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This book combines the exploration of the`ethics' of the Iliad with its poetic and narrative techniques, which extend all the way from touches of phrasing to the shaping of whole scenes and the interaction between scenes, often separated by thousands of lines. These two approaches to the Iliad - through `content' and through `form' - are found to be inextricably worked together, which is why the book consists of `soundings', or sample explorations, where larger arguments branch out from noticing details in the formation of particular passages. Homer was an archaic poet, and even if he could write he surely created the poems to be heard. Far from making all this intricate complexity, the discoveries of many rereadings, inapposite, this book maintains the contrary position: the kind of artistry uncovered, especially the long-distance interconnections, would be more rather than less accessible if perceived aurally. Furthermore, if the form and timing of the long sessions are arranged by the performer, then this opens up further opportunities for shapings, patterns that would be far more apparent when heard in real time than when inside the uniform format of printed pages. These `soundings' should interest those experienced in other literatures and cultures. All quotations of Greek are also given in translation.
Taplin is the author of The Stagecraft of Aeschylus (OUP 1977, Clarendon Paperbacks 1989), Greek Tragedy in Action (Methuen 1978, revised edn 1985), Greek Fire (Jonathan Cape 1990), and with B. Rubens, An Odyssey Round Odysseus (BBC Books 1989). He presented the Radio 4 series on Odysseus (1989) and was academic adviser to the Channel 4 series `Greek Fire'.
'There is much to appreciate here. The author us an experienced communicator, with a notably accurate knowledge and understanding of the Iliad. He helps the reader to consider questions not previously in mind. And he has made a really important advance on the problem of the relationship between the structure of the poem and its public performance some two and three quarter millennia ago.'M.M. Willcock, University College, London, The Classical Review, Vol. XLIII, No. 2, 1993
Fiona Macintosh, Pantelis Michelakis, Edith Hall, Oliver Taplin, University of Oxford) Macintosh, Fiona (Senior Research Fellow at the Archive of Performances of Greek and Roman Drama, University of Oxford) Michelakis, Pantelis (Lecturer in Classics, University of Bristol, and Honorary Fellow, Archive of Performances of Greek and Roman Drama, University of Oxford) Hall, Edith (Leverhulme Professor of Greek Cultural History at the University of Durham, and Co-Director of the Archive of Performances of Greek and Roman Drama, and Fellow of the British Academy) Taplin, Oliver (Professor of Classical Languages and Literature at the University of Oxford
Oliver Taplin, Magdalen College) Taplin, Oliver (University Lecturer in Greek and Latin Literature at Oxford, and Tutorial Fellow, University Lecturer in Greek and Latin Literature at Oxford, and Tutorial Fellow
WYLES TAPLIN, Wyles Taplin, Oliver Taplin, Rosie Wyles, Oxford) Taplin, Oliver (Emeritus Professor of Classics, Magdalen College, University of Nottingham) Wyles, Rosie (Leverhulme Early Career Fellow