10/02/21 Homer and the Epic Cycle (CAH020N209A) | University of Roehampton Homer and the Epic Cycle View Online (CAH020N209A) (Academic year 2021-2022) 1. Homer, Rieu, E.V., Jones, P.V., Rieu, C.H.: The Iliad. Penguin, London (2003). 2. Homer, Rieu, E.V., Rieu, C.H.: The Odyssey. Penguin, London (2003). 3. Powell, Barry B.: Homer. Blackwell, Oxford (2007). 4. Redfield, James M.: Nature and culture in the Iliad: the tragedy of Hector. Duke University Press, Durham (1994). 5. Finley, M. I.: The world of Odysseus. Chatto and Windus, London (1977). 6. Jasper Griffin: The Epic Cycle and the Uniqueness of Homer. The Journal of Hellenic Studies. 97, 39–53 (1977). 7. 1/16 10/02/21 Homer and the Epic Cycle (CAH020N209A) | University of Roehampton M. L. West: ‘Iliad’ and ‘Aethiopis’. The Classical Quarterly. 53, 1–14 (2003). 8. Finkelberg, M.: The Cypria, the Iliad, and the Problem of Multiformity in Oral and Written Tradition. Classical Philology. 95, (20000101). 9. Davies, M.: The Epic Cycle. 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Walter Donlan: Homer’s Agamemnon. The Classical World. 65, (1971). 41. Rabel, R.J.: Chryses and the Opening of the Iliad. The American Journal of Philology. 109, (1988). https://doi.org/10.2307/295073. 42. Adam Parry: The Language of Achilles. Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association. 87, 1–7 (1956). 43. M. D. Reeve: The Language of Achilles. The Classical Quarterly. 23, 193–195 (1973). 44. Nagy, Gregory: The best of the Achaeans: concepts of the hero in archaic Greek poetry. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore (1999). 45. Shay, J.: Achilles in Vietnam: combat trauma and the undoing of character. Scribner, New York (2003). 6/16 10/02/21 Homer and the Epic Cycle (CAH020N209A) | University of Roehampton 46. Richard Holway: Becoming Achilles. Lexington Books, Lanham, Md (2012). 47. Leonard Muellner: The Anger Of Achilles. Cornell University Press. 48. Monsacre, H.: Tears of Achilles: 75. Center for Hellenic Studies, Washington, D.C (2017). 49. 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