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发表于 2003-6-18 06:25:20
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Homer and Questions of Oral Poetry
Homer and Questions of Oral Poetry
Gregory Nagy
Harvard, Prof. of Comp. Lit.
[1]Cf. N 1990a.17-51.
[2]Cf. Lord 1991.2-3, 16. On the disadvantages of the term, see Martin 1989.4, who also quotes Herzfeld 1985b.202: “Even the recognition of folk texts as ‘oral literature’ ... merely projected an elegant oxymoron: by defining textuality in terms of ‘literature’, a purely verbocentric conception, it left arbitration in the control of ‘high culture.’”
[3]Finnegan 1976.
[4]Bremer, de Jong, and Kalff 1987.
[5]N 1990b.207. For an archaeological attestation of a writing tablet in the format of a diptych made of boxwood, with ivory hinge, dated to the late 14th or early 13th century B.C.E. see Bass 1990.
[6]See cross-ref.{tag 773} below.
[7]Finnegan 1991.106.
[8]It is from this perspective that I have used the word tradition in my previous work as well, e.g. N 1979.3. More explicitly in N 1990a.57-61, 70-72 (cf. also pp. 349, 411). I therefore find the criticism of Peradotto 1990.100n2 unjustified. I would add the observation, derived from the reference to my own work just given, that there can be different levels of rigidity or flexibility in different traditions, even in different phases of the same given tradition. Also, that there are situations where the empirical methods of disciplines such as linguistics can be applied to determine what aspects of a given tradition are older or newer.
[9]Cf. N 1990a.17n2, with bibliography on the useful concepts of parole and langue.
[10]Goody and Watt 1968.32, following the work of Bohannan 1952; cf. Morris 1986.87. Further discussion in Jensen 1980.98-99 and Thomas 1989.178-179n58 and 188n85.
[11]Pace Lloyd-Jones 1992.57, who claims that my approach romanticizes tradition; his arguments have been anticipated by the counter-arguments in N 1990a.1.
[12]For an enlightening introduction to the term, see Nettl 1983.6-7, 9.
[13]Lord 1991.2.
[14]For a useful summary, with bibliography, see Ducrot and Todorov 1979.137-144; cf. N 1990a.4.
[15]N 1990b.20-21. See also cross-ref.{tag 953} above.
[16]Lord 1960.28. My use of the term performance is not intended to convey any connotations of a stage-presence, as it were, on the part of the performer. I have in mind rather the performative dimension of an utterance, as analyzed from an anthropological perspective. For a pragmatic application of the word performative, see for example Tambiah 1985.123-166. Cf. Martin 1989.231: “authoritative self-presentation to an audience.”
[17]The word will not be used in the sense of a “diffusionist” approach, familiar to linguists and folklorists.
[18]Cf. N 1990b.9n10, following Lord 1960.68-98; for an altered working definition, see Lord 1991.26-27.
[19]N 1990b.29.
[20]Cf. Lord 1991.73-74.
[21]Parry 1971 [1930].272.
[22]Parry 1971 [1930].276 (italics mine).
[23]N 1990b.24, following Lord 1960.53.
[24]Cf. N 1990a.55-56.
[25]N 1979.6-7.
[26]N 1990a.53; further discussion below. It is hazardous to retroject to the ancient world our contemporary notions of the “author”—notably the individual author. On the semantic problems of retrojecting our notions of the individual, see Held 1991.
[27]A model for a combined synchronic and diachronic approach: Sherratt 1990. Reacting to Martin’s application (1989.7-10), with regard to the problem of Homeric composition / performance, of a wide range of comparative evidence about different kinds of performer-audience interaction, Griffin 1991.5 invokes “the unambiguous evidence, on the subject of Homeric performance, of the Homeric poems,” referring to the descriptions of performances like those of Phemios in Odyssey i. My response is to ask this question: how exactly are such performances as those of Phemios “Homeric?” In other words, how does the Homeric representation of poetry correspond to the essence of Homeric poetry itself? Can we simply assume, with Griffin, that there is no gap between the two kinds of “poetry?” The results of my own study of the question suggests that there is indeed a gap (see especially N 1990a.21, 14 where I develop the concept of “diachronic skewing”).
[28]On the world of Homeric poetry in the second millennium B.C.E., see Vermeule 1986, especially p. 85n28. For the perspective of the eight century B.C.E., see Morris 1986. Commenting on Moses Finley’s title, The World of Odysseus (1977), Catenacci 1993.21 suggests that a more apt title would be The Possible World of Odysseus, citing further bibliography on theories of “possible worlds.”
[29]N 1990a.78-81. On the meaning of Homêros, see cross-ref. n{tag 668} below.
