TY - BOOK AU - Biggs,Thomas AU - Blum,Jessica TI - The Epic Journey in Greek and Roman Literature T2 - Yale Classical Studies SN - 1108572952 AV - PA3015.T7 E75 2019eb U1 - 880.9/32 23 PY - 2019/// CY - Cambridge PB - Cambridge University Press KW - Travel in literature KW - Greek literature KW - History and criticism KW - Latin literature KW - LITERARY CRITICISM / Ancient & Classical KW - bisacsh KW - Electronic books N1 - Description based upon print version of record; Cover; Half-title; Title page; Copyright information; Contents; Illustrations; Contributors; Acknowledgments; From the Editors; Jessica Blum; Thomas Biggs; Abbreviations; Chapter 1 Introduction; Part I Odyssean Journeys; Introduction; Chapter 2 In and Out of the Golden Age: A Hesiodic Reading of the Odyssey; Chapter 3 Pompe in the Odyssey; 3.1 The Nature of Pompe; 3.2 Minor Cases of Pompe; 3.3 The Pompe of Odysseus and the Program of the Poem; 3.4 Odysseus' Failed Cases of Pompe; 3.5 Successful Pompe from Alkino�os; 3.6 Conclusion; Chapter 4 ''What Country, Friends, is This?'' Geography and Exemplarity in Valerius Flaccus' Argonautica4.1 Roman Nostos; 4.2 Home and Homer; 4.3 Genre and the Journey; 4.4 Into the Wild: Genre and Geography; 4.5 In Hercules' Wake; 4.6 Conclusion; Part II Gendered Maps; Introduction; Chapter 5 Wandering, Love, and Home in Apollonius of Rhodes' Argonautica and Heliodorus' Aethiopica; Chapter 6 Heroes and Homemakers in Xenophon; 6.1 Xenophon's Conception of Home; 6.2 Home as Survival; 6.3 Home Makers; 6.4 Home in Anabasis; Chapter 7 Women's Travels in the Aeneid; Part III Rome's Journey: Constructions of Rome through TravelIntroduction; Chapter 8 Epic Journeys on an Urban Scale: Movement and Travel in Vergil's Aeneid; 8.1 Horizontal Movement: Wandering, Rushing, and their Opposites; 8.2 Vertical Movement: Collapse, Resurgence, and Hilltop Views; 8.3 Conclusion: Augustan Movement; Chapter 9 Roman and Carthaginian Journeys: Punic Pietas in Naevius' Bellum Punicum and Plautus' Poenulus; 9.1 Naevius, Anchises, and the Pre-Vergilian Pia Dido; 9.2 Plautus' Pius Poenulus; Chapter 10 Defining Home, Defining Rome: Germanicus' Eastern Tour; 10.1 Home Away from Home10.2 What is Wrong with this Picture?; 10.3 Neither Home nor Rome; Chapter 11 Odyssean Wanderings and Greek Responses to Roman Empire; 11.1 Introduction; 11.2 Odysseus in the Late Hellenistic West; 11.3 Odysseus in the Empire: Rome-Comings and Returns; 11.4 Odysseus as Emperor; 11.5 Conclusion; Part IV Unearthly Journeys; Introduction; Chapter 12 From Rome to the Moon: Rutilius Namatianus and the Late Antique Game of Knowledge; 12.1; 12.2; 12.3; 12.4; Chapter 13 Looking Back in Wonder: Contemplating Home from the Iliad to Pale Blue Dot; 13.1 Lucian, Icaromenippus, and the Ancient Gaiaskopic Tradition13.2 Modern Gaiaskopic Tradition: The First Wave, 1966-1972; Color Plate; 13.3 Second-Wave Gaiaskopiai: Pale Blue Dot and The Day the Earth Smiled; 13.4 Conclusion; References; Index Locorum; General Index N2 - From Homer to the moon, this volume explores the epic journey across space and time in the ancient world UR - https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&db=nlabk&AN=2112076 ER -