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dc.contributor.authorCanevaro, Lilah Graceeng
dc.date.issued2014-03eng
dc.descriptionIn this article I too offer a comparative analysis. However, I step away from the Near East and away from any suggestion of a chain of transmission. I aim to offer fresh insights into Hesiod's Works and Days by comparing it to the Eddic Havamal, a poem far removed in terms of geography and date, but compellingly close in subject matter, construction, and transmission. Those who have studied Havamal, just like Hesiodic scholars, have tied themselves in knots trying to disentangle the strands of authorship and the narrative threads. Havamal is, like the Works and Days, a wisdom poem with a composite structure. It is made up not only of precepts and maxims but also elaborate mythological sections. It is associated with catalogic elements which may be original or later accretions, just like Hesiod's Days, or the Catalogue of Women, or the Ornithomanteia. And most interestingly it is, like the Works and Days, a poem rooted in oral tradition, but poised at that crucial juncture: the advent of writing.//eng
dc.format.extent28 pageseng
dc.identifier.citationOral Tradition, 29/1 (2014): 99-126.eng
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10355/65338
dc.languageEnglisheng
dc.rightsOpenAccess.eng
dc.rights.licenseThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 License.
dc.titleHesiod and Havamal : Transitions and the transmission of wisdomeng
dc.typeArticleeng


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