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Once taken as conclusive evidence of the strict orality of the Homeric poems
themselves
(as opposed to their undisputed but still-enigmatic debt to traditional oral poetry), Parry's thesis has come to receive more critical scrutiny; in particular, the expertise of nonclassicists with wide experience in living oral traditions has weighed in on the central arguments. Among the questions raised are the extent to which conclusions about Homeric diction are relevant to oral poetic traditions of our own era, the suitability of semiliterate
guslars
performing in urban cafés as a model for a Dark Age poet such as Homer, and the vast and conspicuous gulf between Serbo-Croatian narratives and the monumental epic poems of Homer. Also of greater interest today is the significance of the
Iliad
as an end-of-tradition composition. Such questions are fruitfully addressed, in particular, in the essays of the collection edited by Stoltz and Shannon, below.
The following list of works, many contradicting one another, will stimulate further thought, rather than provide definitive answers to the important, if irresolv able, “Homeric question”:
 
 
Robert Fowler, “The Homeric Question,” in Robert Fowler, ed.,
The Cambridge Companion to Homer
(Cambridge, 2004), 220-32.
Richard Janko, “The Origins and Evolution of the Epic Diction” and “The Text and Transmission of the
Iliad,
” in
The “Iliad”: A Commentary, Volume IV: Books 13-16
(Cambridge, 1992), 8-19 and 20-38, respectively.
Minna Skafte Jensen,
The Homeric Question and the Oral-Formulaic Theory
(Copenhagen, 1980).
G. S. Kirk,
The Songs of Homer
(Cambridge, 1962).
Albert B. Lord,
The Singer of Tales
(Cambridge, MA, 1981).
Gregory Nagy,
Homeric Questions
(Austin, TX, 1996).
Barry B. Powell, “Homer and Writing,” in Ian Morris and Barry Powell, eds.,
A New Companion to Homer
(Leiden, 1997), 3-32.
—,
Homer and the Origin of the Greek Alphabet
(Cambridge, 1994).
Benjamin A. Stoltz and Richard S. Shannon, eds.,
Oral Literature and the Formula
(Ann Arbor, 1976); see especially Ruth Finnegan, “What Is Oral Literature Anyway? Comments in the Light of Some African and Other Comparative Material,” 127ff.
CRITICAL STUDIES
As indicated by the chapter Notes, there are many prisms through which to view the
Iliad.
The six-volume Cambridge Commentary, as noted above, has valuable essays on specific themes central to Homeric studies. The works cited below represent particularly insightful, and often moving, treatments of what could be called the epic's defining issues:
 
Jasper Griffin,
Homer on Life and Death
(Oxford, 1983).
Katherine Callen King,
Achilles: Paradigms of the War Hero from Homer to the Middle Ages
(Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1987).
Gregory Nagy,
The Best of the Achaeans: Concepts of the Hero in Archaic Greek Poetry
(Baltimore, 1979).
James M. Redfield,
Nature and Culture in the “Iliad”: The Tragedy of Hector
(Chicago, 1975).
Seth L. Schein,
The Mortal Hero: An Introduction to Homer's “Iliad”
(Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1984).
Jonathan Shay,
Achilles in Vietnam: Combat Trauma and the Undoing of Character
(New York, 1995).
Laura M. Slatkin,
The Power of Thetis: Allusion and Interpretation in the “Iliad”
(Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1991).
Simone Weil, “The
Iliad,
or the Poem of Force,” translated by Mary McCarthy, in Christopher Benfey, ed.,
War and the “Iliad”
(New York, 2005), 1-37.
INDEX
Abel and Cain
Achaeans
Achilles' control of Achaeans' fate
Agamemnon's testing of
Ahhiyawa as
assemblies of
Aulis launch of
camp of
Catalogue of Ships and
Chryses' reception by
fortifications of
Helen's identification of ,
Hera as champion of
morale bolstering of
names used for
Poseidon's inspiring of
postwar fates of
raids of
size of force of
use of term
war won by
Zeus' turning of battle against
see also
Mycenae, Mycenaeans, Mycenaean world;
specific Achaeans
Achilles , xiv-xvii,
Agamemnon's offer of gifts to
Agamemnon's quarrels with , xvi,
Aineias' genealogy related to
Aineias rescued from
Amazon queen and,
Andromache's family and
anger of,
Apollo chased by
Apollo compared with,
aristeía
of
arming of
armor of,
see
armor of Achilles
Athene's appearance to
authority of
beauty of
birthright of
Briseis taken from,
childhood of
death of
diminishment as hero
Embassy to,
see
Embassy to Achilles
emergence as hero
Enkidu compared with,
epithets for
family origins of
flame around head of,
as folk hero
funeral games and
ghost of
grief of,
in Hades,
hair cut by
healing arts and
Hektor and,
see subheadings under Hektor
Helen and,
historic-mythic thematic convergence and
homosexual speculations about,
honor of ,
horses of
Iris as messenger to
late-stage entry to epic of
leadership of
as loner and outsider
lyre playing of
meaning of name of,
military service challenged by
mortality of
Myrmidons led by,
Odysseus' quarrel with
Patroklos as scapegoat for
Patroklos' ghost and
Patroklos' relationship with
Patroklos' use of armor of
Priam's meeting with
return to war of
ritual goblet of
similes used by
Skamandros River battle of ,
son of;
see also
Neoptolemos
spear of,
Thersites hated by
Thersites killed by,
Thetis called upon by
Thetis' hiding of
Thetis' tempering of
tragedy of
tumulus of(map)
use of name
war trauma and
withdrawal from war of ,
Achilles' heel (ankle),
Acts of Andrew
Admetos,
Adrestos
Aegean Sea(map)
aegis,
Aeneid
(Virgil)
Aeolians,
evolution of epic and,
use of term
Aeolis
Aeschines,
Aeschylus,
Aethiopis
(epic),
Antilochos in
.
