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dc.contributor.authorRussell, James R.-
dc.date.accessioned2018-06-21T12:50:30Z-
dc.date.available2018-06-21T12:50:30Z-
dc.date.issued2018-06-
dc.identifier.citationRussell J. R. Odysseus and a Phoenician tale. Vestnik of Saint Petesrburg University. Philosophy and Conflict Studies, 2018, vol. 34, issue 2, pp. 233–250.en_GB
dc.identifier.other10.21638/11701/spbu17.2018.208-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11701/10323-
dc.description.abstractThe question of the authorship of the two Homeric epics — whether there was one Homer, or two — has vexed scholars since the inception of critical literary study. The more bellicose, less inner and mysterious Iliad was by far the more popular poem in antiquity. And although the later Aeneid of Virgil tendentiously fuses together war and nostos (homecoming), it is of arms and a man, not a man of many ways and wiles, that the Roman poet sings. Odysseus is likened, invidiously, to a Canaanite (Phoenician) traveling merchant in his flexibility and adaptability — he, the “rootless cosmopolitan” of his remote age, resonates with the predicament of alienation of modern man and with the psychological depth of the modern literary sensibility, then bellicose, candid, limited Achilles and Aeneas. It is proposed in the article that the Odyssey employs the topos of a man traveling in search of lost members of his family, with a happy resolution, that seems indeed to have been peculiarly popular over many centuries with Phoenicians and Carthaginians. The author suggests indeed that Menaechmus, the name of a character in a play based on this topos with a Punic setting that might even have been performed, in a Northwest Semitic translation in Qart Ḥadašt (Newtown, i.e., Carthage) itself, is merely the very common Hebrew name Menachem. And it is noted that the topos recurs, employed in aid of religious propaganda of the Jewish Christians, in the setting of the Pseudo- Clementine Recognitions.en_GB
dc.language.isoenen_GB
dc.publisherSt Petersburg State Universityen_GB
dc.relation.ispartofseriesVestnik of St Petersburg University. Philosophy and Conflict Studies;Volume 34; Issue 2-
dc.subjectliteratureen_GB
dc.subjecttaleen_GB
dc.subjectcultureen_GB
dc.subjectmanen_GB
dc.subjecttoposen_GB
dc.subjectChristianityen_GB
dc.subjectpaganismen_GB
dc.titleOdysseus and a Phoenician taleen_GB
dc.typeArticleen_GB
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