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  1. Glory and Nostos_: The Ship-Epithet Κοιλοσ in the _Iliad.Matthew Ward - 2019 - Classical Quarterly 69 (1):23-34.
    In theIliadthe Achaean ships play a prominent role in the narrative; they are foregrounded as Achilles sits by his vessels in anger and threatens to sail home; as the Trojans come close to burning them; and as Hector's body lies by Achilles’ ships until ransomed. Where not in the foreground, the ships remain a consistent background; without them the Achaeans would not have reached Troy; they are an essential component of the Greek encampment; and are the unrealized potential vehicle of (...)
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  • Dog-Helen and homeric insult.Margaret Graver - 1995 - Classical Antiquity 14 (1):41-61.
    Helen's self-disparagement is an anomaly in epic diction, and this is especially true of those instances where she refers to herself as "dog" and "dog-face." This essay attempts to show that Helen's dog-language, in that it remains in conflict with other features of her characterization, has some generic significance for epic, helping to establish the superiority of epic performance over competing performance types which treated her differently. The metaphoric use of χύων and its derivatives has not been well understood: the (...)
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  • Discourse and performance: Involvement, visualization and `presence' in Homeric poetry.Egbert J. Bakker - 1993 - Classical Antiquity 12 (1):1-29.
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