first, lost, transitional lines of
Memnon's armor in
Odysseus-Aias quarrel in
Aetolia
Africa, “leopard men” of,
Agamemnon, king of Mycenae ,
Achaeans tested by
Achilles' instinct to kill
Achilles offered gifts by
Achilles' quarrels with , xvi,
arming of
assemblies called by
authority of
Briseis confiscated by ,
Chryseis as war prize of
Chryses threatened by
as commander in chief
delusional dream sent to
Diomedes' taking issue with
emergency council of the princes convened by
epithets of
failed campaign to region by ,
first appearance of
at funeral games
ghost of
Hektor's corpse and
Helen's identification of
homecoming of
paired brothers motif and,
plunder of
ransom rejected by
sacrifice by
scepter of
shield of,
Thersites' attack on
as unfit to command,
wounding of
Agenor
Ahhiyawa
Aiakos,
Aias, Telamonian ,
in Embassy to Achilles
Hektor wounded by
Odysseus' quarrel with
Patroklos' corpse and
ships defended by
suicide of
Aias (son of Oïleus) ,
Aidoneus
Aigina,
Aineias
Achilles' return encounter with
divine rescue of,
origins and destiny of,
Aithe
Akkadian epic,
Aktor,
Alaksandu of Wilusa,
Alcaeus,
Alcmeonis,
Alexander the Great, xiv,
Alexandros:
use of name,
see also
Paris
Ali, Ayaan Hirsi,
Ali, Muhammad
Alkimos
Altes
Amphiaraus
Amphidamas,
Anat,
Anatolia (now Turkey)(map)
Bronze Age alliances in,
Etruscan origins in
fugitive exiles in,
Luwians in
Mycenaean interference in,
Mycenaeans on coast of
Anchises,
Andromache, xiii,
Hektor's death and
military directives given by
on Neoptolemos
postwar fate of,
Angel of Mons
“Another Epitaph on an Army of Mercenaries” (MacDiarmid) ,
Antenor
Antilochos,
at funeral games
Antimachos,
ants
Aphrodite,
Aineias rescued by,
divine deceptions and ,
Helen's confrontation with
Helen's recognition of
Judgment of Paris and
origins of,
Paris desired by
Paris whisked away by,
wounding of
Apollo,
Achilles' death and ,
Achilles hated by,
aegis of
Agenor and
Chryses as priest of
civilized virtues of
as guardian of Troy ,
Hektor aided by
Niobe's children and
offerings to
origins of,
Patroklos' death and
plague sent by
Sarpedon's death and
Thetis' marriage and,
Apollodorus,
Arcadia,
archaeology,
in Lesbos,
of Mycenaean world,
at Troy,
Archaic Age,
Archilochus,
Arctinus of Miletus
Ares,
origins of
shunning of
wounding of
argeiphóntēs
(slayer of Argos)
Argives, use of term
Argolid,
Argos(map),
Aristarchus
aristeía
of Achilles
of Agamemnon
of Diomedes
of Patroklos
Aristotle
arming scenes
armor
cremation and,
of Hektor
magic
of Patroklos,
stripping of,
armor of Achilles
Hektor's taking of
Hephaistos' making of ,
Odysseus-Aias quarrel over
Patroklos' use of ,
army, testing of,
by Agamemnon
Artemis
Asklepios,
Assyrian siege machines,
Astyanax,
as better than his father
death of,
Hektor's death and
postwar fate of,
Astynoös
Athene
Achilles fed by
aegis of
Aphrodite mocked by
birth of,
Diomedes aided by
epithets of,
intervention in war by
Judgment of Paris and
prototype of
Trojan women's offering to
in wounding of Ares
Athens,
athletic contests,
see
funeral games
Atreides
audience of Homer ,
Achilles' shield and
allusions recognized by
battlefield carnage and
Catalogue of Ships and,
death and
depiction of divinity and
description of,
disparagement of Paris and
Eumelos known to
expectations of
Iliad
's memory lapses and
king unworthy of command and
modern
near-death misses and,
opening lines and
Zeus-Hera pact and
Aulis
authority
of Agamemnon
of Nestor
scepter of the assembly and
of Zeus
Automedon
Axylos
Ba'al
Babylonian creation epic,
Balios
bathing,
battle joy,
beauty, goddesses' dispute about
beauty contest,
see
Judgment of Paris
Bellerophontes,
berserk state
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