all scholarship for odyssey and aeneid

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105 Terms

1
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Fox on how Aeneas acts
Aeneas is always either insipid or odious
2
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Williams on Aeneas being mortal
no superhuman figure, he is an ordinary mortal
3
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Hardie on Aeneas’ roles
he is forced into a mission by circumstances beyond his control
4
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Lyne on Aeneas’ interactions
his interactions with others is minimal
5
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Mackie on Aeneas’ pietas
Aeneas’ general concern to facilitate fate is the cornerstone of his pietas
6
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Gransden on Aeneas’ character
Aeneas is a complex characer, pius but also a great soldier
7
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Ross on puppet
Aeneas is a mere emblematic automaton, a wooden puppet lacking
8
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Pattie on not being a puppet
he is in fact free at any time to cry ‘Enough’, to decide that his mission is too hard
9
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Quinn on Aeneas’ disgrace
Aeneas has surrendered to an impulse that disgraces his humanity
10
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Sowerby on Aeneas as a loser
At the beginning he is a traumatised loser.
11
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Sowbery on Aeneas’ own will
he is the chosen instrument of divine wil
12
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Gransden on the values of Rome
Virgil has transformed the old Homeric code into something new and wholly Roman
13
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Williams on Aeneas in Book 12
it is Aeneas who loses in the end
14
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Griffin on flattery
It would be absurd to supposed that Virgil embarked on an epic poem simply in order to flatter Augustus
15
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Griffin on how to present Augustus as a military leader
Virgil hit on a brilliant solution to the Actium problem, presenting a tableau with the central scene on Aeneas’ shield, creating a strongly symbolic image
16
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Griffin on the story of Aeneas and Augustus
story of the foundation of Rome from Troy by a hero famous for his pietas, the history of Rome and the deliverance of Rome achieved by Augustus
17
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Williams on Virgils sympathy
So powerful was Virgil’s sympathy for the defeated that it often seems to conflict with the triumph of Rome’s achievement
18
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Williams on how Aeneas was modelled to help romans
It is a great mistake to think that Aeneas was modelled on Augustus;
19
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Guinach on Virgil as an admirer
admirer of the First Citizen (princeps) and his policies and sought to promote the reconstruction that Augustus had in mind
20
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Parry on the mood of the Aeneid
frustration, loss and sadness
21
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Quinn on justifying the civil wars
he must make a serious attempt to justify Augustus’ conduct of the civil war
22
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Quinn on his audience
Virgil knew his audience would read the Aeneid with another war and another man in mind
23
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Sowerby on the customs in the Aeneid
the Aeneid is intimately connected with Roman history, ways and customs
24
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Williams on the major intention
the major intention of the Aeneid was to glorify Virgil’s own country
25
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Griffin on the key message of the poem
the cost of imperialism is high
26
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Williams on Virgils sympathy
he sympathized deeply with private sorrow, yet he still admired the Roman national programme
27
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Semple on war
Virgil in truth hated war
28
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Gransden on war
Virgil expresses a profound empathy for the young men on both sides
29
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Pattie on war
the violent death are presented in a way to seem unacceptable
30
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Griffin on the gods and fate
The participation of the divine marks the events as truly significant
31
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Gransden on Fate
Certain events are predetermined
32
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Ross on the gods and fate
Fate and the gods are everywhere throughout the poem
33
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Quinn on the gods and fate
human action is dominated constantly by a divine machinery
34
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Gransden on the gods
In the Aeneid the gods work through human wills and desires
35
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Pattie on the inclusion of the gods in the poem
it allows him to indulge his delight in depicting scenes of fancy and imaginations
36
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Camps on the gods and fate
The divine power in its dealings with mean appears as irresponsible and heartless
37
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Sowerby on Anchises and Ascanius in Book 2
the patriarchal ideal of Roman society
38
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Griffin on family relationships
There are no happy families in the Aeneid
39
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Gransden on father figures
The Aeneid is dominated by fathers and father-figures
40
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Syed on women symbolising their nations
Lavinia as the ‘proper’ Latin woman can be contrasted to the foreign, ‘wilder and chaotic’ Dido.
