Homeric Poetry Seminar Agenda

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Homeric Poetry Seminar Agenda

Sunoikisis Greek 291/391: Homeric Poetry Seminar Agenda, June 15-17, 2012 Faculty Consultant: Prof. Richard Martin (Stanford University) Course Director: Dr. Ryan Fowler (CHS Sunoikisis Fellow) This work by the Sunoikisis consortium is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/. Seminar Participants:  David Carlisle (Cornell College)  Prof. Hal Haskell (Southwestern University)  Prof. Nigel Nicholson (Reed College)  Prof. Arum Park (Brigham Young University)  Prof. Danilo Piana (Johns Hopkins University)  Prof. Brett Rogers (University of Puget Sound)  Prof. Joe Romero (University of Mary Washington)  Prof. Holy Sypniewski (Millsaps College)  Prof. Heather Vincent (Eckerd College).

Homeric Poetry Seminar Agenda This agenda guided the planning discussions for the fall 2012 Sunoikisis course on Homeric Poetry.

Friday, June 15 Time Event Location 8:00-9:00 Breakfast Common Room a.m. 9:00-10:30 First Session House A a.m. General Introductions, Overview, and Feedback • Introductions • Review of the evolution of Sunoikisis and the development of ICC's • Discussion of proposed modifications based on feedback from students

10:30-11:00 Coffee Break Common Room a.m. 11:00 a.m.- Second House A 12:30 p.m. Session Homeric Poetry Structure and Plot (Please read Iliad 1-2)

1. Griffin, J. 1977. “The Epic Cycle and the Uniqueness of Homer.” Journal of Hellenic Studies 97: 39–53. [David Carlisle will lead the discussion with assistance from Holly Sypniewski]

2. Martin, R. 2001. “Wrapping Homer Up: Cohesion, Discourse, and Deviation in the Iliad.” In Sharrock, A. and Morales, H. eds. Intratextuality: Greek and Roman Textual Relations . New York: Oxford University Press. 43-65. [Scott Garner will lead the discussion with assistance from Arum Park]

3. Carlisle, M. 1999. “Homeric Fictions: Pseudo-Words in Homer.” In Carlisle, M. and Levaniouk, O. eds. Nine Essays on Homer . Lanham, Maryland: Roman and Littlefield Publishers. 55-91. [Hal Haskell will lead the discussion with assistance from Joseph Romero]

4. Whitman, C. 1958. “Achilles: Evolution of a Hero,” in Homer and the Homeric Tradition . Cambridge: Havard University Press. 181- 220. [Heather Vincent will lead the discussion with assistance from Nigel Nicholson]

5. Lord, A. 1960. “Homer,” and “The Iliad,” in The Singer of Tales Cambridge: Harvard University Press. 141-157, 186-197. [DaniloPiana will lead the discussion with assistance from Ryan Fowler] 12:30-2:00 Lunch Dining Room p.m.

2:00-3:30 Third SessionHouse A p.m. Historical and Social Background (Iliad 3, 6)

1. Donlan, W. 1997. “The Homeric Economy.” In Morris, I. and Powell, B. eds. A New Companion to Homer . Leiden: Brill. 649-667. [Nigel Nicholson will lead the discussion with assistance from DaniloPiana]

2. Cairns, D. L. 2004. “Ethics, ethology, terminology: Iliadic anger and the cross-cultural study of emotion.” In Braund, S. and Most, G.W. eds. Ancient Anger. Perspectives from Homer to Galen . Yale Classical Studies 32 . 11-49. [Brett Rogers will lead the discussion with assistance from Joseph Romero]

3. Morris, I. 1986. “The Use and Abuse of Homer.” Classical Antiquity 5 : 81–136. [Holly Sypniewski will lead the discussion with assistance from Scott Garner]

4. Hammer, D. C. 1997. “‘Who Shall Readily Obey?’: Authority and Politics in the Iliad.” Phoenix 51.1: 1-24. [Hal Haskell will lead the discussion with assistance from Heather Vincent]

5. Rose, P. W. 1997. “Ideology in the Iliad: Polis , Basileus , Theoi ” Arethusa 30.2: 151-200. [Arum Park will lead the discussion with assistance from Ryan Fowler] 3:30-4:00 Coffee Break Common Room p.m. 4:00-5:30 Fourth House A p.m. Session Gods, Religion and Myth (Iliad 9, 15)