[30]Cf. Kleingünther 1933.
[31]For an illuminating discussion of culture heroes in Chinese traditions, cf. Raphals 1992.53: Yi invents the bow; Zhu, armor, Xi Zhong, the carriage, Qiao Chui, the boat.
[32]N 1985.33 and N 1990a.170, 368.
[33]Cf. N 1990a.55, especially with reference to Plato Ion 533d-536d. In the Homeric Hymn to Apollo, the dramatized first-person speaker claims the identity of Homer: detailed discussion in N pp. 375-377 (expanding on N 1979.8-9) and N 1990b [1982].54 (cf. Clay 1989.53 with n111 and p. 55 with n116).
[34]Carey 1992.285 argues that, “in his approach to Greek literature in general, Nagy overemphasizes the tradition at the expense of the individual.” I would counterargue that my approach gives due credit to tradition in contexts where many contemporary Classicists overemphasize the individual poet at the expense of tradition: see especially N 1990a.79-80.
[35]N p. 79, in response to Griffith 1983.58n82.
[36]Zumthor 1972.68.
[37]N 1990a.72 and n99, with bibliography.
[38]Detailed discussion in N 1990b.18-35, explaining the results of N 1974.
[39]Ibid.
[40]Finnegan 1977.
[41]Finnegan p. 59.
[42]Parry 1971 [1930] 270.
[43]Davidson 1994.62.
[44]Davidson, ibid., in response to the claims of Finnegan 1977.62 about the metrical conditioning of formulas. On the relationship of formula and meter, see N 1990b.18-35; cf. Lord 1991.73-74. For further criticism of Finnegan’s interpretation of Parry’s understanding of the formula, see Miller 1982b.32.
[45]Davidson , ibid.
[46]Finnegan 1977.64.
[47]Finnegan p. 62.
[48]See Davidson 1994.60-62 and N 1990b.18-35; cf. Lord 1991.73-74. For a wide-ranging critique of various definitions of the formula, with special reference to Austin 1975 (11-80), Finnegan 1977 (54-55, 73-86), Kiparsky 1976, Nagler 1974 (23), see Miller 1982a.35-48. (I leave open, however, the question of whether or not there was a distinct Aeolic phase in the development of Homeric diction.)
[49]Finnegan 1977.71.
[50]Davidson 1994.62.
[51]Martin 1989.92 observes: “only a deracinated, print culture would view Homeric formulas as devices to aid the composition of poetry.” Rather, formulas “belong to the ‘composition’, if you like, of personal identity in a traditional world” (ibid.). All this is not to say that we cannot find gaps in Parry’s argumentation. For an attempt at pinpointing such gaps, I cite the subtle arguments of Lynn-George 1988.55-81. The issues raised by Lynn-George call for an Auseinandersetzung, the scope of which would surpass what is being attempted in this presentation.
[52]N 1990b [1976].24. See also Martin 1989.8n30 disputing Shive 1987 on the questions of economy and extension. I notice that Janko 1982.24 uses the expression “the tendency to economy” in the following formulation: “The tendency to economy is only properly applied within the poetry of the same composer, and even there, as Edwards has shown [Janko p. 241n16 cites Edwards 1971 Ch. 5], it was less strict than has been thought.” Actually, the more basic point is that the principle of economy is to be observed on the level of individual performance: Lord 1960.53f; cf. also Lord 1991.73-74. For a demonstration of the remarkable degrees of economy in Homeric composition, see also Visser 1987, who shows that each of 25 expressions for “he killed” in the Iliad occupies a distinct metrical slot.
[53]Again, N 1990a.79. There are, of course, areas where rules do not apply, inviting free variation. I borrow the concept of free variant from the field of descriptive linguistics(try Bloomfield). This concept is particularly useful for describing those aspects of tradition where innovation is most likely to take place (thanks to Loukia Athanassaki, December 30, 1990); see also Martin 1989.151n16.
[54]Miller 1982b.5-8.
[55]Miller p. 7.
[56]These three assumptions are restated and then refuted by Miller pp. 90-91. I agree with Miller (p. 46) that that “much paper has been wasted” on the “pseudo-issue” of “whether improvisation-composition involves memorization or not” (he provides bibliography), “partly out of misunderstanding Lord, and partly out of misconceptions about the nature of language in general and improvisation in particular.” For more on the pitfalls of using the concept of memorization, see Lord 1991.236-237. I am sympathetic, however, to the idea of a dichotomy of improvisation vs. memorization as discussed by Jensen 1980.13, provided that the two terms are used in a diachronic context, referring respectively to relatively more fluid vs. more static phases of oral tradition. On the distinction of fluid vs. static phases, see cross-ref.{tag 929} below.
