walked...
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encyclopedia articles on: Homer  - 83 results

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HOMER principal figure of ancient Greek literature; the first...Works, Life, and Legends Two epic poems are attributed to Homer, the Iliad and the Odyssey. They are composed in a literary...scholars are generally agreed that there was a poet named Homer who lived before 700 b.c., probably in Asia Minor, and that...
HOMER, WINSLOW 1836 1910, American landscape, marine, and genre painter. Homer was born in Boston, where he later worked as a lithographer...during which he was a popular magazine illustrator. In 1876, Homer abandoned illustration to devote himself to painting. He...
MARTIN, HOMER DODGE 1836 97, American landscape painter, b. Albany, N.Y. His earlier works are in the style of the Hudson River school, but...
CUMMINGS, HOMER STILLE 1870 1956, American lawyer, U.S. Attorney General (1933 39), b. Chicago. He practiced law in Stamford, Conn., where...
HASKINS, CHARLES HOMER 1870 1937, American historian, an authority on medieval history, b. Meadville, Pa. At Harvard (1902 31) he was professor and...
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