1. Kirk, G. S. 1990. “The Homeric Gods: prior considerations.” In Kirk, G. S. ed. The Iliad: A Commentary , volume II. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 1-14. [Ryan Fowler will lead the discussion with assistance from Brett Rogers]

2. Edwards, M. W. 1987. “Gods, Fate, and Mortality,” in Homer: Poet of the Iliad . Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press. 124-142. [Scott Garner will lead the discussion with assistance from Holly Sypniewski]

3. Edmunds, L. 1997. “Myth in Homer.” In Morris, I. and Powell, B. eds. A New Companion to Homer . Leiden: Brill. 415-441. [Hal Haskell will lead the discussion with assistance from Ryan Fowler]

4. Vernant, J. 1991. “A ‘Beautiful Death’ and the Disfigured Corpse in Homeric Epic.” In Zeitlin, F. I. ed. Mortals and Immortals: Collected Essays . Princeton: Princeton University Press. 50-74. [DaniloPiana will lead the discussion with assistance from David Carlisle]

5. Griffin, J. 1978. “The Divine Audience and the Religion of the Iliad,” Classical Quarterly 28: 1-22. [Heather Vincent will lead the discussion with assistance from Arum Park]

6. Nagy, G. 1979. The Best of the Achaeans . Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press. 174-210. [Joseph Romero will lead the discussion with assistance from Nigel Nicholson] 6:00-8:00 Dinner TBA p.m.

Saturday, June 16 8:00-9:00 Breakfast Common Room a.m. 9:00-10:30 First Session House A a.m. Language, Formula and Speech (Iliad 16-17)

1. Janko, R. 1992. “The origins and evolution of the epic diction.” In Janko, R. ed. The Iliad: A Commentary, volume IV . Oxford: Oxford University Press. 8-19. [Arum Park will lead the discussion with assistance from DaniloPiana]

2. Morrell, K. S. 1996. “Chaos Theory and the Oral Tradition: Nonlinearity and Bifurcation in the Iliad” Helios 23.2: 107-134. [Ryan Fowler will lead the discussion with assistance from Scott Garner]

3. Parry, M. 1971. The Making of Homeric Verse: The Collected Papers of Milman Parry . Oxford: Oxford University Press. ix-23. [Nigel Nicholson will lead the discussion with assistance from David Carlisle]

4. Griffin, J. 1986. “Homeric Words and Speakers.” JHS 106: 36-57. [Holly Sypniewski will lead the discussion with assistance from Brett Rogers]

5. Martin, R. P. 1989. “The Language of Achilles,” in The Language of Heroes: Speech and Performance in the Iliad . Ithaca: Cornell University Press. 146-205. [Joseph Romero will lead the discussion with assistance from Hal Haskell] 10:30-11:00 Coffee Break Common Room a.m. 11:00 a.m.- Second House A 12:30 p.m. Session Battles and Type-Scenes (Iliad 18-19)

1. Edwards, M. W. 1980. “Convention and Individuality in Iliad 1.” HSCP 84: 1-28. [David Carlisle will lead the discussion with assistance from Scott Garner]

2. Hesk, J. 2006. “Homeric Flyting and how to read it: performance and intratext in Iliad 20.83-109 and 20.178- 258.” Ramus 35.1: 4-28. [Arum Park will lead the discussion with assistance fromNigel Nicholson]

3. vanWees, H. 1997. “Homeric Warfare.” In Morris, I. and Powell, B. eds. A New Companion to Homer . Leiden: Brill. 668-693. [Ryan Fowler will lead the discussion with assistance from Holly Sypniewski] 12:30-2:00 Lunch Dining Room p.m.

