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Margarita Alexandrou - Song Regained: Working with Greek Poetic Fragments

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Apart from relatively few exceptions of texts which survive intact, what we have of Ancient Greek literature remains, to a great degree, fragmentary. As a result it is often misread, overlooked or mined not for its own sake but to support the investigation of texts which survive in their entirety. This collection of chapters addresses a range of poetic fragments, with a strong (though not exclusive) focus on Archaic epic and lyric, and an emphasis on the papyrological tradition. Its main purpose is to showcase effective methodologies through case studies, through a hands-on approach assisted by a robust theoretical underpinning. The topics covered include textual criticism, the editing of fragmentary corpora, the role of palaeography and the physical features of writing materials, the study of ancient editions, annotations and paraliterary texts, matters of indirect or mixed tradition, and fragment placement and attribution. This volume will certainly be a rewarding read, intended equally for new researchers who wish to acquire or improve the skills needed to deal with fragmentary texts and for established scholars who may draw on the authors insights to navigate the field improving their experience and enriching their knowledge.

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Sozomena Studies in the Recovery of Ancient Texts Edited by Herculaneum - photo 1

Sozomena

Studies in the Recovery of Ancient Texts

Edited by

Herculaneum Society
Alessandro Barchiesi
Robert Fowler
Dirk Obbink
Nigel Wilson

Volume

ISBN 9783110710960

e-ISBN (PDF) 9783110711004

e-ISBN (EPUB) 9783110711011

Bibliographic information published by the Deutsche Nationalbibliothek

The Deutsche Nationalbibliothek lists this publication in the Deutsche Nationalbibliografie; detailed bibliographic data are available on the Internet at http://dnb.dnb.de.

2022 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

Contributors

Margarita Alexandrou is a Postdoctoral Researcher at the University of Cyprus. She has published on archaic iambos and is preparing a commentary on the fragments of Hipponax of Ephesos.

Chris Carey is Emeritus Professor of Greek at UCL. He has published on Greek epic, lyric, drama, oratory and law.

Ettore Cingano is Professor of Greek Literature at Ca Foscari University in Venice. He has published extensively on Greek lyric poetry from Stesichorus to Pindar, on the Hesiodic fragments and on the cyclic epics. His research interests also include metrical inscriptions and the early versions of Greek myths in literature and iconography.

Giovan Battista DAlessio, formerly Professor of Greek Language and Literature at Kings College London, is Professor of Classical Philology at the University of Naples Federico II. He has published extensively on Greek epic, lyric, Hellenistic poetry and literary papyri.

P. J. Finglass is Henry Overton Wills Professor of Greek at the University of Bristol. He has published the monograph Sophocles (2019) in the series Greece and Rome New Surveys in the Classics, as well as editions of Sophocles Oedipus the King (2018), Ajax (2011), and Electra (2007), of Stesichorus (2014), and of Pindars Pythian Eleven (2007) in the series Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries; has co-edited (with Adrian Kelly) The Cambridge Companion to Sappho (2021) and Stesichorus in Context (2015) and (with Lyndsay Coo) Female Characters in Fragmentary Greek Tragedy (2020); and edits the journal Classical Quarterly.

W. Benjamin Henry is a Research Associate in the Department of Greek & Latin at University College London. His publications include Pindars Nemeans: A Selection (2005), Philodemus, On Death (2009), and contributions to The Oxyrhynchus Papyri.

Mark de Kreij is Veni Postdoctoral Fellow at Radboud University in Nijmegen. His research interests have moved from Greek linguistics to the materiality of Greek literature, and he is currently preparing a book on the readers and performers of Greek lyric in Roman Egypt.

Kathleen McNamee is Professor Emerita of Classics at Wayne State University in Detroit. Her publications, which deal with Greek and Latin literature and papyrology, include Annotation in Greek and Latin Texts from Egypt (2007), Sigla and Select Marginalia in Greek Literary Papyri (1992), and Abbreviations in Greek Literary Papyri and Ostraca (1981).

Marco Perale is Lecturer in Classics at the University of Liverpool. He is the author of Adespota Papyracea Hexametra Graeca. Hexameters of Unknown or Uncertain Authorship from Graeco-Roman Egypt, vol. 1 (2020). He is currently preparing a new critical edition of the fragments and epigrams of the poet-philologist Simias of Rhodes.

