Oral tradition, volume 08, number 1 (March 1993)
Table of Contents
- Cover
- Front Matter
- Editor's Column
- About the Authors (Back Matter)
- Articles
-
Activation and Preservation: The Interdependence of Text and Performance in an Oral Tradition
by Egbert J. Bakker -
Nestor Among the Sirens
by Keith Dickson -
Theocritus and Oral Tradition
by James B. Pearce -
Homer and Roland: The Shared Formular Technique, Part I
by William Merrit Sale -
The Interrelationship Between the Oral and the Written in the Works of Alexander Campbell
by Raymond F. Person, Jr. -
Strategies for the Presentation of Oral Tradition in Print
by Eric L. Montenyohl -
Alterities: On Methodology in Medieval Literary Studies
by Ursula Schaefer
[Collection created May 30, 2018]
Items in MOspace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.
Recent Submissions
-
Oral tradition, volume 08, number 1 (March 1993)
(1993-03) -
Strategies for the Presentation of Oral Traditions in Print
(1993-03)Montenyohl proposes strategies for converting oral traditions into print. -
Homer and the Roland: The Shared Formular Technique, Part I
(1993-03)"The argument of the following article, though necessarily long and demanding, can be summarized briefly. Homer employs his noun-formulae consistently, so that the principles of their employment can be stated mathematically ... -
Ancient Greek Oral Traditions
(1993-03) -
Editor's column (Oral Tradition, 8/1 (1993)
(1993-03) -
Front matter (Oral Tradition, 8/1, 1993)
(1993-03) -
About the authors (Oral Tradition, 8/1, 1993)
(1993-03) -
Activation and Preservation: The Interdependence of Text and Performance in an Oral Tradition
(1993-03)Very simply and generally, the function of written texts in our culture (and hence the source of the conduit metaphor) is the transmission of information. The writer of a text may have a multitude of reasons for writing ... -
Nestor Among the Sirens
(1993-03)At first glance, two traits uniquely characterize Nestor in the Homeric poems: longevity and the command of persuasive speech. That these features are in no way peculiar to him, but instead common to the type of figure ... -
Cover (Oral Tradition, 8/1, 1993)
(1993-03)