2:00-3:30 Third Session House A p.m. Genre and Style (Iliad 20-21)

1. Edwards, M. W. 1991. “Similes.” In Edwards, M. W. eds. The Iliad: A Commentary, volume V . Oxford: Oxford University Press. 24-41. [Brett Rogers will lead the discussion with assistance from Arum Park]

2. Edwards, M. W. 1991. “Style.” In Edwards, M. W. eds. The Iliad: A Commentary, volume V . Oxford: Oxford University Press. 42-60. [Scott Garner will lead the discussion with assistance from Heather Vincent]

3. Martin, R. 2005. “Epic as Genre.” In Foley, J. M. ed. A Companion to Ancient Epic . Oxford: Blackwell. Chapter 1. [Holly Sypniewski will lead the discussion with assistance from DaniloPiana]

4. Nagy, G. 1999. “Epic as Genre.” In Beissinger, M., Tylus, J. and Wofford, S. eds. Epic Traditions in the Contemporary World: The Poetics of Community. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. 21-32. [Ryan Fowler will lead the discussion with assistance from David Carlisle] 3:30-4:00 Coffee Break Common Room p.m. 4:00-5:30 Fourth House A p.m. Session Narratives and Audiences (Iliad 22)

1. Crotty, K. 1994. “Supplication and the Poetics of the Iliad,” in The Poetics of Supplication: Homer's Iliad and Odyssey. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. 89-104. [Arum Park will lead the discussion with assistance from Ryan Fowler]

2. de Jong, I. 1997. “Homer and Narratology.” In Morris, I. and Powell, B. eds. A New Companion to Homer . Leiden: Brill. 305-325. [David Carlisle will lead the discussion with assistance from Heather Vincent]

3. Morrison, J. V. 1992. “Alternatives to the Epic Tradition: Homer's Challenges in the Iliad.” TAPA 122: 61-71. [DaniloPiana will lead the discussion with assistance from Joseph Romero]

4. Dalby, A. 1995. “The Iliad, the Odyssey and their Audiences.” Classical Quarterly 45: 169-279. [Brett Rogers will lead the discussion with assistance from Hal Haskell] 6:00-8:00 Dinner TBA p.m.

Sunday, June 17 8:00-9:00 amBreakfast Common Room 9:00-10:30 First Session House A am Poetry in Performance (Iliad 23-24)

1. Martin, R. 1997. “Similes and Performance.” In Bakker, E. and Kahane, A. eds. Written Voices, Spoken Signs: Tradition, Performance and the Epic Text. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. 138-66. [Nigel Nicholson will lead the discussion with assistance from Arum Park]

2. Bakker, E. 1997. “Storytelling in the Future: Truth, Time, and Tense in Homeric Epic.” In Bakker, E. and Kahane, A. eds. Written Voices, Spoken Signs: Tradition, Performance, and the Epic Text . Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, reprinted as Chapter Six of Pointing at the Past: From Formula to Performance in Homeric Poetics . Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. 2005. 11-36. [Brett Rogers will lead the discussion with assistance fromHeather Vincent]

3. Nagy, G. 1995. “An Evolutionary Model for the Making of Homeric Poetry.” In Carter, J. and Morris, S. eds. The Ages of Homer . Austin: University of Texas Press. 163-179. Reprinted in G. Nagy. 1996. Homeric Questions . Austin: University of Texas Press. 29-63. [David Carlisle will lead the discussion with assistance from DaniloPiana]

4. Nagy, G. 1996. “Homer and the Evolution of a Homeric Text,” in Homeric Questions . Austin: University of Texas Press. 65-112. [Joseph Romero will lead the discussion with assistance fromScott Garner] 10:30-11:00 Coffee Break Common Room a.m. 11:00 a.m.- Second House A 12:30 p.m. Session Iliad 1, 9, 24

1. Muellner, L. 1996. “The Mênis of Achilles and the First Book of the Iliad," in The Anger of Achilles: Mênis in Greek Epic . Ithaca: Cornell University Press. 94-175. [Heather Vincent will lead the discussion with assistance from Brett Rogers]

2. Lynn-George, M. 1988. “The Epic Theatre: the Language of Achilles,” in Epos, Word, Narrative and the Iliad . Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press International. 50-140. [Nigel Nicholson will lead the discussion with assistance from Arum Park]

3. Myres, J.L. 1932. “The Last Book of the Iliad.” JHS 52: 264-296. [DaniloPiana will lead the discussion with assistance from David Carlisle]

4. deJauregui, M.H. 2011. “Priam'sCatabasis: Traces of the epic journey to Hades in Iliad 24.” TAPhA 141.1: 37-68. [Hal Haskell will lead the discussion with assistance fromJoseph Romero]

5. Wilson, D. 1999. “Symbolic Violence in Iliad Book 9.” CW 93.2: 131-147. [Scott Garner will lead the discussion with assistance from Holly Sypniewski]

12:30-2:00 Lunch Dining Room p.m.