Lucia Prauscello is Senior Research Fellow at All Souls College, Oxford. She is the author of Singing Alexandria: Music between Practise and Textual Transmission (Leiden 2006) and of Performing Citizenship in Platos Laws (Cambridge 2014). She has published articles on various aspects of ancient Greek literature and culture. She is currently working on an edition of Corinna together with Giovan Battista DAlessio and on the new OCT of Menander with Peter Parsons.

David Sider is Professor of Classics at New York University. He works on Greek philosophy and poetry. His most recent book is a commentary on the epigrams and elegies of Simonides.

Christos Tsagalis is Professor of Greek at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki. He is the author of: Epic Grief: Personal Laments in Homers Iliad (2004), The Oral Palimpsest: Exploring Intertextuality in the Homeric Epics (2008), Inscribing Sorrow: Fourth-Century Attic Funerary Epigrams (2008), From Listeners to Viewers: Space in the Iliad (2012), : , , (2016), Early Greek Epic Fragments I: Genealogical and Antiquarian Epic (2017), : (2018). He has also co-edited (with F. Montanari and A. Rengakos) the Brills Companion to Hesiod (2009) and (with M. Fantuzzi) The Greek Epic Cycle and its Ancient Reception (2015). He is co-editor (with Jonathan Ready) of the Yearbook of Ancient Greek Epic and (with P. J. Finglass & S. Malloch) of the series Key Perspectives on Classical Research.

Giuseppe Ucciardello is Professor of Greek Language and Literature at the University of Messina. He has published extensively on Greek lyric, Attic orators, Greek grammarians, Byzantine Lexicography. He has a special interest in Greek literary Papyrology and is currently working on an edition with commentary of fragments of lyrica adespota from papyri.

Abbreviations of editions, commentaries and works of reference
A-BAustin, C. and Bastianini, G. (2002), Posidippi Pellaei quae supersunt omnia, Milan.
AnOxCramer, J. A. (183537), Anecdota Graeca e codd. manuscriptis bibliothecarum Oxoniensium, 4 vols, Oxford.
APAnthologia Palatina.
CAPowell, J. U. (1925 [reprinted 1970]), Collectanea Alexandrina: reliquiae minores poetarum graecorum aetatis ptolemaicae, 323146 A.C., epicorum, elegiacorum, lyricorum, ethicorum, Oxford.
CEGHansen, P. A. (198389), Carmina Epigraphica Graeca, 2 vols, BerlinNew York.
CLGPCommentaria et Lexica Graeca in Papyris Reperta (2003). I.1.1: Bastianini, G., Haslam, M., Maehler, H., Montanari, F., and Rmer, C. (with Stroppa, M.) (2004), Pars I: Commentaria et lexica in auctores; Vol. 1, fasc. 1: Aeschines Alcaeus, MunichLeipzig.
I.1.2.1: Bastianini, G., Haslam, M., Maehler, H., Montanari, F., and Rmer, C., Stroppa, M. (2013), Pars I: Commentaria et lexica in auctores; Vol. 1, fasc. 2.1 Alcman, BerlinBoston.
I.1.3: Bastianini, G., Haslam, M., Maehler, H., Montanari, F., and Rmer, C. (with Stroppa, M.) (2011), Pars I: Commentaria et lexica in auctores; Vol. 1, fasc. 3: Apollonius Rhodius Aristides, BerlinBoston.
I.2.6: Bastianini, G. Colomo, D., Haslam, M., Maehler, H., Montana, F., Montanari, F., and Rmer, C. (2019), Pars I: Commentaria et lexica in auctores; Vol. 2, fasc. 6: Galenus Hipponax, BerlinBoston.
CPFCorpus dei papiri filosofici greci e latini (1989), Florence.
D-KDiels, H. (195152), Die Fragmente der Vorsokratiker, 3 vols, 6th edn, revised by W. Kranz, Berlin.
EDGBeekes, R. S. B. (with L. van Beek) (2010), Etymological Dictionary of Greek (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series Volume 10), 2 vols, LeidenBoston.
EGEFTsagalis, C. (2017), Early Greek Epic Fragments I: Antiquarian and Genealogical Epic, Trends in Classics
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