Edited By Margaret Beissinger, Jane Tylus, and Susanne Wofford
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS
Berkeley · Los Angeles · Oxford
© 1999 The Regents of the University of California
Preferred Citation: Beissinger, Margaret, Jane Tylus, and Susanne Wofford, editors. Epic Traditions in the Contemporary World: The Poetics of Community. Berkeley: University of California Press, c1999 1999. http://ark.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/ft40000565/
INTRODUCTION
SECTION ONE— ON THE MARGINS OF THE SCRIBAL: FROM ORAL EPIC TO TEXT
1— Epic as Genre
2— Performing Interpretation: Early Allegorical Exegesis of Homer
3— The Arabic Epic Poet as Outcast, Trickster, and Con Man
4— Epic, Gender, and Nationalism: The Development of Nineteenth-Century Balkan Literature
SECTION TWO— EPIC AND AUTHORITY
5— Metamorphosis, Metaphor, and Allegory in Latin Epic
6— Tasso's Trees: Epic and Local Culture
7— Appropriating the Epic: Gender, Caste, and Regional Identity in Middle India
SECTION THREE— THE BOUNDARIES OF EPIC PERFORMANCE
8— Problematic Performances: Overlapping Genres and Levels of Participation in Arabic Oral Epic-Singing
9— Worshiping Epic Villains: A Kaurava Cult in the Central Himalayas
SECTION FOUR— EPIC AND LAMENT
10— The Natural Tears of Epic
11— The Poetics of Loss in Greek Epic
12— The Role of Lament in the Growth and Eclipse of Roman Epic
SECTION FIVE— EPIC AND PEDAGOGY
13— Epics and the Politics of the Origin Tale: Virgil, Ovid, Spenser, and Native American Aetiology
14— Walcott's Omeros : The Classical Epic in a Postmodern World
Notes
CONTRIBUTORS
INDEX
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
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