Homeric Poetry Seminar Agenda
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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