2:00-3:30 Third Session House A p.m. Spillover and Preliminary Assignments

3:30-4:00 Coffee Break Common Room p.m. 4:00-5:30 Fourth House A p.m. Session Overview and Final Preparations: Assignments and Schedule • Discussion of the lecture topics and lecturers • Setting the calendar for midterm and final essay examinations

6:00 p.m. Dinner TBA

2012 Seminar Syllabus Homer

This is a preliminary agenda. Please forward comments and suggestions to [email protected].

Friday, June 15 Time Event Location 8:00-9:00 Breakfast Common Room a.m. 9:00- First House A 10:30 Session a.m. General Introductions, Overview, and Feedback Introductions Review of the evolution of Sunoikisis and the development of ICC's Discussion of proposed modifications based on feedback from students

10:30- Coffee Common Room 11:00 Break a.m. 11:00 Second House A a.m.- Session 12:30 p.m. Homeric Poetry Structure and Plot (Please read Iliad 1-2)

1. Griffin, J. 1977. “The Epic Cycle and the Uniqueness of Homer.” Journal of Hellenic Studies 97: 39–53. [David Carlisle will lead the discussion with assistance from Holly Sypniewski]

2. Martin, R. 2001. “Wrapping Homer Up: Cohesion, Discourse, and Deviation in the Iliad.” In Sharrock, A. and Morales, H. eds. Intratextuality: Greek and Roman Textual Relations . New York: Oxford University Press. 43-65. [Scott Garner will lead the discussion with assistance from Arum Park]

3. Carlisle, M. 1999. “Homeric Fictions: Pseudo-Words in Homer.” In Carlisle, M. and Levaniouk, O. eds. Nine Essays on Homer . Lanham, Maryland: Roman and Littlefield Publishers. 55-91. [Hal Haskell will lead the discussion with assistance from Joseph Romero]

4. Whitman, C. 1958. “Achilles: Evolution of a Hero,” in Homer and the Homeric Tradition . Cambridge: Havard University Press. 181-220. [Heather Vincent will lead the discussion with assistance from Nigel Nicholson]

5. Lord, A. 1960. “Homer,” and “The Iliad,” in The Singer of Tales Cambridge: Harvard University Press. 141-157, 186-197. [DaniloPiana will lead the discussion with assistance from Ryan Fowler] 12:30- Lunch Dining Room 2:00 p.m.

2:00-3:30 Third House A p.m. Session Historical and Social Background (Iliad 3, 6)

1. Donlan, W. 1997. “The Homeric Economy.” In Morris, I. and Powell, B. eds. A New Companion to Homer . Leiden: Brill. 649-667. [Nigel Nicholson will lead the discussion with assistance from DaniloPiana]

2. Cairns, D. L. 2004. “Ethics, ethology, terminology: Iliadic anger and the cross-cultural study of emotion.” In Braund, S. and Most, G.W. eds. Ancient Anger. Perspectives from Homer to Galen . Yale Classical Studies 32 . 11-49. [Brett Rogers will lead the discussion with assistance from Joseph Romero]

3. Morris, I. 1986. “The Use and Abuse of Homer.” Classical Antiquity 5 : 81–136. [Holly Sypniewski will lead the discussion with assistance from Scott Garner]

4. Hammer, D. C. 1997. “‘Who Shall Readily Obey?’: Authority and Politics in the Iliad.” Phoenix 51.1: 1-24. [Hal Haskell will lead the discussion with assistance from Heather Vincent]

5. Rose, P. W. 1997. “Ideology in the Iliad: Polis , Basileus , Theoi ” Arethusa 30.2: 151-200. [Arum Park will lead the discussion with assistance from Ryan Fowler] 3:30-4:00 Coffee Common Room p.m. Break 4:00-5:30 Fourth House A p.m. Session Gods, Religion and Myth (Iliad 9, 15)

1. Kirk, G. S. 1990. “The Homeric Gods: prior considerations.” In Kirk, G. S. ed. The Iliad: A Commentary , volume II. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 1-14. [Ryan Fowler will lead the discussion with assistance from Brett Rogers]

2. Edwards, M. W. 1987. “Gods, Fate, and Mortality,” in Homer: Poet of the Iliad . Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press. 124-142. [Scott Garner will lead the discussion with assistance from Holly Sypniewski]