41
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Oliensis on gender in the Aeneid
Virgil associates the feminine with unruly passion
42
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Oliensis on virtuous women
The uncomplicatedly virtuous women of the epic, Creusa and Lavinia
43
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Reilly on the role of women
Virgil portrays women who step out of traditional gender roles as doomed to fail, even if they portray virtues that a Roman man should hold
44
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Griffin on women in the Aeneid
Women are on the whole, alarming and violent creatures, prone to the making of terrible scenes
45
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Quinn on the stories of Dido and Turnus being tragic
thus are partly but not wholly responsible for their destruction
46
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Sowerby on Dido
the innocent victim of the Roman destiny
47
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Sowerby on Turnus sympathy
all sympathy felt for him as the victim of inexorable fate
48
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Callen-King on Turnus
tool of Juno
49
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Sowerby on ira furor and lust
the emotions originating in the body are invariably a snare and a source of human misery in the Aeneid
50
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Quinn on the hero
The episodes (in the poem) are designed to stress the inadequacy of the hero’s code
51
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Pattie on Roman values
The Aeneid is about how Roman values superseded those of the heroic Homeric world
52
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Quinn on Virgil use of characterisation
to create complex characters worthy of a sympathy that can be intense but not uniform
53
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Quinn on the poem
intensely dramatic, equally influenced by Athenian tragedy as it is by Homer
54
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Quinn on what Virgil wanted his audience to know
to write a poem which, though modelled on Homer, was essentially different
55
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Gransden on the true value of the Aeneid
the true value of the Aeneid lies in its transformations of Homer
56
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Renshaw on the Odyssey 
the Odyssey is a story of romance, adventure, hospitality, and of justice prevailing over wickedness
57
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58
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Callen-king on the overall theme of the poem
Living is what matters in the Odyssey 
59
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Griffin on Justice 
Justice is both done and seen to be done
60
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Jones on the oikos is central to everything 
The Odyssey makes the household the centre of its world
61
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Halverson on the oikos vs nostos 
The integrity of the oikos \[household\] is..the central issue of the Odyssey,
62
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Griffin on the Oikos 
Odysseus comes from a close and affectionate human family
63
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Morrison on father and son importance 
An essential part of Odysseus is that he is the son of Laertes
64
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Murray on the fantasy to reality 
Homer presents the return to Ithaca as a return from fantasy to reality
65
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Goldhill on the oikos 
It is one's father's house, and his father's, in one's father's land (and his father's).
66
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Silk on revenge
‘Few of Homer’s modern readers would condone revenge killing… let alone acclaim it, but the Odyssey does
67
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Morrison on the public recognition 
public actions weigh more heavily than inner feelings
68
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Callen-King on Odyssean kleos
a new kind of kleos which recognises heroic living in various situations rather than death on the battlefield
69
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Callen-king on the suitors 
They commit the most egregious violation of hospitality
70
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Callen-King on xenia for Alcinous 
Alkinoos knows when and how to feed and entertain a guest, when to question him and when to send him off with guest gifts
71
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Callen-king on Polyphemus’ xenia
Polyphemus mocks the norms of hospitality by giving Odysseus the “guest gift” of being eaten last
72
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Jones on the suitors 
Reckless disregard for the bond of Xenia are enough to justify their deaths
73
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Jones on Nausicaa
Nausicaa goes into a full xenia sequence
74
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Jenkins on Odysseus and Penelope’s first conversation 
she does not recognise the actual husband sat before her.
75
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Morrison on Odysseus revealing his identity to the herdsmen
we see another side to Odysseus’ identity – Odysseus as lord and master of the house
76
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Parks on Athene as a role model in Book 1 
Athene’s disguise as Mentes introduces the motif of ‘disguised identity followed by significant revelation’
77
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Morrison on Odysseus learning from his mistakes 
There are costs to revealing your name, choosing to conceal it might have benefits
78
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Morrison on Argus recognising Odysseus 
Odysseus steels himself to conceal his emotions, something we know he must do for his disguise.
79
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Hall on Odysseus as a colonist 
he speaks with the discerning eye of the colonist
80
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Morrison on if Odysseus is a hero 
Odysseus achieved glory in part by underhandedness
81
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Graziosi on whether odysseus is a villain
a tragic hero, a stoic sage and a villain
82
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Jones on three ways to sum up Odysseus
loyal hero-husband, eternal wanderer, antihero
83
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Jones on metis of Odysseus 
The man of “metis” is essentially a deceiver
84
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Callen-king on the roles of Odysseus 
father, husband son and king
85
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CM BOWRA on the stupidity of Odysseus 
His need for cunning is enforced by his own recklessness.
86
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Manzuka on fate removing blame from Odysseus 
all had to die for reasons of fate
87
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Parks on Odysseus’ suffering 
Odysseus’ devotion to saving his crew is highlighted through this feeling of guilt
88
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Morrison on much enduring
that “much enduring” characteristic that adds to his heroism, fame and likability
89
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Finley on Penelope as a key motivator in the poem 
She is a key to the unity of the poem
90
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Griffin on Penelope like Odysseus 
Penelope shows herself to be like him
91
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Griffin on fidelity 
The fidelity of Odysseus’ wife is crucial to the story, and the contrast between her and the disloyal wife of Agamemnon is repeatedly emphasised
92
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Fagles on Od and Pen
partnership of intellectual equals
93
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Griffin on Telemachus’ maturation 
young man in the process of achieving adult status
94
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Jones on Telamachus learning from others 
young hero learns from what other heroes have to tell him, as much as from acting himself
95
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Jones on the Suitors being contradictory 
they constantly think one thing and say another
96
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Bowra on the lack of heroism in a a heroic age
the suitors are a degenerate corruption of heroes
97
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Jones on the suitors as Aegisthus 
The Suitors, despite divine warnings, take what they have no right to in Odysseus’ palace
98
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Morrison on Penelope’s trick with the loom
The trick doesn’t say much for the mental quickness of the Suitors.
99
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Camps on the supernatural 
Supernatural powers are at work everywhere
100
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Jones on the gods helping mortals as positive 
the gods help only those who are worthy of it