All Stories

  1. AESCHYLUS, SEPTEM CONTRA THEBAS 780–7
  2. The Original Versus the Received Text with Special Emphasis on the Case of the Comma Johanneum
  3. Boreas and Oreithyia: A Case-Study in Multichannel Transmission of Myth
  4. Dêmioergoi
  5. Amphimachos (2)
  6. Perrhaebians
  7. Athos
  8. Canonising and Decanonising Homer: Reception of the Homeric Poems in Antiquity and Modernity
  9. Phylakos (1)
  10. Alkmaon (2)
  11. Aktorione (1)
  12. Aktorione 2)
  13. Alastor (1)
  14. Alastor (2)
  15. Alastor (3)
  16. Akamas (1)
  17. Amphidamas (1)
  18. Amphidamas (2)
  19. Amphios (2)
  20. Argos (2)
  21. Ankaios (2)
  22. Chromios (5)
  23. Dymas (2)
  24. Euenos (2)
  25. Euryalos (2)
  26. Phylake
  27. Adrastos (4)
  28. Akamas (2)
  29. Kapaneus
  30. Kephallenes
  31. Phyleus
  32. Pieria
  33. Pylos
  34. Archelochos
  35. Arcadians
  36. Aretê
  37. Augeias
  38. Athenians
  39. Chimaira
  40. Diokles
  41. Dodona
  42. Dorians
  43. Emathia
  44. Epidauros
  45. Eriphyle
  46. Eteokles
  47. Europa
  48. Epirus
  49. Handicrafts
  50. Amphilochos
  51. Amarynkeus
  52. Amyntor
  53. Alpheios
  54. Altes
  55. Amisodaros
  56. Amphimedon
  57. Amphinomos
  58. Amphitrite
  59. Apologue
  60. Orsilochos (3)
  61. Mekisteus (2)
  62. Linear B
  63. Sthenelos (2)
  64. Thoas (3)
  65. Teuthras (2)
  66. Reception, from the Renaissance to the Enlightenment
  67. Eurypylos (3)
  68. Hermione (2)
  69. Hypereia (3)
  70. Proitos
  71. Selloi
  72. Speeches
  73. Polykaste
  74. Polyneikes
  75. Talaos
  76. Talent
  77. Talthybios
  78. Podarkes
  79. Salmoneus
  80. Titaresios
  81. Sintians
  82. Phlegyes
  83. Thesprotians
  84. Tychios
  85. Ino
  86. Peneleos
  87. Pittheus
  88. Plakos
  89. Prophecy
  90. Protesilaos
  91. Astyoche
  92. Gerenian
  93. The Homer Encyclopedia
  94. K olos M achê
  95. Trojan War
  96. Kalchas
  97. Tityos
  98. Ortilochos
  99. Magnetes
  100. Nereus
  101. Minyan
  102. Megapenthes
  103. Megara
  104. Melampous
  105. Proteus
  106. Adrasteia
  107. Aeolids
  108. A igeus
  109. Aigyptios
  110. Aietes
  111. Alkathoos
  112. Alkestis
  113. Alkimedon
  114. Abydos
  115. Homer and His Peers: Neoanalysis, Oral Theory, and the Status of Homer
  116. MORE ON ΚΛΕΟΣ ΑΦΘΙΤΝ
  117. Greek Distrust Of Language
  118. (J.) Heath The Talking Greeks: Speech, Animals, and the Other in Homer, Aeschylus, and Plato. Pp. viii + 392. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005. Cased, £55, US$90. ISBN: 0-521-83264-0.
  119. ARISTOTLE AND EPISODIC TRAGEDY
  120. Greeks and Pre-Greeks
  121. THE CITY DIONYSIA AND THE SOCIAL SPACE OF ATTIC TRAGEDY
  122. Ino-Leukothea between East and West
  123. Motherhood or status? Editorial choices in Sophocles, Electra 187
  124. Neoanalysis and Oral Tradition in Homeric Studies
  125. Virtue and Circumstances: On the City-State Concept of Arete
  126. The Cypria, the Iliad, and the Problem of Multiformity in Oral and Written Tradition
  127. Time and arete in Homer
  128. Plato's Language of Love and the Female
  129. Oedipus' Apology and Sophoclean Criticism: OC 521 And 547
  130. Anatolian Languages and Indo-European Migrations to Greece
  131. A Linear A Inscription from Tel Lachish (lach ZA 1)
  132. The Second Stasimon of the Trachiniae and Heracles' Festival on Mount Oeta
  133. Patterns of human error in Homer
  134. Odysseus and the Genus ‘Hero’
  135. Sophocles Tr 634-639 and Herodotus
  136. The Dialect Continuum of Ancient Greek
  137. Royal Succession in Heroic Greece
  138. A Creative Oral Poet and the Muse
  139. Formulaic and Nonformulaic Elements in Homer
  140. A Note on Some Metrical Irregularities in Homer
  141. Ajax's Entry in the HesiodicCatalogue of Women
  142. Homer's View of the Epic Narrative: Some Formulaic Evidence
  143. The First Song of Demodocus
  144. Is KΛΕΟΣ ΑΦθΙΤΟΝ a Homeric Formula?
  145. Diagnosing Fiction: From Plato to Borges
  146. Elitist orality and the triviality of writing
  147. Late features in the speeches of the Iliad
  148. Kingship in Bronze Age Greece and Western Asia
  149. The spread of the Greek language
  150. The end of the Bronze Age
  151. The heterogeneity of Greek genealogy
  152. The pre-Hellenic substratum reconsidered
  153. Marriage and identity
  154. Continuities and discontinuities
  155. Appendix: The Testament of Hattusili
  156. List of references
  157. Oral Formulaic Theory and the Individual Poet
  158. Preface
  159. Introduction