Book contents
- The Cambridge Guide to Homer
- The Cambridge Guide to Homer
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Notes on the Contributors
- General Introduction
- Part I Homeric Song and Text
- Part II Homeric World
- Part III Homer in the World
- Introduction
- Homer in Antiquity
- Homer and the Latin West in the Middle Ages
- Homer in Greece from the End of Antiquity 1: The Byzantine Reception of Homer and His Export to Other Cultures
- Homer in Greece from the End of Antiquity 2: Homer after Byzantium, from the Early Ottoman Period to the Age of Nationalisms
- Homer in Renaissance Europe (1488‒1649)
- Homer in Early Modern Europe
- The Reception of Homer since 1900
- Homer: Image and Cult
- Key Topics
- Albert Bates Lord
- Allegory and Allegorical Interpretation
- Aristotle and Homer
- Athens and Homer
- Biographies of Homer
- Chaucer and Homer
- Dante and Homer
- The Homeric Question
- Milman Parry
- Plato and Homer
- Plutarch and Homer
- Shakespeare and Homer
- Jean de Sponde and Homer
- Vergil and Homer
- Simone Weil and the Iliad
- Bibliography
- Index
- References
Aristotle and Homer
from Key Topics
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 February 2020
- The Cambridge Guide to Homer
- The Cambridge Guide to Homer
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Notes on the Contributors
- General Introduction
- Part I Homeric Song and Text
- Part II Homeric World
- Part III Homer in the World
- Introduction
- Homer in Antiquity
- Homer and the Latin West in the Middle Ages
- Homer in Greece from the End of Antiquity 1: The Byzantine Reception of Homer and His Export to Other Cultures
- Homer in Greece from the End of Antiquity 2: Homer after Byzantium, from the Early Ottoman Period to the Age of Nationalisms
- Homer in Renaissance Europe (1488‒1649)
- Homer in Early Modern Europe
- The Reception of Homer since 1900
- Homer: Image and Cult
- Key Topics
- Albert Bates Lord
- Allegory and Allegorical Interpretation
- Aristotle and Homer
- Athens and Homer
- Biographies of Homer
- Chaucer and Homer
- Dante and Homer
- The Homeric Question
- Milman Parry
- Plato and Homer
- Plutarch and Homer
- Shakespeare and Homer
- Jean de Sponde and Homer
- Vergil and Homer
- Simone Weil and the Iliad
- Bibliography
- Index
- References
Summary
Aristotle’s concern with Homer provides a valuable index of the status of the Iliad and Odyssey in the late Classical period. He shows knowledge of a history of privileging Homer as a source of wisdom but keeps that tradition at arm’s length. He treats the poems as esthetic objects and analyzes them as such.
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- Information
- The Cambridge Guide to Homer , pp. 573 - 574Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020