This paper falls into two parts: (i) The first part argues that Works and Days is more coherently organised, and displays greater coherence of thought, than many interpreters recognise. However, the last part of the poem (from 695), heterogeneous and loosely structured, poses severe problems. (ii) The second part is concerned with the end(s) to which the Hesiodic poems were composed. It is argued that neither Works and Days (which is formally a didactic poem) nor Theogony (which is not) can be fully explained in didactic terms. The poetics of the Theogony proem emphasise beauty and pleasure, and take a cautious view of the truth of poetry; similar inferences can be drawn from Homer. However, this does not exclude the possibility that th...
I begin this exploration of characteristically Iliadic and Odyssean attitudes toward the traditional...
Although the theme of self-sufficiency in the second half of the Works and Days (286-828) has often ...
The early Presocratics’ major speculative and critical initiatives—in particular, Anaximander’s conc...
Hesiod’s Works and Days was performed in its entirety, but was also relentlessly excerpted, quoted a...
One of the most frustrating aspects of Homeric studies is that so little literary material outside t...
In this dissertation, I seek to refine our understanding of the genre of didactic poetry in antiquit...
In this article I too offer a comparative analysis. However, I step away from the Near East and away...
This article offers fresh insights into Hesiod’s Works and Days by comparing it with the Eddic Hávam...
The structure of Hesiod’s Works and Days has long puzzled classical scholars, in part because the po...
The section of Works and Days commonly known as the Nautilia (618-94), where the poet turns his atte...
The formal analysis of Hesiod’s Days —i.e., the last part of the Works and Days— takes the author of...
In his two chief works, the Theogony and Works and Days, Hesiod treats the possibility of providence...
This article offers the text of a lecture on Hesiod’s Works and Days written by Eric Robertson Dodds...
What are the conditions under which poetry of the periphery produces a poetico-discursive event with...
While scholars have noticed important allusions to Hesiod in Quintus of Smyrna’s Posthomerica, there...
I begin this exploration of characteristically Iliadic and Odyssean attitudes toward the traditional...
Although the theme of self-sufficiency in the second half of the Works and Days (286-828) has often ...
The early Presocratics’ major speculative and critical initiatives—in particular, Anaximander’s conc...
Hesiod’s Works and Days was performed in its entirety, but was also relentlessly excerpted, quoted a...
One of the most frustrating aspects of Homeric studies is that so little literary material outside t...
In this dissertation, I seek to refine our understanding of the genre of didactic poetry in antiquit...
In this article I too offer a comparative analysis. However, I step away from the Near East and away...
This article offers fresh insights into Hesiod’s Works and Days by comparing it with the Eddic Hávam...
The structure of Hesiod’s Works and Days has long puzzled classical scholars, in part because the po...
The section of Works and Days commonly known as the Nautilia (618-94), where the poet turns his atte...
The formal analysis of Hesiod’s Days —i.e., the last part of the Works and Days— takes the author of...
In his two chief works, the Theogony and Works and Days, Hesiod treats the possibility of providence...
This article offers the text of a lecture on Hesiod’s Works and Days written by Eric Robertson Dodds...
What are the conditions under which poetry of the periphery produces a poetico-discursive event with...
While scholars have noticed important allusions to Hesiod in Quintus of Smyrna’s Posthomerica, there...
I begin this exploration of characteristically Iliadic and Odyssean attitudes toward the traditional...
Although the theme of self-sufficiency in the second half of the Works and Days (286-828) has often ...
The early Presocratics’ major speculative and critical initiatives—in particular, Anaximander’s conc...