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Approaches to Teaching Homer's Iliad and Odyssey

PUBLISHER Modern Language Association of America (01/01/1987)
PRODUCT TYPE Hardcover (Hardcover)

Description

Homer's epics usually appear first in anthologies used for the general literature courses required of most college and high school students throughout the country. His influence extends beyond the confines of English and classics departments into seminars offered in comparative literature, history, philosophy, and the social sciences. This volume in the Approaches to Teaching World Literature series describes how teachers present Homer in the classroom and convey to students the importance of his epics in Western culture.

Like other books in the series, this one is divided into two parts. The first part, "Materials," reviews editions and translations of the Iliad and Odyssey and surveys secondary readings and audiovisual materials for both students and instructors. The second part, "Approaches," consists of seventeen essays by specialists and nonspecialists on teaching Homer in upper-division literature seminars, in undergraduate surveys, in composition courses, and in disciplines other than English and classics. The essays discuss backgrounds, influences, and themes and describe specific approaches, such as using the Iliad as a springboard for teaching literary history, examining what the Odyssey offers modern readers, and reading Aristotles's Poetics to glean insights into Homer's achievement.

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Product Format
Product Details
ISBN-13: 9780873525008
ISBN-10: 0873525000
Binding: Hardback or Cased Book (Unsewn / Adhesive Bound)
Content Language: English
More Product Details
Page Count: 158
Carton Quantity: 37
Product Dimensions: 6.05 x 0.40 x 9.06 inches
Weight: 0.52 pound(s)
Feature Codes: Bibliography, Index
Country of Origin: US
Subject Information
BISAC Categories
Education | Teaching - Subjects - Arts & Humanities
Education | Medieval
Education | Ancient and Classical
Dewey Decimal: 883.01
Library of Congress Control Number: 86031167
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Homer's epics usually appear first in anthologies used for the general literature courses required of most college and high school students throughout the country. His influence extends beyond the confines of English and classics departments into seminars offered in comparative literature, history, philosophy, and the social sciences. This volume in the Approaches to Teaching World Literature series describes how teachers present Homer in the classroom and convey to students the importance of his epics in Western culture.

Like other books in the series, this one is divided into two parts. The first part, "Materials," reviews editions and translations of the Iliad and Odyssey and surveys secondary readings and audiovisual materials for both students and instructors. The second part, "Approaches," consists of seventeen essays by specialists and nonspecialists on teaching Homer in upper-division literature seminars, in undergraduate surveys, in composition courses, and in disciplines other than English and classics. The essays discuss backgrounds, influences, and themes and describe specific approaches, such as using the Iliad as a springboard for teaching literary history, examining what the Odyssey offers modern readers, and reading Aristotles's Poetics to glean insights into Homer's achievement.

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Editor: Myrsiades, Kostas
Kostas Myrsiades is Professor of Comparative Literature and English at West Chester University in Pennsylvania. He is a distinguished translator and neo-hellenist and the first American to receive the Gold Medallion for his translations from the Hellenic Society of Translators of Literature. His work in Greek letters is not only demonstrated in his 18 published books and numerous articles on modern and ancient Greek literature but also in the many invited lectures he has delivered for such groups as the Jane Globus Seminar Series Lecture at Baruch College, the Elytis Chair Lecture Series of Poetry and Neohellenic Studies at Rutgers, and the Embassy of Greece/National Library of Canada Lecture at Ottawa. He is the editor of College Literature, a quarterly of literary criticism, theory, and pedagogy, which has been the recipient of six awards from the Council of Editors of Learned Journals, including the Phoenix Award for distinguished editorial achievement.
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Hardcover