3. Edmunds, L. 1997. “Myth in Homer.” In Morris, I. and Powell, B. eds. A New Companion to Homer . Leiden: Brill. 415-441. [Hal Haskell will lead the discussion with assistance from Ryan Fowler]

4. Vernant, J. 1991. “A ‘Beautiful Death’ and the Disfigured Corpse in Homeric Epic.” In Zeitlin, F. I. ed. Mortals and Immortals: Collected Essays . Princeton: Princeton University Press. 50-74. [DaniloPiana will lead the discussion with assistance from David Carlisle]

5. Griffin, J. 1978. “The Divine Audience and the Religion of the Iliad,” Classical Quarterly 28: 1-22. [Heather Vincent will lead the discussion with assistance from Arum Park]

6. Nagy, G. 1979. The Best of the Achaeans . Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press. 174-210. [Joseph Romero will lead the discussion with assistance from Nigel Nicholson] 6:00-8:00 Dinner TBA p.m.

Saturday, June 16 8:00-9:00 Breakfast Common Room a.m. 9:00- First House A 10:30 a.m. Session Language, Formula and Speech (Iliad 16-17)

1. Janko, R. 1992. “The origins and evolution of the epic diction.” In Janko, R. ed. The Iliad: A Commentary, volume IV . Oxford: Oxford University Press. 8-19. [Arum Park will lead the discussion with assistance from DaniloPiana]

2. Morrell, K. S. 1996. “Chaos Theory and the Oral Tradition: Nonlinearity and Bifurcation in the Iliad” Helios 23.2: 107-134. [Ryan Fowler will lead the discussion with assistance from Scott Garner]

3. Parry, M. 1971. The Making of Homeric Verse: The Collected Papers of Milman Parry . Oxford: Oxford University Press. ix-23. [Nigel Nicholson will lead the discussion with assistance from David Carlisle]

4. Griffin, J. 1986. “Homeric Words and Speakers.” JHS 106: 36-57. [Holly Sypniewski will lead the discussion with assistance from Brett Rogers]

5. Martin, R. P. 1989. “The Language of Achilles,” in The Language of Heroes: Speech and Performance in the Iliad . Ithaca: Cornell University Press. 146-205. [Joseph Romero will lead the discussion with assistance from Hal Haskell] 10:30- Coffee Common Room 11:00 a.m. Break 11:00 Second House A a.m.-12:30Session p.m. Battles and Type-Scenes Iliad 18-19)

1. Edwards, M. W. 1980. “Convention and Individuality in Iliad 1.” HSCP 84: 1-28. [David Carlisle will lead the discussion with assistance from Scott Garner]

2. Hesk, J. 2006. “Homeric Flyting and how to read it: performance and intratext in Iliad 20.83-109 and 20.178-258.” Ramus 35.1: 4-28. [Arum Park will lead the discussion with assistance fromNigel Nicholson]

3. vanWees, H. 1997. “Homeric Warfare.” In Morris, I. and Powell, B. eds. A New Companion to Homer . Leiden: Brill. 668-693. [Ryan Fowler will lead the discussion with assistance from Holly Sypniewski] 12:30- Lunch Dining Room 2:00 p.m.

2:00-3:30 Third House A p.m. Session Genre and Style (Iliad 20-21)

1. Edwards, M. W. 1991. “Similes.” In Edwards, M. W. eds. The Iliad: A Commentary, volume V . Oxford: Oxford University Press. 24-41. [Brett Rogers will lead the discussion with assistance from Arum Park]

2. Edwards, M. W. 1991. “Style.” In Edwards, M. W. eds. The Iliad: A Commentary, volume V . Oxford: Oxford University Press. 42-60. [Scott Garner will lead the discussion with assistance from Heather Vincent]

3. Martin, R. 2005. “Epic as Genre.” In Foley, J. M. ed. A Companion to Ancient Epic . Oxford: Blackwell. Chapter 1. [Holly Sypniewski will lead the discussion with assistance from DaniloPiana]

4. Nagy, G. 1999. “Epic as Genre.” In Beissinger, M., Tylus, J. and Wofford, S. eds. Epic Traditions in the Contemporary World: The Poetics of Community. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. 21-32. [Ryan Fowler will lead the discussion with assistance from David Carlisle] 3:30-4:00 Coffee Common Room p.m. Break 4:00-5:30 Fourth House A p.m. Session Narratives and Audiences (Iliad 22)