[57]The concepts of unity and single author are not necessarily the same thing. I can justify, at least in terms of my “evolutionary model,” to be discussed below, the doubts expressed by Sealey 1957.330 about a “single author” of the Iliad and Odyssey—as if he were a historical reality. Still, I have no doubts that the notion of such a single author was indeed a historical reality in the ancient world. Further, I will argue that this notion was connected with the notion of a unified and singular corpus of heroic poetry.
[58]N 1979.41, 78-79. On unity and coherence in the structure of evolving institutions like the Olympics, cf. N p. 7.
Selected Bibliography on "Homeric Questions"
A New Companion to Homer. ed. Ian Morris and Barry Powell. Leiden, 1996
Ages of Homer: A tribute to Emily Thounsend Vermeule. Austin, 1994
Allen, T. W. Homer: The Origins and Transmission. Oxford, 1924
Chantraine, P. Grammaire Homérique I-II. Paris, 1953
Chadwick, J. The Decipherment of Linear B. Cambridge, 1958
Felson-Rubin, Nancy. Regarding Penelope: From Character to Poetics. Princeton University Press, 1994.
Haslam, M. "Homeric Papyri and Transmission of the Text." A New Companion to Homer. ed. I. Morris and B. Powell. Leiden, 1996, pp. 55-100
Hooker, J. T. Linear B: An Introduction. Bristol, 1980
Janko, R. Homer, Hesiod, and the Hymns: Diachronic Development in Epic Diction. Cambrdige, 1982
Jensen, M. The Homeric Question and the Oral-Formulaic Theory. Copenhagen, 1980
Katz, Marylin. Penelope's Renown: Meaning and Interderterminacy in the Odyssey. Princeton University Press, 1991
Kirk, G. The Songs of Homer. Cambridge, 1962
Lord, A. The Singer Resumes the Tale. Ithaca, 1995
Lord, A. Epic Singers and Oral Tradition. Ithaca and London, 1991
Lord, A. The Singer of Tales. Cambridge, Mass., 1960; Second edition, 2000
Martin, R. P. 1989. The Language of Heroes: Speech and Performance in the Iliad. Revised paperbound version, Ithaca, 1992
Mazon, P. Introduction à l' Iliade. Paris, 1967
Nagy, G. Best of the Achaeans. revised edition, Baltimore, 1999
Nagy, G. Homeric Questions. Austin, Texas, 1996
Nagy. G. Poetry as Performance: Homer and Beyond. Cambridge, 1996
Nagy, G. Pindar's Homer: The Lyric Possession of an Epic Past. Baltimore and London, 1990
Nagy, G. Greek mythology and Poetics. Ithaca, 1990
Nine Essays on Homer. ed. Miriam Carlisle and Olga Levaniouk. Lanham, 1999
Parry, M. The Making of Homeric Verse: The Collected Papers of Milman Parry. ed. A. Parry. Oxford, 1971
Pfeiffer, R. History of Classical Scholarship: From the Beginnings to the End of the Hellenistic Age. Oxford, 1968
Powell, B. Homer and the Origin of the Greek Alphabet. Cambridge, 1992
Reading The Odyssey: Selected Interpretive Essays. ed. Seth L. Schein. Princeton, 1996
Scholia Graeca in Homeri Iliadem I-VII. ed. H. Erbse. Berlin and New York, 1969-1988
The Iliad: A Commentary. ed. G. S. Kirk (vol. I-II), Bryan Hainsworth (vol. III), Richard Janko (vol. IV), Mark W. Edwards (vol. V), and Nicholas Richardson (vol. VI). Cambridge, 1985-1993.
Valk, M. van der. Researches on the Text and Scholia of the Iliad I-II. Leiden, 1964.
Vermeule, E.. Aspects of Death in Early Greek Art and Poetry. Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1979
Vermeule, E. Greece in the Bronze Age. Chicago, 1964.
West, M. L. "Archaische Heldendichtung: Singen und Schreiben." Der Übergang von der Mündlichkeit zur Literatur bei den Griechen. Ed. W. Kullmann and M. Reichel. Tübingen, 1990, pp. 33-50
West, Stephanie. The Ptolemaic Papyri of Homer. Cologne and Opladen, 1967
Wilamowitz-Moellendorff, U. von. Die Ilias und Homer. Berlin, 1916
Wolf, F. A. 1795. Prolegomena ad Homerum. trans., with introduction and notes, by A. Grafton, G. W. Most, and J. E. G. Zetzel. Princeton, 1985
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