1. Crotty, K. 1994. “Supplication and the Poetics of the Iliad,” in The Poetics of Supplication: Homer's Iliad and Odyssey. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. 89-104. [Arum Park will lead the discussion with assistance from Ryan Fowler]

2. de Jong, I. 1997. “Homer and Narratology.” In Morris, I. and Powell, B. eds. A New Companion to Homer . Leiden: Brill. 305-325. [David Carlisle will lead the discussion with assistance from Heather Vincent]

3. Morrison, J. V. 1992. “Alternatives to the Epic Tradition: Homer's Challenges in the Iliad.” TAPA 122: 61-71. [DaniloPiana will lead the discussion with assistance from Joseph Romero]

4. Dalby, A. 1995. “The Iliad, the Odyssey and their Audiences.” Classical Quarterly 45: 169-279. [Brett Rogers will lead the discussion with assistance from Hal Haskell] 6:00-8:00 Dinner TBA p.m.

Sunday, June 17 8:00-9:00 Breakfast Common Room am 9:00- First House A 10:30 am Session Poetry in Performance (Iliad 23-24)

1. Martin, R. 1997. “Similes and Performance.” In Bakker, E. and Kahane, A. eds. Written Voices, Spoken Signs: Tradition, Performance and the Epic Text. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. 138- 66. [Nigel Nicholson will lead the discussion with assistance from Arum Park]

2. Bakker, E. 1997. “Storytelling in the Future: Truth, Time, and Tense in Homeric Epic.” In Bakker, E. and Kahane, A. eds. Written Voices, Spoken Signs: Tradition, Performance, and the Epic Text . Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, reprinted as Chapter Six of Pointing at the Past: From Formula to Performance in Homeric Poetics . Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. 2005. 11-36. [Brett Rogers will lead the discussion with assistance fromHeather Vincent]

3. Nagy, G. 1995. “An Evolutionary Model for the Making of Homeric Poetry.” In Carter, J. and Morris, S. eds. The Ages of Homer . Austin: University of Texas Press. 163-179. Reprinted in G. Nagy. 1996. Homeric Questions . Austin: University of Texas Press. 29-63. [David Carlisle will lead the discussion with assistance from DaniloPiana]

4. Nagy, G. 1996. “Homer and the Evolution of a Homeric Text,” in Homeric Questions . Austin: University of Texas Press. 65-112. [Joseph Romero will lead the discussion with assistance fromScott Garner] 10:30- Coffee Common Room 11:00 a.m. Break 11:00 Second House A a.m.-12:30Session p.m. Iliad 1, 9, 24

1. Muellner, L. 1996. “The Mênis of Achilles and the First Book of the Iliad," in The Anger of Achilles: Mênis in Greek Epic . Ithaca: Cornell University Press. 94-175. [Heather Vincent will lead the discussion with assistance from Brett Rogers]

2. Lynn-George, M. 1988. “The Epic Theatre: the Language of Achilles,” in Epos, Word, Narrative and the Iliad . Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press International. 50-140. [Nigel Nicholson will lead the discussion with assistance from Arum Park]

3. Myres, J.L. 1932. “The Last Book of the Iliad.” JHS 52: 264-296. [DaniloPiana will lead the discussion with assistance from David Carlisle]

4. deJauregui, M.H. 2011. “Priam'sCatabasis: Traces of the epic journey to Hades in Iliad 24.” TAPhA 141.1: 37-68. [Hal Haskell will lead the discussion with assistance fromJoseph Romero]

5. Wilson, D. 1999. “Symbolic Violence in Iliad Book 9.” CW 93.2: 131-147. [Scott Garner will lead the discussion with assistance from Holly Sypniewski] 12:30- Lunch Dining Room 2:00 p.m.

2:00-3:30 Third House A p.m. Session Spillover and Preliminary Assignments

3:30-4:00 Coffee Common Room p.m. Break 4:00-5:30 Fourth House A p.m. Session Overview and Final Preparations: Assignments and Schedule Discussion of the lecture topics and lecturers Setting the calendar for midterm and final essay examinations

6:00 p.m. Dinner TBA

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